track at Morant's Curve, cutting through
Banff National Park track crossing the
Fraser River Named as the CPR's first president, Stephen oversaw the monumental task of not just negotiating a route across 2,000 miles of
forests,
swamps,
rivers, and
mountains; but also raising the necessary funds estimated at $100 million, of which at least half had to be secured. At
Hill's suggestion he hired
William Cornelius Van Horne to construct three major sections of the track, and his partnership with
James Ross proved invaluable to the engineering success of the railway. However, by the end of 1881, Stephen admitted that the project was "assuming dimensions far beyond my calculations". He ceased all other activities, and bringing
R.B. Angus to Montreal with him, they devoted all their energies to the world's second
transcontinental railroad. As Stephen purposefully did not want a long list of investors, the risks were high to all those involved and the CPR found few takers in
London and
New York City. By 1883, the syndicate was straining under the huge financial obligations being called of them. Stephen was risking almost all of his fortune on the venture and even used his mansion in
Montreal as collateral.
Hill resigned in 1883, when he realised that his own railroad would be in direct competition with the CPR for eastbound traffic. However, through loyalty to his partners, he held on to half of his shares. Next,
Kennedy resigned, depressing the CPR stock even further and making Stephen's increasingly frantic attempts to find capital even more difficult. In the face of this crisis, fellow Montrealer
McIntyre resigned in 1884, forcing the other directors to buy his shares and in the process earning himself Stephen's lifelong enmity. Using every ounce of his experience in banking, natural flair for persuasion and business acumen, Stephen proved capable of putting together the complicated financing needed to complete the project, despite cost overruns from numerous unanticipated engineering, business and political problems. The final piece in the financial puzzle was secured when, in 1885, he travelled to
London for a personal appeal that convinced
Lord Revelstoke and
Barings Bank to underwrite the sale of £3 million in company stock. On 7 November 1885, at
Craigellachie, British Columbia,
Donald Smith famously hammered home the last spike in the railroad. Stephen,
Smith, and
Angus were the sole members of the original syndicate to have kept their nerve. Their gamble paid off and the success of the first leg of what would soon become the "world's greatest transportation system" almost immediately made them enormously rich. ==Aftermath==