02 November 2025

Fighting the Last War

As trains operate over the Bolan and Khojak Passes in Balochistan, a small army of YouTube videographers records the trains of the Pakistan Railways. 

The imposing tunnel portals, often displaying their original tunnel names, attest to their British origins. English seems to be the formal operating language of the railway. 

... At one point, trains reach a manual semaphore set at stop. They face a switch normalled for a long, steep, runaway track. After satisfying the switchman occupying a miniscule shanty, the diverging route is set for the main line, clearing the semaphore. 

Tall, fortified, brick water towers with abundant loopholes in all directions ... and isolated desert station compound ruins, which are walled and equipped with a central water source ... can also be seen. 

... The civil engineering challenge of providing adequate water for steam locomotives, by itself, would have been a major task in this (usually) arid region.

from: Citizen's Atlas; 1924; Bartholomew.

Commerce and military transportation are two time-honoured reasons for building railways across foreign colonies.  

On the century-old map above, railways are shown as dashed lines. Beginning in the top, left corner and working down to the bottom, right corner, you will see:
  • Kandahar, Afghanistan.
  • Chaman, Balochistan, Pakistan - the end of the line ... and Khojak Pass, with its summit tunnel.
  • Quetta - a city of about 1.5 million people, where many of these video journeys begin.
  • Bolan Pass - another summit tunnel and the location of a runaway track.
  • Sibi - a featured destination on one of the remote branch lines.
*  *  *

I've just discovered/watched a few Sites and Sounds videos, but they are shot using excellent equipment so you can enjoy them on a large screen.

I've watched many from Quetta Railography and he is a sympathetic character who often rides the outside of the unit to video.



Above: I think this runaway track is on the line descending from Bolan Pass.

*  *  *


Above: At the tunnel entrance, you can see the cot of the worker who is probably the trackwalker.
Sometimes, armed military and para-military personnel protect facilities from the local separatist movement. 

*  *  *


I think this is a trip to Sibi. The line suffered significant damage from torrential rains. 
Sometimes large bridges are taken out on the main line.

Notice the nose of this 'branch line' engine.
They look different on the outside, but inside I can often hear an SD40-2 or enjoy a smoking Century.

*  *  *


This is the 'northbound' portal of Khojak Tunnel. Built in 1891, it is 2.4 miles long.
In Pakistan and Bangladesh, you can often see old interlocking rods, semaphores and unused signal towers.

By our standards, the passenger rolling stock in these countries often shows abundant hazards and arch-bar-style trucks can be seen sometimes. However, the railroaders in Canada and Pakistan would find they have a lot in common if they visited each other's cabs.

As I mature in my interests, I marvel at the enduring efficiency of these old and sometimes under-maintained railway systems. There is a lot of classic railroading taking place on these lines - without the aid of hi-rail equipment or gasoline-powered maintenance of way tools. Trains often operate with 20 coaches as these lines provide essential transportation for much of the population.

*  *  *

Bureaucracy gets a bad name.

Often used as a synonym for 'obstruction', 'bureaucracy' is often viewed with disdain. However, when it is working properly, a bureaucracy organizes the work of, and preserves the culture of, a large organization. We would not want hospitals or police departments 'winging it' if new employees decided ... that Operating Room infection control masking is 'over the top' ... or that 'shooting a few crooks' would 'send a strong message'. 

Few organizations have more rigid written rules to follow than railways and the military. Generally, these rules are in place because they have been proven to lead to successful outcomes, save lives and prevent the loss of expensive equipment.

Health care and the military came together in this 1912 Manual of Elementary Military Hygiene. The British generally went into their dominions, colonies, and their Crown Rule in India with a robust military presence. 

To ensure success, they had to keep their soldiers healthy. You'll notice that the statistics they use are mostly from very warm places - nothing like the invigorating climate of British North America.



Here are the criteria to be considered when planning the hygienic layout of a typical camp.


If you look at the statistics below in Appendix I for Afghanistan (1878-80) and North-West Frontier, India (1897-8) I think they want us to acknowledge that disease causes more admissions and deaths ... than 'killed and wounded in action'. 

And this is often the case for foreign troops in wars, shown in Appendix II.


Rations to be provided on a daily basis are carefully specified in Appendix III.

In Appendix IV, it is important to ensure that soldiers housed and sleeping in barracks have adequate space.


 ... so that was 'The Last War' ...


*  *  *


World War I

The Next War.


It caught most well-trained and experienced military leaders by surprise 
and condemned their conventional efforts to failure.


from: Light Railways of the First World War; WJK Davies; 1967; David & Charles.

In the First World War, fighting was conducted in virtually all climates around the globe. However, the main preoccupation was with the European Front. It provided an early example of industrialized war. Trains delivered mass-produced weapons, ammunition and canned rations as close as possible to the Front.

If soldiers could be evacuated beyond the range of artillery, disease could be treated under civilized conditions. Wounds experienced in the trenches under fire were another matter. Soldiers lived in ditches and holes because they saved lives.

The 'hay ride' above is being photographed in 'the Rear' ... there are bushes and trees which have not been splintered by artillery. Smoke-producing steam engines would not be permitted within sight of enemy artillery observers because they would become instant targets.

*  *  *

from: World War I in Photographs; JHJ Andriessen; 2002; Rebo.

Above: These burrowing soldiers have probably violated old hygiene regulations for barrack construction. 
They are probably still in artillery range.

While thousands died in pointless attacks resulting in gains measured in yards ... 

From time to time, there were successful offensives 
which got soldiers out of their deadlocked, sewage filled ditches.

*  *  *

from: World War I in Photographs; JHJ Andriessen; 2002; Rebo.

Given the range and effectiveness of artillery (and machine guns and snipers), 
it was sometimes impossible to bring food and water to the front line trenches 
... or to rotate troops to an area in the rear for scheduled rest. 

Basic sanitation and burying the dead were often improvised on the spot. 

With heavy bombardments and static trench areas, the dead did not stay buried.

*  *  *

from: World War I in Photographs; JHJ Andriessen; 2002; Rebo.

Draft animals suffered terribly - particularly in the mud.
The alternative was using human bearer parties for freight.

Horses or mules were essential for moving heavy guns.
Animals killed by enemy artillery added to the hygiene nightmare.

*  *  *

The Guide
A Manual for the Canadian Militia

(The 'Canadian Army' title did not exist formally until 1940.)

This 1880 book was updated and rushed out the door - typical of most activities of the early war.

It assumed that the future would bear a resemblance to the past.

In its 300 pages, it provides the institutional memory necessary to organize all aspects of an army.

However, it has nothing on how to provide bureaucracy - or anything else - in trenches teeming with well-fed rats, under regular shelling, with clouds of poison gas silently drifting across No Man's Land, or dispensed in deadly puffs from artillery gas shells. 

Nowhere does it suggest, when advancing into the overlapping fields of fire of enemy machine guns, how to safely pass barbed wire entanglements during the course of an attack.



Over the din of battle, it had long been prescribed that commands were
to be communicated and relayed by a loud portable device powered by human lungs.

After World War One,
two everyday pieces of music were transposed in commemoration ceremonies
... to represent human death, followed by a resurrection. 

Here, they appear in their normal daily sequence.





from: The Battle of the Somme; Martin Gilbert; 2006; McClelland & Stewart.

Having been relieved from their front-line positions, 
Canadian troops are rotating into a rest area.

It was about 30 years after World War One that the booklet, below, was published.

However, an (unsanctioned) song from that war reflects 

the old traditions (a rum ration), 

the perceived daily occupations of the more privileged ranks,

and a notorious technology of World War One
(the barbed wire entanglement).





YouTube link:

Hanging on the Old Barbed Wire 

from: Oh! What a Lovely War (1969)


24 October 2025

Canadian Facts .. 1924! Tariffs, Trade, Trains and Tumplines

... and Canada's historic connection with Ukraine. 


Perhaps, it has always been difficult to be Canada ...

This 4.5 x 7 inch booklet was probably ideal for an interior coat pocket. If you were on a streetcar or a commuter train, waiting for an appointment or looking for some entertaining facts to bring into conversation, this 90-page publication was ideal to help you pass the time. All 'aged paper' selections below come from this booklet. 

I have tried to extract and share some historical perspectives of the topics consuming Canadian news these days. In some situations, it has always been like this. In others, we are living in very different times.

It was interesting to discover that Royal Military College graduate, Lt-Col Reuben Leonard (1860-1930), donated (the previous year - see the bottom of Page 20) the real estate which contributed the expression 'Chatham House Rules' to today's dialogues of journalists, policy experts and politicians. His civil engineering career began with the CPR and in 1911 he became the Chairman of the National Transcontinental Railway. 



*  *  *

To take you quickly into this era, here is a sample of the trackside refreshments offered to passengers on the Canadian Pacific Railway.

from: Canada, A History in Photographs; Hall & Dodds; Hurtig.

Canadian Pacific lunch counter at Kenora, 1921.

*  *  *






from: The Last Best West; Jean Bruce; 1976; Fitzhenry & Whiteside.

*  *  *

Caution: It seems that the notorious Canadian 'Log Products' Lobby (with 3126 establishments) has tried to skew the facts by achieving a double entry, below! Or maybe it's just a typo.

We can only imagine the tremendous demand for hydro poles, telephone, and railway telegraph poles ... in order to create the complicated urban networks, and pioneering rural lines of wires, across the broad expanse of Canada at this point in history. Don't forget the need for railway ties, either.

*  *  *

from: A Toronto Album; Michael Filey; 1970; University of Toronto Press.

Above: Old Union Station, Toronto. Undated photograph.

*  *  *

Canadian Global Affairs

The two selections below come from: Documents on Canadian External Relations, Volume 1, 1909-1918; 1967; Department of External Affairs. 

This interesting 900-page book - published as a government Centennial Project, no doubt - provides the correspondence exchanged over key events in Canadian history. 

A typical memorable example is provided by correspondence on the handling of Canadian Pacific steamships during World War One. If they were found to be in Britain, The [British] Admiralty would often requisition them as war transports - generally for moving troops to places like the Dardanelles or Egypt. The Company and Canadian officials sent countless requests to have them returned for essential Canadian uses, but the messages sent in reply generally suggested that the needs of the British Empire were more critical than the needs of a single colony or dominion.

Of course, after the experiences of Canadians in World War One, we had learned to stand up against much of his kind of treatment and Canada was on its way to becoming a more independent country.

*  *  *

The first example comes from 1909 via a long memo sent by our Minister of Finance to 'our' ambassador in Washington - on Page 761 of the book. It considers home country tariffs on foreign imports to be something 'done to' foreigners ... a traditional protectionist view of the use of tariffs which probably seems quite familiar these days.

Sent: 1 December 1909

Memo from William Fielding (1848-1929), Minister of Finance, Canada. 
to 
James Bryce, 1st Viscount Bryce (1838-1922), Ambassador of Britain [and its colonies and dominions] to the United States.

*  *  *

Below, a London-born Governor General of Canada writes to 'his boss', who was also born in London.
This correspondence is about the same matter.

Grey thinks, metaphorically, that 'we have all the cards' as he refers to aces, trumps and tricks.

One significant irritant was that American paper makers were afraid that Canada would deny them cheap wood pulp. Of course, newspapers consumed enormous quantities of low-value paper back then. 

This trade relations topic fills 42 pages of my book (most of which I've read) and took from December 1909 until July 1911 to settle. 

Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia made things difficult for a while by prohibiting exports of pulpwood from their Crown Lands - while US industry essentially wanted free trade in Canadian pulp.

... Perhaps it has always been difficult to manage trade with the US ... The US Congress and Britain had an influence in the regulation of Canadian tariffs and trade during this 1909-1911 negotiation. 




Above: 
Albert Grey, 4th Earl Grey (1851-1917)
Governor General
to 
Robert Crewe-Milnes, 1st Marquess of Crewe (1858-1945)
Colonial Secretary

The Democratic Speaker of the US House of Representatives, Champ Clark, was a proponent of annexing Canada. In 1911, he spoke about how 'The people of Canada are of our blood and language'. He looked forward to the American flag flying over all of 'British North America' to the North Pole. He thought the Reciprocity Treaty would be the first step in annexing Canada ... The Congressional Record noted there was 'prolonged applause' in the House at the end of his speech.

In 1911 there was a 'Free Trade Election' ('Reciprocity' with the US) in Canada. The Liberals were the free traders and the Conservatives favoured protectionism. Conservative Borden beat Laurier ... in part, due to the anti-American feelings which developed over the advocating of annexation, etc.

*  *  *





Above: So this is where tariffs were 6 years after World War One ended.

*  *  *

The Auto Industry


from: Quebec 1850-1950; Lionel Koffler; 2005; Firefly Books.

Above: In 1918, not far from the birthplace of Rolly Martin they were selling a 'Canadian brand' of autos. Experienced carriage makers, accustomed to building reinforced vehicles for horses to pull, sometimes tried their hand at making horseless carriages. 

This explains the career path of Sam McLaughlin - the son of an Oshawa carriage maker. His car company began operation in 1908. His acquaintance, former carriage maker William C Durant (founder of General Motors), pulled McLaughlin into his dynamic and persuasive orbit. Durant's Buick powertrains were used in McLaughlin's cars.

McLaughlin bought the Canadian subsidiary of Chevrolet in Oshawa in 1915. In 1918 his two companies merged and were sold to GM. McLaughlin became President of General Motors Canada. The Canadian McLaughlin-Buicks were produced until 1942. 

*  *  *

The Post Office 



from: Vanishing Canada; Rick Butler; 1980; Clarke, Irwin & Co.

Rural mail delivery, Ancaster, Ontario, 1880.

The first Super Mailbox! ("Is that all it does?")

Historians say the item held by the gentleman to the right was a ... 'News Paper'.

*  *  *

War & Militia Facts

from: The World War, Volume III; ed: Holland Thompson; 1920; Grolier Society.






from: The World War, Volume III; ed: Holland Thompson; 1920; Grolier Society.