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  Hillsborough River > Tranquility Base  
  Hillsborough River - Tranquility Base

How Islanders see themselves

Geography has always shaped the life of Prince Edward Island. The Mi'kmaq called it, Abegweit, which means 'cradled on the waves.'

After a prosperous start supplying wood and sailing ships to the British Empire, islanders were largely disconnected from the Industrial Age.

Once the 'Age of Sail' was over, technological advances that fueled the industrial age of the 19th and 20th centuries could not take root on the island. Iron-hulled steamships spelled the end of the wooden shipbuilding industry. The island lacked water and coal resources and was cut off from North America's booming network of railways. The economy expanded westward, and Prince Edward Island was not in its path.

Now, that very exclusion from economic growth has become Prince Edward Island's most important asset. With its landscape free of industrial scars, and much of its Victorian architecture still intact, the island enjoys an economy based on farming and tourism.

The physical separation of the province from mainland Canada has ended with the opening of a causeway linking it to New Brunswick. Some islanders hope the road link will lead to faster economic growth. Others are concerned that the causeway will weaken their island identity.

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