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The Okanagan Valley in Canada

Canadian Pacific Train Framed Art Print

Canadian Pacific Train Framed Art Print
Roger Couillard
18 in. x 26 in.
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The Okanagan Valley in Canada

The Okanagan is the most important valley in the region. Most of the terraces which flank the valley sides are intensively utilized for fruit growing. In summer, these vivid green patches stand out clearly against the brown, unirrigated grazing lands. Lakes occupy much of the valley bottom, but vegetables and small fruits are cultivated in a few low-lying sections. Behind the valley in the highlands, numerous small lakes serve as reservoirs to supply the farms with irrigation water by a simple gravity process.

The population of this prosperous valley has been increasing steadily since 1892, when only 400 people lived in the area. At the present time the population is 297,601, of which more than half is urban. Settlement is by no means uniform throughout the trench, but is concentrated in several rural-urban communities. The size of each urban centre depends directly upon the extent and prosperity of its rural hinterland. Such places as Kelowna, Penticton and Vernon are to be considered among the exceptionally attractive and pleasant small cities of Canada.

Kelowna

Kelowna, with a population of 106,707, is the chief distributing centre of a rich fruit growing district on Dark Brown Soils. It is located on the east bank of Lake Okanagan and is served by the Canadian National Railway from Kamloops, and by Canadian Pacific barges on Lake Okanagan to Penticton. A number of industries, such as saw milling, box making and fruit canning, are found in the city.

Penticton

Penticton is located at the southern end of Lake Okanagan. It serves a prosperous peach growing district on the Brown Soils of the southern Okanagan Valley. Excellent rail, air and highway facilities support the trade of the city. Its industrial and commercial functions are similar to those of Kelowna. In 2006, the population numbered over 31,909.

Vernon

Vernon (35,944) is an important trade city in the heart of the Black Soils area, near the northern end of Lake Okanagan. Diversified farming characterizes the environs of Vernon, but apple growing dominates. Canneries, creameries and other small industries, which are complementary to the agriculture of the area, have located in the city. The tourist industry is greatly encouraged by an active bureau. The Canadian National Railway serves the city.

Small Towns in the Okanagan Valley

Oliver and Osoyoos are the main towns in the extreme southern section of the valley. Vegetables and small fruits are raised under irrigation on Brown Soils, where the growing season is very long and the summer is the hottest and driest in Canada. To the south, in the state of Washington, a similar landscape obtains.

Summerland is located just northwest of Penticton. It is a small distributing centre and contains a large government experimental farm.

Armstrong, Enderby and Salmon Arm are trade and transportation centres in the more humid northern quarter of the Valley. Mixed fanning has developed on the Podzolic Soils of the area.

Other Districts

The other valleys in the Fraser Upland region contain scattered settlements. A few irrigated orchards dot the landscape in the South Thompson Valley, but, in the main, most of the land throughout the region is used for cattle ranching.

Kamloops

Kamloops is the most important city outside of the Okanagan Valley. It is located at the confluence of the North and South Thompson Rivers and is a focal point of routes. Both the Canadian Pacific Railway and the Canadian National Railway use the city as a divisional point. Kamloops is the distribution centre for a wide area. Founded as a Hudson’s Bay post in 1812, it was incorporated as a city in 1893. A large sanatorium is located a few miles from the city at Tranquille.

Other Towns

Toward the west in the Thompson Valley, Ashcroft, Spences Bridge and Lytton are small trading centres. Keremeos in the Similkameen Valley, Merrit in the Nicola Valley, and Lillooet in the Fraser Valley, are the only other towns of any significance in the southern part of the region.

The Cariboo and Chilcotin districts have many large cattle ranches. The Pacific Great Eastern Railway traverses the area and serves such small communities as Clinton and Williams Lake. Many cattle are shipped from the latter town each fall. Quesnel is the northern terminus of the railway. It supplies the gold mining camps to the east.

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Arizona: A Place to Visit

Santa Fe Railroad, Grand Canyon

Santa Fe Railroad, Grand Canyon Giclee Print
18 in. x 24 in.
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Arizona is the 48th state of United States of America. It is located in the southwestern region of United States. The capital of Arizona is Phoenix which is the largest city of Arizona. It was the last state declared by the government of United States in the United States of America. Arizona does not have a very moderate climate and therefore it is liked by the people who are interested in spending their vacation in hot summers.

Arizona is known for its hot climate, desserts and very mild winters. It was also termed as the fastest growing state of United States of America in terms of population. It consists of about 4 million people. Phoenix is the most popular part of Arizona and also its capital. The other important cities in Arizona are Mesa, Glendale, Peoria, Chandler, Sun City, Sun City West, Fountain Hills, Gilbert, Avondale, Tempe Tolleson and Scottsdale.

Arizona is a state which solely follows American culture. However, the weather affects its culture. The food pattern is the same as that of the rest of United States of America. Arizona is very famous for its cooking patterns. The tourists here can also enjoy desserts. Arizona is one of safest places in United States of America. The infrastructure is developed in a very good and secure manner. Arizona is also very famous for its sports. It has its own teams for different sports, just like the other States of United States of America. Arizona is a very wealthy state in terms of education and sports. People who like educational and sports activities come to Arizona to study and learn.

The top attractions in Arizona are Bisbee, Canyon de Chelly, Jerome, Lake Powell and Monument Valley. These are the most beautiful places to visit in Arizona. The most famous hotels in Arizona are Anthem, Bellemont, Page, Paradise Valley, Parker, Oak Creek Canyon and Oro Valley. These hotels are the best and most luxurious hotels in Arizona. They are very well developed and have the best and the latest amenities.

These hotels serve various types of cuisines to their guests. The hotel management takes care of maintaining different types of cuisines according to the type of the guests from different countries. The music is also very diverse in Arizona. It is based on the native English music which is followed all over America. However, it also contains some French and Spanish words in it.

As far as sport is concerned, there are many popular players who are now playing as professionals in the American teams. These teams play at the world level championships and leagues. Arizona is also famous for having the maximum number of female governors, than any other state in the country. It follows a very rich education pattern. The universities and schools are very sensitive about their education level and student management. The state government is also very active in maintaining law and order in the state to make the natives as well as the tourists feel safe and secure.

Chicago for the Tourist Art Print

Chicago For the Tourist

Chicago For the Tourist Art Print
Proehl
24 in. x 36 in.
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chicago posters, travel posters, retro railway ads, photographic prints, travel destinations, united states, chicago travel posters, urban landscapes, vintage north american travel

Vintage Travel Ads: Trans-Siberian Express Giclee Print

Trans-Siberian Express

Trans-Siberian Express Giclee Print
24 in. x 32 in.
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Trans-Siberian Express

The Trans-Siberian Railway or Trans-Siberian Railroad is a network of railways connecting Moscow and European Russia with the Russian Far East provinces, Mongolia, China and the Sea of Japan. It is the longest railway in the world. Today, the railway is part of the Eurasian Land Bridge.

Return tickets from Central Europe to Vladivostok and back can be as cheap as €250 with so called CityStar or Sparpreis Europa special offers. In addition, a reservation supplement for long-distance trains is mandatory, the prices range between €30 to €60 each way for trains in four-berth sleeper on the Trans-Siberian Railway. Overall, buying tickets for Russian trains in Germany, the Czech Republic or Poland can be cheaper than in Russia.

In addition to these services, a number of privately-chartered services are operated, and one tour operator even commissioned the construction of their own train, jointly owned by themselves and Russian railways. The train, officially named Golden Eagle Trans-Siberian Express was launched on 26 April 2007 by Prince Michael of Kent.

A History of Travel in America

New York Pennsylvania Railroad

New York Pennsylvania Railroad Masterprint
11 in. x 17 in.
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Mounted

The many years of early exploration throughout the whole extent of the continent, carried on by brave individual adventurers and trappers chiefly from Spain and France before the year 1620 had almost no effect in shaping the after-history and development of America’s travel system. The significance of any discovery in its relation to the subject, whether of route or method of travel, did not lie in the earliest information respecting that route or method, but in the popular impulse which was later — sometimes much later — to recognize its value and demand its use. It was necessity or comprehension, not knowledge; the needs or desires of the people rather than the exploits and achievements of individuals that always influenced the progress of the system and led on, little by little, to what now exists.

Hence it was that definite and visible progress in creating established methods of getting about the country did not begin until several English colonies had found firm foothold along the Atlantic coast. There were three motives that caused the first travel movements among the early population. One was the natural wish of a settlement to get into touch with its neighbors; another was need of betterment and growth; and the third was an occasional impulse, due to differences of one sort or another, which sometimes caused part of a colony to separate from the rest of it and go elsewhere to set up for itself.

The five principal localities from which radiated the first travel movements of the country were the Chesapeake Bay region; eastern Massachusetts; New York Bay and the Great River of the Mountains; the Connecticut River valley and Long Island Sound; and Delaware Bay and the Delaware and Susquehanna Rivers. Three of these, the Chesapeake, New York and Delaware Bays, are important among those gateways already referred to through which the interior of the country is accessible from the Atlantic seaboard. But the two biggest entrances of all—the Mississippi River with its tributaries and the St. Lawrence River and the Great Lakes — were destined to play a much smaller part in the story than their importance warranted. For it so happened that the course of wars and politics in Europe produced conditions in America which deprived the Mississippi, the St. Lawrence River and the lakes of much of the influence they might otherwise have had in shaping the development of travel in America.

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Railroad Travel and the State of Business 1918 – 1938

Pennsylvania Railroad, Washington

Pennsylvania Railroad, Washington Giclee Print
Eggleston, Edward
24 in. x 32 in.
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Railroad travel fluctuates in rough harmony with the general disturbances in the national economy we call business cycles. The relationship becomes evident if changes in passenger miles are compared with the upswings and downswings in business outlined by the National Bureau’s ‘reference’ chronology. A more satisfactory comparison can be made for the period since 1918 than for earlier times, as information is more detailed for recent cycles: March 1919 is the first month for which the number of passenger-miles has been compiled and published. Before then the total amount of travel was recorded in annual statistics only. We shall examine the monthly data first.

The course of railroad travel since 1919 is divided into phases of growth and decline by asterisks, one at each peak or trough. Dates the National Bureau regards as troughs in business at large are indicated by solid, and those it regards as peaks by broken vertical lines. Each interval from a solid to a broken line represents a business expansion, in which, presumably, a more or less general growth of employment, production, trade, and income occurred. The space from a broken to a vertical line represents a period of general decline, or business contraction.

Except for the 1919-20 and 1933-37 expansions, each phase of business can readily be matched with a corresponding phase of travel. For example, a few months after the business contraction of 1920 began, travel started to decline, and continued to do so during the remainder of the business phase and for some time thereafter. Differences between the turning dates in a particular form of economic activity and the ‘reference’ turns of the chronology are not uncommon. Indeed the dates of the business peaks and troughs are necessarily somewhat arbitrary; not all kinds of activity, even among those which clearly follow the reference cycles in a general way, reach peaks or troughs in exactly the same month.

There were no real exceptions even in 1919-20 or 1933-37. We have not marked any trough in passenger-miles corresponding to the reference trough of April 1919. But monthly data on the revenue railroads derived from the transportation of passengers suggest that there was a trough in October 1918. As will presently appear, statistics of Pullman traffic show such a trough. We conclude that there was an expansion in total passenger-miles corresponding to the business expansion of 1919-20, although it began considerably earlier. During the long reference expansion of 1933-37, we have marked off not one but three phases in travel. It rose to a peak in October 1934, declined thereafter, and subsequently rose to a final peak in March 1937. The intermediate peak was not as high as the final one, the intermediate trough not as low as the initial one. It is fair to say that during the period as a whole there was an expansion in travel corresponding to the reference phase.

What is true of passenger traffic as a whole is equally true of its principal component, travel other than commuting. Beginning with the 1921-23 expansion, there was a specific phase for every reference phase. In arriving at this judgment we again disregard a mild specific contraction during the long expansion of 1933-37.

‘Other than commutation’ travel includes journeys in Pullman cars, for which we have monthly data beginning early enough to cover practically the entire 1914-18 business expansion. Here again each reference phase can be matched by a specific phase. A long expansion in Pullman passenger-miles, beginning before and ending after the reference expansion of 1919-20, is clearly defined. Again, three phases in 1933-37 can be lumped into a single longer phase corresponding to the business phase. The 1914-18 expansion presents a somewhat similar situation. There was a trough somewhat before the data begin in January 1915, lower than the trough we have marked in January 1916. This is exactly what we find in data on the revenue of the Pullman Company, which begin somewhat earlier. We conclude that there was a long rise from late 1914 to November 1917 which, although interrupted, corresponds to the 1914-18 reference phase.

It is not so obvious that there are fluctuations in commutation travel corresponding to those in business. Consequently we can’t say that every reference phase was matched by a specific phase. But we can approach the problem in a somewhat different way by asking whether there was a net rise during each business expansion and a net decline during each contraction. We find a net rise in three of four expansions, but a decline in 1933-37; also a net decline in three of four contractions, but practically no change in 1926-27.

Since there are few cases altogether, these exceptions look formidable. Even though an economic activity rises in both an expansion and a contraction, however, it may rise more rapidly in the former. We regard such a difference in rates of growth as analogous to the difference between a rise in expansion and a fall in contraction. The resemblance is still closer if the activity rises in expansion but remains unchanged in contraction. Finally, the activity may decline in both phases, but more rapidly in contraction. Such a difference in rates of decline is also analogous to that between rise and fall. If an activity fairly consistently does one or another of these four things we say that it conforms positively to business cycles.

For commuting the data permit us to make seven comparisons between a reference phase and the following phase of opposite character. We can compare the expansion of 1921-23 with the contraction of 1923-24, the latter with the expansion of 1924-26, and so forth. Every one of the comparisons suggests positive conformity of one kind or another. If 1924-26 is compared with 1926-27, or 1926-27 with 1927-29, we find growth in expansion but none in contraction. If we compare 1933-37 with either the preceding or the following phase we find more rapid decline in contraction than in expansion. There was perfect positive conformity.

Nevertheless it is somewhat curious that commuting did not decline at all in 1926-27. In the decade after 1920, however, this kind of traffic was subject not only to changes in the prosperity of actual or potential commuters but also to another influence. During the 1920′s, although not during the ’30′s, the population of suburban areas, and presumably the number of potential commuters, grew rapidly.

It Is also remarkable that commuting should have declined, even slightly, during 1933-37, when other kinds of travel and economic activity at large were showing pronounced recovery. But after 1929 many highway improvements especially designed to facilitate the flow of motor traffic in a metropolitan region were made in and around New York and no doubt in other commuting areas. Some were completed during 1933-37. They increased the relative attractiveness of driving to work in comparison with commuting by train. Even if a traveller chose to go to and from his job by railroad, it was no longer so advantageous to buy a commutation ticket rather than pay for each trip separately.

Other fares had been greatly reduced; commutation fares had not changed much. In 1933-37 ordinary fare exceeded commutation fare by about 1 cent per mile; in earlier expansions the spread was 2 cents. Under some circumstances the difference was nominal. The average commutation fare per mile is computed on the assumption that purchasers of monthly tickets make full use of them. Some persons had occasion to go into town only two or three times a week or preferred to drive in good weather.

For them the price of a monthly ticket, divided by the number of trips actually taken, may have exceeded the new low level of noncommutation fares. Some travel was probably diverted to the ‘other’ category. Finally, migration to the suburbs did not add to the number of potential daily riders as rapidly as in the 1920′s. All these factors help to explain the absence of any marked expansion in commuting.

National Transportation System from 1775 to 1800

Florida, Go By Train

Florida, Go By Train Art Print
24 in. x 36 in.
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The year 1784 found about thirty thousand people in the Kentucky region, and the immigration of that summer amounted to some twelve thousand men, women and children. The overland movement still maintained a caravan character. By its increased use the Wilderness Road was being robbed of many of its difficulties, and to the one original path had been added various extensions and ramifications. A reference to the accompanying map will disclose with approximate completeness the several routes that at various times, and from different eastern localities, were used to reach the interior of the country. The relationship which these different roads bore to the general westward advance can be discussed with propriety at this point, though not all of them had become important highways of travel at quite so early a date as we have reached.

The origin and direction of Boone’s Trace have already been given, and its course through the territory embraced in the map can be easily followed. Boone’s actual work in marking the first road began at a point some distance to the northeast of Fort Chissel, and then proceeded to the Warriors’ Path, as indicated. Within a few years the preferred route had veered from the Warriors’ Path somewhat to the south of the point where Boone forsook that highway, and assumed a rather more direct line toward Boonesborough. The eastward end of the original trace marked by Boone was easily reached over rough roads, previously made, that extended westwardly from Richmond and eastern Virginia.

A route extending southwest through the valley between the Blue Ridge and Alleghany ranges was the one followed for a part of its way by Calk. He crossed over the Blue Ridge and reached Fort Chissel in nine days from the time his party started. Twelve days after leaving the fort he touched Boone’s newly made path at the point where he joined Henderson’s party, and continued on it thereafter. In following years a well-defined pack-horse road through the forests led all the way up through the valley to the southern boundary of Pennsylvania, where it swung to the eastward and finally reached Philadelphia. Over this, the longest of all land routes to the interior, came at a later time thousands of travellers from New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Virginia. The distance from Philadelphia to Vincennes along this line of march was about eight hundred miles.

It will be seen that Fort Chissel was an important junction point on all distinctively land paths made through the wilderness by white men. For many years all overland travellers, from whatever eastern community they came or wherever they were destined, converged at the little timber blockhouse for a brief pause before taking the plunge into far wilder regions beyond. East of that point the difficulty of westward progress, as well as the danger that attended it, was less in a marked degree than that encountered after it had been left behind. When at last the west-bound travel had grown to such proportions that parties passed along the various roads in almost continuous procession, the immediate neighborhood about the fort resembled the only port on a forbidding coast. Half a dozen caravans sometimes halted there in the course of a day, and the accumulation at one spot of hundreds of human pilgrims and more hundreds of horses, pigs, cows and dogs, all in the confusion of pitching camp or of preparing for a fresh march, filled the forest with an uproar. Often there were a few Indians about, peaceable enough for the time being, and crouched somewhere on the outskirts of the brush to watch in silence the visible dissolution of their ancient heritage. They were no longer animated by a hope that the white flood could be turned back by any effort they could make.

The road into Tennessee, as it appears on the map, was not the first route by which permanent white settlers penetrated into that district. In the very earliest years of the invasion the Tennessee people followed Boone’s Trace to the point of Logan’s divergence, then continued on Logan’s path for a short distance and finally, leaving it also, swung through the woods until they came to a trail which followed in a general way the course of the Cumberland River. Then they kept on along the Cumberland until they found a locality that pleased them, and struck south into the present Tennessee. Many went in this manner as far as the site of Nashville.

But by the year 1783 a new and better method of getting into northern and middle Tennessee had been found, and this later route is shown on the map here given. Travellers to the Tennessee region followed existing roads from the East until well past Fort Chissel. There they left the old trail that led to Kentucky, and at the southern extremity of the Clinch range — or Clinch Mountain, as it was then called — proceeded in a line almost due west, through the country now included in Roane, Fentress, White, Jackson, Smith, Wilson, Sumner and Davidson counties until the site of Nashville was reached. Later this road was extended still farther west. The Tennessee path was a very popular line of march and was not only used by the future Tennesseeans, but by many who intended to take up land in southern Kentucky. Those on the road who were making for the Kentucky settlements left the Tennessee trail near the present Gallatin, crossed the Cumberland River and turned north. In that fashion much of southern Kentucky received its first white population.