Nakusp and Slocan Railway explained

The Nakusp and Slocan Railway (N&S) is a historic Canadian railway that operated in the West Kootenay region of southeastern British Columbia. The N&S initially connected Nakusp and Three Forks but soon extended to Sandon.

Proposal

The 1891 discovery of silver in the Slocan Range created a mining boom. A railway to transport ore was crucial for commercial mining. In 1892, the province issued the N&S charter, which the Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) leased the next year. Steamboat connections on Upper Arrow Lake, were northward from Nakusp to a spur from the CP main line at Revelstoke. About this time, the Kaslo and Slocan Railway (K&S), a Great Northern Railway subsidiary, received a competing charter for a route westward from Kaslo.

Construction

In July 1893, D. McGillivray, manager of the Inland Development & Construction Co., the principal contractor, commenced work.[1] [2] Progressing southeastward, the rail head from Nakusp reached Rosebery in August 1894[3] and Three Forks that October. The 36.4miles route attracted a $3,200 per mile grant. Whereas horse packtrains had carried ore from the surrounding mines to New Denver, Three Forks became the new aggregation point.

The advance of the K&S toward Sandon, the vicinity of the most important mines, prompted the N&S to also extend 4.21NaN1 to that destination. Arriving in December 1895, regular service began. The festering CP and GN antagonism flared up between the N&S and K&S. That month, K&S crews set loose occupied N&S cars, demolished a bridge, track, a freight shed, and the station, and attacked repair crews. CP subsequently relocated the station and track from disputed land.

Operation

Initially offering lower rates than the N&S, the K&S carried over 80 per cent of Slocan ore, but the proximity of track to the mines determined the carrier in most instances. Agreeing to avoid rate wars, a tenuous truce existed.

From 1897, the Rosebery–Slocan City ferry southward across Slocan Lake linked to the CP Columbia and Kootenay Railway (C&K).[4] Low water and ice on the narrows of the Arrow Lakes made the water route south to Robson (which connected to Nelson and the Trail smelter) unreliable. The combined N&S, ferry, and C&K bypassed this problematic section. To avoid difficult grades on the main line, much eastbound freight was diverted to the route during the early 1900s. Trains were split in half to ascend the steep grade on the Nakusp–Rosebery portion.[5] The route lost importance with the completion of the southern main line in 1915.[6]

A washout in June 1909, closed the Sandon extension until that October. Furthermore, the steep N&S grades, especially on this section, proved expensive to operate throughout the life of the line.

In 1913, the N&S completed rebuilding the abandoned K&S track, creating a Nakusp–Kaslo through service.

Passenger travel northeast of Rosebery ceased in 1933. Damage from the 1955 floods on Carpenter Creek ended all traffic east of Denver Canyon.[7] Passenger service on the line and lake ferry finished in 1954. The final freight run on these sections was either December 1988 or March 1989.[8] However, the latter service had reduced to twice weekly by the 1960s[9] and once weekly by 1980.[10]

Route

From Nakusp, the line climbed steeply to Summit Lake and descended to Hills on Slocan Lake, encompassing a 2.5 per cent grade. The railway bordered the lake's eastern shore via Rosebery. Bypassing New Denver, a 2.5 per cent climb followed Carpenter Creek terminating at Three Forks, situated over 800feet below Payne Bluff.

The southeastward Three Forks to Sandon extension presented a 4.5 per cent grade.

Sandon–Nakusp
Stations
Mile 1898 Mile 1907[11] Mile 1914 Mile 1929[12] Mile 1935[13] Mile 1943[14] Mile 1953[15]
0.0 Sandon 0 Sandon 40.7 Sandon 28.9 Sandon
37.4 Parapet 25.6 Parapet
4.2 T F 5 T F 36.4 T F 26.6 T F
5.4 A C 6 A C 35.3 A C 31.0 Alamo
8.5 D C 9 D C 32.5 D C 30.5 D C
12.3 Roseberry 13 Rosebery 28.4 Rosebery 34.6 Rosebery 34.5 Rosebery 0.0 Rosebery 67.2 Rosebery
17.2 Slocan Lk. 18 Hills 23.5 Hills 39.5 Hills 39.3 Hills 4.9 Hills 72.1 Hills
28.0 Summit 28 Summit 12.7 S L 50.3 S L 50.8 S L 16.3 S L 83.5 S L
5.3 Brouse 57.7 Brouse 57.6 Brouse 23.1 Brouse 90.3 Brouse
40.5 Nakusp 41 Nakusp 0.0 Nakusp 63.0 Nakusp 62.9 Nakusp 28.4 Nakusp 95.6 Nakusp

Rail trails

The Nakusp & Slocan Trail comprises Nakusp–Rosebery. North of Summit Lake is well maintained, but south is more rudimentary. The Rosebery to Three Forks Regional Trail (Galena Trail) covers the named section. A designated non-motorized greenway, the latter is well managed.[16]

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tribune, 20 Jul 1893 . 1 . www.library.ubc.ca.
  2. Web site: Nakusp Ledge, 14 Dec 1893 . 1 . www.library.ubc.ca.
  3. Web site: Nakusp Ledge, 2 Aug 1894 . 8 . www.library.ubc.ca.
  4. Web site: Ledge, 13 Jan 1898 . 8 . www.library.ubc.ca.
  5. Web site: Lardeau Mining Review, 8 Aug 1907. 1 . www.library.ubc.ca.
  6. Web site: Daily Colonist, 2 Jun 1915 . 5 . www.archive.org. 1915 .
  7. Web site: Province, 28 Sep 1980 . 30 . Passenger service between the Slocan and Kootenay Lakes ceased in 1933, and freight service was permanently halted by the floods of 1955. . www.newspapers.com.
  8. Web site: Rosebery BC railway barge slip . www.bigdoer.com. 18 April 2013 .
  9. Web site: CP Spanner, Aug–Sep 1966 . www.okthepk.ca.
  10. Web site: Province, 28 Sep 1980 . 30 . A weekly barge service on Slocan Lake is the sole remnant of Canadian Pacific's once imposing BC freshwater fleet . www.newspapers.com.
  11. Web site: 1907 timetable . 44 . www.traingeek.ca.
  12. Web site: 1929 timetable . 31 (TT116) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  13. Web site: 1935 timetable . 11 (TT 70) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  14. Web site: 1943 timetable . 46 (TT158) . www.streamlinermemories.info.
  15. Web site: 1953 timetable . 47 (TT134) . www.library.ubc.ca.
  16. Web site: N&S Railway, GalenaTrail . www.trailsbc.ca.