Showing posts with label 1980s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1980s. Show all posts

26 July 2024

The New Brunswick Railway & the CPR Gibson Subdivision (1988)

You can see Rolly Martin's country place of origin on the map below. He grew up on a farm near St Modeste, Quebec. The closest railway was the Temiscouata - a company which was incorporated in 1885, and had faded considerably by 1950 when the CNR took over its operations. 

Rolly said he was never particularly impressed with this railway ... but, as we know, he ended up working on big CPR steam power. Railfans do appreciate the Temiscouata's novelty, however. 

from: Atlas of Canada; 1981; Reader's Digest Assn of Canada.

As was frequently the case, the strategic engineering of the future Gibson Subdivision was determined by the drainage patterns of the land. Once the route from the St Lawrence (at Riviere du Loup) gets to Lake Temiscouata, it begins to follow the valleys of the Madawaska and Saint John Rivers toward Fredericton. The railway line is a faint grey beside the red Highway 185 on the 1981 map above.

The Fredericton (known as Fort Nashwaak in 1692) to Riviere du Loup (established 1673) route was a well-used early Canadian travel corridor which took advantage of the rivers and lakes between the two points.

*  *  *

However, at this particular location near the St Lawrence River ... early railway construction was delayed because there was first a political question to be solved. There was some dispute regarding the border between the British North American colonies and territories ... and the United States at several places across the continent. One contentious area involved the land around today's state of Maine.

The Webster-Ashburton Treaty (1842) settled some of the border issues. Alexander Baring, 1st Baron Ashburton ... of the Baring banking family (Barings Bank: 1762-1995) ... was the British delegate assigned to the case. He was arguably closer to Americans ... because of his banking experience with them ... than he was to the British North American citizens and politicians. As often happened in these circumstances, Britain (the boss of Canada) gave the United States a pretty good outcome.

Whether it was fair or not, this settlement did provide some certainty for railway projects undertaken near the border.

Here is a railway company prospectus from 1871 from archive.org .


Alexander Gibson (1818-1913) has undersigned the prospectus. He learned the lumber business from the bottom up and had a talent for making operations more efficient. With experience as a director on a railway company board, he began to develop his plan for the New Brunswick Railway. 

Back when most structures and transportation vehicles were made primarily out of wood ... and there was robust demand for lumber exports to Britain ... the New Brunswick government was offering generous grants of timbered land to railway builders. 

Think twice, spike once ... how far apart should the rails be?

The Government of Canada had just repealed the railway statute (1851-1870) promoting Provincial Gauge - 5 feet 6 inches ...

Between 1871 and 1881, Gibson's railway used a 3 foot 6 inch gauge - not the Standard Gauge (for Britain and the USA) of 4 feet 8.5 inches.

It was conventional wisdom at the time that narrow gauge lines were more economical (in many cases) because rolling stock was smaller, and therefore bridges and the track structure could be lighter and cheaper. Gibson was a provincial lumberman without the aspiration to build a transcontinental railway empire. If he was just building a local railway and funds were limited, narrow gauge might be good enough.

... I also wonder if a narrow gauge main line would be beneficial ... so that temporary, rough logging branches could be built into the bush using the same narrow gauge. In other words, this would save the cost of transferring logs/lumber between railcars at a 'break of gauge' point where these temporary logging branches met the public main line. 

Above & below: A map of the New Brunswick Railway and an example of its Mason-built Fairlie-patent locomotives. With the railway's conversion to Standard Gauge in 1881, these were sold off to other railways, for example, to the narrow gauge Prince Edward Island Railway.

Map and photo from: Narrow Gauge Railways of Canada; Omer Lavallee; 1972; Railfare.

Another photo of a similar Gibson narrow gauge engine is lettered for the "R du L R R" - even though Alexander Gibson never built his railway beyond Edmundston. In the end, it would be the Temiscouata Railway which would provide that final link to the Grand Trunk Railway's system (later the CNR) and the St Lawrence River at Riviere du Loup. 

A narrow gauge locomotive transported from the US on a Standard Gauge railcar.

With a boost from Sir John A Macdonald's protectionist National Policy (began 1879) Gibson imported cotton from the USA and built a large textile mill and a model company town at Marysville - now part of Fredericton. The restored building still exists as Marysville Place - a provincial government office building.

In the late 1880s, Gibson was setting up his mill and working on his other businesses. No longer was it one of his priorities to build a railway to Riviere du Loup - if it ever was. 

Meanwhile, the Canadian Pacific Railway had been very active in expanding its national network and acquiring a fleet of ships for service to Asia and Europe. The CPR had built a deliberately direct eastern main line through Maine to reach the year-round port of Saint John, New Brunswick. The CPR had a long history of increasing its network quickly by acquiring (leasing) smaller railways ... 

In 1891, the CPR leased Gibson's New Brunswick Railway for its usual term of 999 years.

*  *  *

from: Appendix to Statutory History of the Steam & Electric Railways of Canada; 1937-1941; Department of Transport.

Looking at the 1941 map of the CPR's eastern network (above) you can see their 'Short Line' through Maine (5 & 4) and Gibson's New Brunswick Railway line (6).

*  *  *

from: Altitudes of the Dominion of Canada; 1901; Geological Survey of Canada.

Integrating Gibson's New Brunswick Railway with other acquisitions, the CPR ended what they named the "Gibson Subdivision" at Newburg, New Brunswick. 

The column at the right shows the altitude above Sea Level in feet. 
If you want to go off and draw a track profile ... don't worry ... I'll still be here when you get back.

*  *  *

from: Canada, Descriptive Atlas; 1932; Minister of Immigration & Colonization.

Above and below are different images from the same map. Before, we looked at a map of the CPR in isolation. Here the CPR system (shown in green) appears with the CNR system (red) to give a complete picture of the regional railway network. 

On the map below, you can also see the Temiscouata Railway (black) leaving the map to the west as it connects Edmundston with Riviere du Loup and the Canadian National Railways system as it existed back then.

from: Canada, Descriptive Atlas; 1932; Minister of Immigration & Colonization.

*  *  *

from: Employee Timetable; 30 April 1950; Canadian Pacific Railway.

To make things more confusing for amateur railway historians, the CPR (at some point) reversed the mileage numbering on this line. If you look at the 'altitudes' list farther above - it showed Fredericton at mile 0.0 ... whereas, Fredericton is at mile 60.7 on the employee timetable above.

For those of you who did not go off to draw a track profile ... the ruling grade northbound began at Barton. The ruling grade southbound began at Nackawic. This is based on a CPR Haulage Capacity booklet from 1962.

*  *  *

Vacation Trip 1988

We had never been to Newfoundland before. The Newfoundland Railway was being shut down during that summer. We had a great trip on Newfoundland - across and back - but only saw a couple of actual Newfoundland Railway movements. Many of the locomotives had already been massed at St John's for sale and export.

By the time of our return along that historic Fredericton-Riviere du Loup transportation corridor ... we had become quite habituated to stopping, photographing and documenting each notable railway feature we saw. 

The following photos were taken on 5 August 1988. We began travelling north from South Devon around noon. It was a typically overcast and hazy vacation day.


South Devon, Mi 59.0 Gibson Subdivision looking timetable south.

*  *  *


South Devon looking timetable north.
This photo better shows the diamond at the crossing by the CNR.

*  *  *


Douglas Field, Mi 54.6 Gibson Sub looking north.
I believe this was once a showplace for agricultural livestock.
The particular use of this elevated dock is a bit of a mystery.
Notice the vertical supports: Re-used tie-plate-notched horizontal bridge/trestle timbers.

*  *  *


Here is the location formerly known as Cardigan on the 'altitudes' list. 
Burtts Corner, Mi 42.6, Gibson Sub.
This view looks timetable south.

(There was also a Burtt Lake on the 'altitudes' list which was near today's Hainesville.)

The reason for this 'monumental' station on this branch line is a mystery.
It may have been a central location to house the two 'section gangs' 
which maintained the track between Mi 33.1 and Mi 53.2 .
(Sometimes railways had to provide facilities for employees
working in areas remote from towns with available housing.)

A station agent and his family probably lived here, as well.


A friend I've had since around 1980 recently moved to Burtt's Corner with his partner.
Finally realizing that they lived near this memorable station caused me to send them copies of these two photos 
... and it also caused me to poke away at this post about the Gibson Sub.

(The sheer 'beauty' of my photography was a reason for never posting these photos.)

*  *  *


I believe this was taken at about Mi 30 Gibson Sub, looking north.
This may be part of the ruling grade at Barton.

*  *  *

As an indication of how little was left when we went through in 1988,
here is a 1986 employee timetable for the Gibson Subdivision.





Travelling north, beyond the end of the Gibson Sub, here is Mi 68 of the Shogomoc Sub. looking north.
... about 4 miles north of Hartland.

We left our starting point - South Devon - about three hours earlier.

*  *  *


Finally, here is Florenceville, New Brunswick, Mile 74.9 on the Shogomoc Sub.
Looking south (above) and north (below).

Today, I think the ground on which this station was built is somewhere under the large McCain Foods complex.

My mother had a school friend who married a potato/pea farmer and lived in nearby Glassville. 
This may have been my third or fourth visit here.
It's a really nice part of the country.



02 February 2024

CNR 1985 Hespeler - Look! There's a really old sta...



" ... Do you want to stop? "

" ... ... No ... it's OK ... keep going. "

This is a representative dialogue from all of our driving vacations of the 1980s and 1990s.

On this day, we kept rolling because we needed to get to Vienna (explained below) ...


*  *  *

Over the years, this has been a neglected mystery photo, 
but this 'new internet thing' quickly answers my questions ...

1) By fire: 2003. 
2) That's a woolen goods factory.




from: Two Divisions to Bluewater; Peter Bowers; 1983; Boston Mills Press.

Check out the baggage cart and train order signal.

And hello, fellow reporting marks squinters! 

... It's:

The Manistee & Northeastern!

(circa 1887-1924)


*  *  *


Grand Trunk Railway, 1916


from: Grand Trunk Railway, Official Guide, June 1916.

* * *

The local interurban railway, 1916


from: Official Guide, June 1916.


from: The Intercity Electric Railway Industry in Canada; John F Due; 1966; University of Toronto Press.


from: The Intercity Electric Railway Industry in Canada; John F Due; 1966; University of Toronto Press.

*  *  *

This 1933 map shows the strategic picture of the railway lines around Kitchener and Galt.

Going against our modern colour convention ... CPR is green, CNR is red.


from: Canada Descriptive Atlas; 1933; Minister of Immigration & Colonization.


*  *  *

Local Canadian National Railways employee timetable, 1957




*  *  *

1916 Topographic Map - Hespeler


from: Historical Topographic Map Digitization Project https://ocul.on.ca/topomaps/collection/


*  *  *

1916 Topographic Map - Berlin to Galt, Hespeler


from: Historical Topographic Map Digitization Project https://ocul.on.ca/topomaps/collection/


*  *  *

Bonus - A Self-Guided Tour of Vienna

My sister was obtaining her performance diploma in the City of Music, Vienna, Austria. For a couple of years, we had to write letters on light airmail paper, put the little sheets in hand-addressed envelopes, and put the correct postage (based on weight) on the envelope. It was precisely like email ... except it took a couple of weeks to get there, and consumed paper and money.

My sister was always saying that we should come over and visit. 

As we always did ... in the 1980s and 1990s ... we were looking at the paper provincial highway map of Ontario to plan our summer vacation ... and had an idea ...


David Letterman began his Late Night show in 1982, but we had been big fans of his daytime show back in 1980. 

ProTip: If you work in health care, you can often wangle a job where you get lots of weekdays off ... because you have been working lots of nights and weekends! 

Letterman's unique and original talent to aggrandize the mundane for comedic effect permeated our thinking, and influenced the 'storyboard' of our self-guided tour of Vienna ... Ontario ...

There are many more photos in the original photoset showing ALL the local buildings with 'Vienna' on them.
They made quite a bundle for the calculation of airmail postage.


(As I prepared these photos in 2024, I 'toured' around Old Vienna by Google, looking for the landmarks we photographed.
In particular, the Home Hardware is a really nice store today.)



Here we are, ready for fun, adventure and culture in the City of Music



Vienna Auto Wreckers and Auto Speed Shop has the finest selection 
of gently-used genuine BMW and Mercedes auto parts 
to keep you rolling down the Danube in style.

Shake hands with the Devil!
Bring in your VW Beetle 
and push it to the limit 
on our new chassis dynamometer.

Four on the floor never felt so good!



Is your old ancestral Schloss showing it's age?
Does your family room look like the Lipizzaners live in it?

Well, come to the Vienna Home and Castle Building Center 
for the best in do-it-yourself ideas, tips, hints, know-how and advice.

This week they're offering some great deals on sheets of plywood with Baroque corners.

Chase those fetid gargoyles from your old Gothic bathroom, 
then part the curtains with pride to show everyone your own Wiener Staatsoper!
You'll want the neighbours to see it, too.

The next time Franz Josef and Sisi 
bring the kids in the camper and stay for a week, 
they'll be mighty pleased to hold court in your new throne room.

That's the Vienna Home and Castle Building Center ...
Where are they?

It's easy to remember, and hard to forget,
because they're right down there on Plank Road.

... You'll be glad you did.



And so we say a fond farewell to Vienna, City of Music.

The new friends we've made.
The adventures we've had.

Sure we're tired.

... But it's a good kind of tired.


Outro:



26 January 2024

CNR 1985 A Visit to Guelph & 6167


We were vacationing in south-western Ontario and after our early morning departure from Burlington, we stopped in Guelph to see 'an old friend' of mine.

Grainy old prints remain of this reunion ...



Built by Montreal Locomotive Works and added to the CNR roster in March 1940, 6167 was put on display at Guelph in 1967.

This was a beautiful and highly-detailed cosmetic restoration - perhaps employing all the paint embellishments seen only on CNR excursion engines of the 1960s. A touch that I found particularly clever at the time, was the use of silver paint on the head of the rail and on the treads of the wheels.

Sadly, there is never a permanent civic endowment to ensure a roof is kept over 'civic locomotives'. Consequently, they spend a lot of their static outdoor careers as boarded-up ugly black hulks - in the eyes of local citizens. All of this careful and sensitive restoration was washed away by the elements.



The CNR Guelph station is at the left edge of the photo.



This headlight-equipped bike must have been on the road before we were!






Looking left from the view of the station is the local switcher and a train order signal.



The local armoury (that castellated building) was constructed in 1906 during the height of the Canadian volunteer militia period.


from: Dent's Canadian School Atlas; 1936-1956; JM Dent & Sons. 

Above is a circa 1956 map of south-western Ontario showing Guelph - west of Toronto.


Government of Canada topographic map, Guelph 1935 from: Historical Top Map Digitization Project, https://ocul.on.ca/topomaps/collection/

Above, a 1935 topographic map shows the railway lines serving Guelph. 

The abandoned right-of-way east to Acton is probably the 'financially hopeless' Toronto Suburban (interurban) Railway which was abandoned in 1931. 

At one point the TS was owned by Sir William Mackenzie for its 'franchise rights'. 

There is an excellent Wikipedia page about the line if you are interested!

*  *  *

My original childhood encounter with the 6167 can be seen via the links below.

CNR 1963 CRHA Excursion: 6167, Montreal to Victoriaville

CNR 1963 CRHA Excursion: 6167, Montreal to Victoriaville, Part 2


03 February 2023

1989 Portage la Prairie - On the CNR Side, Part 2

Here are some CNR freights pounding through Portage, as well an employee timetable for that era. 

Here is East Tower circa 2014 via a Google image. Originally, an interlocking tower controlled the junction between the Canadian Northern and the Grand Trunk Pacific at this site. After the Canadian National Railways settled in, it was still the site of crossovers between the North and South main tracks of the CNR line from Winnipeg as they reached Portage.



In the 'middle' of the CNoR yard at Portage were significant steam locomotive maintenance facilities. Probably this postcard - now over a century old - was photographed from one of them (or a grain elevator). Looking south, you see the historical orientation of non-CPR lines in the Portage railway yard area. From the north: Canadian Northern, Grand Trunk Pacific, Great Northern. I recently sent a copy of this postcard to my uncle (a resident of Portage for about half a century) and he noted that none of the cityscape in the postcard is recognizable today. 

*  *  *  *  *

Inserted after this post was assembled ...

As someone who is never smart enough to stop researching something hopeless ... 
After I finished most of this post ... I think I found the postcard location ...

As seen via Google from Portage la Prairie circa 2020 at Tupper St N and Saskatchewan Ave W ... here is a good match for a steeple/church roofline in the postcard (it is the steeple nearest to the right edge of the postcard) ... today's Trinity United Church. The street with the well-treed sidewalk at the right margin of the postcard may be today's 1st Street NW. 

... so the boxcars in the postcard are located somewhere to the west of the location of the today's CNR station (ex-Grand Trunk Pacific).

end of insert

*  *  *  *  *

At the west end of the traditional CNR yard area is the switching plant at Kearns. This view is via Google from 2018 or so. The yard lead, at the left, blends into the two main tracks through Portage. The track in the left foreground is the first few feet of the Gladstone Sub - it goes west to Dauphin. The track to the right carries on as the Rivers Sub, through to Melville, Saskatchewan.


Above is my photo from September 1989 showing the area of CNR West Tower at Portage. Kearns is just behind the camera and the camera is facing west. The tracks, left to right, are: VIA connector, Rivers Sub, Gladstone Sub. You can see the CPR Carberry Sub crossing the CNR tracks westbound from right to left.

A forest of absolute signals! Let's go through them from left to right ...

  • 1. VIA connector protecting its switch and showing switch alignment/occupancy via Kearns.
  • 2. Rivers Sub protecting the VIA connector switch.*
  • 3,4. Rivers Sub, protecting the CPR on both sides of the diamond.
  • 5. Gladstone Sub (eastbound), protecting the CPR on the diamond.
  • 6. Gladstone Sub (eastbound), protecting Kearns.*
  • 7. Gladstone Sub protecting the CPR on the diamond.
  • 8. CPR Carberry Sub westbound protecting the CNR on the diamond.
(*The signals for eastbounds located east of the diamond also show switch alignment/occupancy via Kearns. And some of the 8 signal masts shown are certainly designed/wired to protect the rear of preceding trains. Imagine the fun of being an engineer who designs railway signals!)

Before supplying an employee timetable which is nearly contemporary with the photos, here are a couple of freights ...

*  *  *

On September 8, an afternoon freight is westbound at Kearns ...



On September 9, a refreshing vacation rain meets a morning eastbound intermodal as it is about to pass by the Portage CNR station. Bonus points if you spotted a problem with the class lights. 

*  *  *

Below is the employee timetable. A Portage vacation photography binge generally involved the two miles of track between West and East Towers. As the CPR/CNR diamond (with a 20 mph speed limit) was also where the rival lines converged, one could argue that Kearns was the place to be.

Below, you'll notice the First Class trains - the Supercontinental, 'the train to Churchill', and the Canadian. As mentioned in Part 1, the Canadian departs the Rivers Sub via the VIA connecting track to the CPR Carberry Sub. 



Above and below: Also, you'll see that the CNR still maintains an operator at Portage for clearances, etc.


Below: Items 2.2 to 2.6 cover operations at Portage ... and Item 3.3 .



Under 7.1 you'll notice Great Northern RG 42. I once heard a crew refer to having put something into the 'old Great Northern'.

The VIA connecting track comes up in 7.2 .


*  *  *



Above and below, on September 9, a westbound coal empty crosses the CPR at West Tower.



Above: On September 9 at 14hr, an eastbound potash train is seen at Kearns.

Above: During the late afternoon of September 10, an eastbound grain train passes by the Portage station.

September 13, 1989

After a race to Moose Jaw and a sweep east along the border, we're back!

(To see half a dozen posts on the history of that area, old maps, and our trip, just press the Portage Interlocking 01 radio button at the top and click on anything with 1989 in the title.)


These three photos show a westbound on the afternoon of September 13 at Kearns.



*  *  *


No doubt being amused at how some people from Ontario choose to spend their vacations, 
this equipment move was kind enough to pose on the Rivers Sub for a portrait of both sides ... 

... Actually, he was probably waiting for the CPR to release the diamond.


In the background, I think you see the Gladstone Sub ... in the foreground, the VIA connecting track to the CPR Carberry Sub.


Finally, we have a westbound at Kearns, with the CNR maintenance of way equipment located just west of the station. 

Dare we suggest that it is on the roadbed of 'the Old Great Northern'?