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Village Squire, 1980-08, Page 17opened. The building was dismantled in 1920. Cantin took setbacks in stride. While St. Joseph grew, he pursued government approval for his deep -water canal scheme that advocated only 14 locks. The plan included the canal from Lake Huron to Lake Erie, and another twinning the Welland Canal and canals that would bypass the 14 -foot canals already established on the St. Lawrence. His proposal called for 35 -foot deep canals, a minimum of 400 feet in width. At the turn of the century, the St. Lawrence River was non -navigable from Montreal to Lake Ontario. Canoes were unloaded from ocean vessels in Montreal Harbour and placed on canal boats that travelled to Lake Ontario ports, then the cargoes were loaded onto Great Lakes carriers. DEEP WATER SEAWAY From 1895 until the mid-1950s, the governments of Canada and United States studied the feasibility of a deep -water seaway. support his proposed canals. By this time, the value of hydro electric power was evident and Cantin was competing with corporations that had much more capital than his company. DOUBLE CROSSED Ultimately Cantin contended he was double-crossed by engineer R.O. Sweezey, a main figure in the famous Beauharnois Scandal that rocked Canada in the 1930s and involved several high-ranking government officials. Cantin helped to uncover the scandal, but by then , the government had decided the St. Lawrence Seaway should be publicly -owned, not privately -developed. Back in St. Joseph, construction ceased and the town gradually disintegrated because it had no reason to become more than a service village with a church, a school and a store. Cantin lost his bid to play a major physical role in the development of the Seaway, but he did not lose his vision. Until his death in St. Cantin advertized his huge Balmoral Hotel as a luxurious summer resort. Vacationers stayed away in droves However. they received strong opposition from eastern railroads in the U.S., east coast port authorities, privately -owned power companies, several unions and other organizations. Passage of the Wiley-Dondero Act in the U.S. in 1954 allowed American co-operation in building the 27 foot St. Lawrence Seaway, as we know it today. The increasing size of certain ocean vessels makes it impossible for them to navigate the Seaway, and some groups and individuals now feel the Seaway should have been 35 feet wide attesting to Cantin's foresight. From 1898 through 1913, the Great Lakes and Atlantic Canal and Power Company Limited was incorporated with "power to locate and construct deep canals from Lake Huron to Montreal Harbour. Estimated cost was $500,000,000. But World War 1 intervened. After the war, Cantin concentrated on securing power rights on the Beauharnois Rapids above Montreal, which was the key to the success or failure of his over-all scheme. He needed the power rights to have a sufficient financial base on which to Joseph in 1940, he travelled throughout North America promoting the Waterway and his way of building it. "To understand Cantin, we must put him in the perspective of his time," says Joseph L. Wooden, author of A Drum to Beat Upon, a history of St. Joseph and Narcisse Cantin. The late 1890's to World War 1 was an enormous boom period in Canadian history. 1,500,000 immigrants came to Canada in a twelve year span, and from 1903 to 1913, 12,000 miles of railway were laid. Schemes for canals, mines and development of the west were proposed. Cantin was one of many who were planning scheming and promoting this development boom, and he was very much a part of the excitement and expansionary feeling of the time. A TRUE PROMOTER He dealt with the industrial giants and corporate heads of North America in cities like Montreal, Toronto, New York Buffalo and Chicago. He was a true promoter - a charming man with sound ideas and a knack for persuading businessmen to THE TOUCHMARK cWakers of Fine Pewter Holloware, Jewellery See Methods Centuries Old in Our FamilyWorkshop OPEN 7 DAYS 31 WATER ST. S., ST. MARYS, ONT. 284-1113 VILLAGE SQUIRE/AUGUST 1980 PG. 15