The first inter-city mainline across south-eastern Ontario was the Toronto-Montreal Grand Trunk Railway (GTR) built through Kingston in 1856, later Canadian National Railways (CNR). The second mainline was the Ontario & Quebec Railway, built through Sharbot Lake in 1883, later Canadian Pacific.
Enter two of Canada’s most dynamic railway builders, Sir William Mackenzie and Sir Donald Mann. Having begun their Canadian Northern Railway empire in Western Canada, they were now seeking an Ontario connection. Such a link would enable Mackenzie and Mann to complete a transcontinental line linking British Columbia to Quebec. Their railway empire grew to 9,433 miles in 19 years!
The GTR had established its line early, able to choose the best route with stations and yards close to downtown areas of communities along Lake Ontario. The CNoR was left with an inferior route, far from towns or cities. It even found itself paralleling and following the GTR from Port Hope to Deseronto.
Mackenzie and Mann built their mostly-new southern Ontario line in three sections. The first left Todmorden, outside Toronto, reaching Trenton 105 miles later, opening on September 30, 1911. The second section connected Trenton to Deseronto over 28 miles, opening January 30, 1912. The final section from Sydenham to Hurdman, outside Ottawa, 86 miles long, entered service on December 30, 1913. But wait, what about Deseronto-Sydenham?
Mackenzie and Mann bought the Deseronto-Sydenham Bay of Quinte (BofQ) Railway in 1909, at a substantial loss to its previous owners. The only pre-existing part of their route, not requiring new construction, its purchase completed a through Toronto-Ottawa Canadian Northern inter-city mainline, extending to Montreal. The CNoR did re-engineer some parts of the line to make it faster for passenger trains, notably at Yarker, and between Sydenham and Harrowsmith. Here's a subsequent post on the bridges of Yarker. Queen's Journal 1903 ad for the Rathbun Company and their BofQ:
The initial Harrowsmith to Sydenham line was planned to be three miles, but due to a grade between the two communities, a greater distance was more advantageous, resulting in the building of an additional 1.3 miles. The line passed through Harrowsmith, then continued east after the K&P split off to the south and Kingston. The track hugged the top of the cliff overlooking 'the flats' to Sydenham, and today’s Rutledge Road descends to the level of the swampy land that extends south toward Murvale. The sharp curve on the CN line was engineered to ease the grade.
The new CNoR line served an existing lead concentrating plant at Perth Road at the country’s largest mica mine at Sydenham. Sydenham was an important shipping point for phosphate, feldspar, mica, hogs and cattle. The village also boasted sawmills, a shingle mill and grist mill. Acme Farmers’ Dairy built a milk-processing plant in 1917, later closing in 1953. An apple-evaporator business was built near the station on the north side of Bedford Street. Sydenham’s station lasted until 1966, and its location is better-known as the Brewers Retail/Beer Store! Just to the east, a turntable and one-stall enginehouse was built at the shore of Sydenham Lake, dating from the days when Sydenham was the 'end of the line'.
To the east, the (now) ghost village of Opinicon hosted three sawmills, a shingle mill, cheese factory and phosphate mine dating to 1870. Later, a sawmill operated between Rock Lake and Opinicon Lake, and a flour mill was at the outlet of Rock Lake Creek. This settlement was connected to Bedford Mills by the Old Bedford Road that was crossed by the railway. A feldspar mine on Upper Rock Lake shipped its product by rail. It was taken by barge through a canal dug between Upper Rock Lake and Stonehouse Lake, then loaded on flatcars on a siding at Stonehouse Lake.
Storrington was perhaps better-known for its boat-building than any railway connection. Barges for the Rideau Canal were built by the Dog Lake shipyards as early as the 1860’s. Cordwood was taken down to Kingston, with coal carried north to Ottawa on the return voyage.
At Forfar, a connecting line for the Canadian Northern line was bought by Mackenzie and Mann in 1911. It secured a connection to Brockville and St. Lawrence shipping. Originally grandly called the Brockville, Westport and Sault Ste. Marie Railway in 1888, the 45-mile line linked Lyn Junction, near Brockville, to Westport. Its balky construction included the ferrying of a steam locomotive and two freight cars up the Rideau Canal from Kingston to Newboro in 1889! Renamed the Brockville, Westport and North Western Railway in 1903, its owners perhaps realized then that the Sault was far beyond their grasp! A trip along the line lasted 2 hours and 45 minutes. World War I and the ensuing economic slump was bad news for Canada’s overbuilt railway network. Basically broke from its beginning, the CNoR became part of the Canadian National Railways on December 20, 1918, and finally legally in January, 1923. The CNR renamed this line the Westport Subdivision, crossing its Napanee-Ottawa Smiths Falls Subdivision at Forfar Junction. The Westport Subdivision was abandoned in 1952.
According to CNR timetables, in 1931 the Smiths Falls Subdivision hosted four daily passenger trains: numbers 7 and 35 Ottawa-Toronto, and Toronto-Ottawa numbers 8 and 36. Passenger trains had a maximum speed of 40 miles per hour, while the line’s four freight trains could not exceed 30 miles per hour. Freight train number 510 operated three times per week from Yarker to Ottawa, with its westbound counterpart 511 running on opposite days Ottawa to Yarker. Through freight 448 ran Belleville-Napanee-Ottawa, and its westbound counterpart 447 in the opposite direction, each six days per week.
Due to a curve four miles east of Perth Road station, train speeds were cut in half there. The same speed restriction existed on the curving grade up to Harrowsmith from Sydenham. Area stations were located at Chaffey’s Locks, 62 miles west of Federal (near Ottawa), Buck Lake at mile 71, Perth Road at mile 74, Sydenham at mile 80 and Harrowsmith at mile 85. Three-car spur tracks were built at Storrington Feldspar at mile 69.5 and another was simply named Mica at Mile 77.6
The Buck Lake stop disappeared by the 1944 timetable, as did the passenger trains. Passengers then travelled on mixed trains (a coach attached to a regular freight train) 337 between Forfar Junction and Napanee on Tuesdays and Fridays, and 338 Napanee-Forfar Junction on Wednesdays and Saturdays. In 1943-44, the locomotive and combine were turned on the Napanee wye, the ashes dumped, coal put in the tender and water taken. A night watchman would arrive from Belleville to prepare for the next departure. (Earlier, in 1940, the trains only operated as far as Yarker.) Through mixed trains 445 and 446 ran daily except Sunday between Napanee and Ottawa.
Mixed train from Napanee, taken at Forfar in April, 1951. (CSTM Mattingly Collection MAT000299)
By 1955, the only scheduled trains were freight trains 445 and 446. These carried Ottawa-Toronto freight traffic and handled any cars for customers along the line, such as the paper mill at Strathcona, just east of Napanee.
On Valentine's Day, 1966, CNR began running opposing overnight Cavalier trains between Ottawa and Toronto. Completely separate from the Montreal-Toronto overnight trains, this pair ran between Smiths Falls and Napanee on the ex-Canadian Northern line, not on the CP line to Brockville used by the day trains. As of February 1, 1971 Montreal - Toronto and Ottawa - Toronto night trains were combined/split at Belleville. With two locomotives and several baggage cars, coaches and sleeping cars, the Cavaliers left Toronto or Ottawa late at night, stopping only at Smiths Falls before arriving in Ottawa or Toronto early the next morning. Interestingly, these trains operated until October, 1978! After that date, the Cavalier route was changed, and from then until its cancellation by VIA Rail in 1989, the overnight trains travelled over CPR rails from Brockville to Smiths Falls then CNR rails from there to Ottawa.
The improvement of roads, and the convenience of road transportation led to CNR ending operations on the Smiths Falls Subdivision around 1980. The tracks were lifted in the spring of 1989 from Forfar to Harrowsmith. The Strathcona-Smiths Falls section of the CNR Smiths Falls Subdivision was donated by the CNR for conservation authority trail use in 1997, and is now known as the Cataraqui Trail.
Additional Photos
Two images posted to the Chaffey's Locks Rocks Facebook group. This postcard image, possibly from 1929, shows a train on the Chaffey's Locks bridge. The locomotive has block lettering on the tender:
A 1970's view of a CN freight trundling over the Chaffey's Locks bridge:This is just fun to watch! Due to intermittent trackwork on the CN Oakville Sub, this detour via Weston and Halton Subs is nicely featured in this video. Filmed from the tail-end. Some highlights were new CIAX ore jennies between 3:45 and 4:50 mark, then equilateral turnouts at the 43:15 mark.
Once again thanks to your latest article I have learned far more about the former CNoR Rideau Lakes mainline than ever. Unaware for example that some of it had been re-engineered.
ReplyDeleteThe whole series presents a fitting retrospective on a area that I had the opportunity to ride in the late 70’s. It must have been a pleasure to document with your dad having taught in nearby Sydenham.
Bravo Eric on another interesting lesson in railway history.....plus
Lâche pas
K.Wadden. Pte-Claire Qc.
I am learning right along with you, Ken. Thanks for your kind words.
ReplyDeleteOn Continue!
Eric
Thank you; this is wonderful info!I currently live in Sydenham just across the creek from the former tracks: My father, Otto Gossage (born 1908) grew up in a stone farmhouse right above the tracks just east of where they cross the Syd-Harrowsmith road.There is/was a cow underpass built from their farm to the lower fields. Dad had stories about them building the second track, the bribe that persuaded the Township to curve the road so the tracks could maintain a relatively straight line, the derailment that had a hundred well-dressed people wandering around the cow-pasture until repairs were done...My mother's aunt Willa O'Brien's husband was station-master in Sydenham at one time.
ReplyDeleteI will explore this website with pleasure.
Wilma Kenny
willorkenny@gmail.com
Hi Wilma,
ReplyDeleteGreat to hear from you. I think you are on the Sydenham side of the hill, and I've heard of that culvert under the tracks but have never seen it.
I think my father-in-law may have driven fuel truck for one of your family...Warren Gossage. When I worked at Gould Lake Conservation Area, I seem to remember passing by the truck parked at a house north out of Sydenham. If memory serves!
Hope you will enjoy my blog. I've had a good response with this series that kept growing and getting longer...like a freight train. Old-time derailments definitely drew a crowd!
Thanks very much for your comment,
Eric
Hi Eric,
DeleteOur property is lined by the Cataraqui Trail and we have a large concrete culvert that runs underneath the trail. The culvert is just below the east end of the bend going toward Sydenham. It's 40 feet long roughly from one side to the other and about 60 feet up the embankment to the trail. It's stamped 1911 in the concrete.
Our property ends at this culvert. It's a really neat spot tucked away down below in the woods. We had to cut alot of brush and growth to get to it and have since made it our little getaway spot to enjoy peace, watch the kids play and the people enjoying the trail above!
Your father-in-law is my first cousin; our fathers were brothers...Just had a good chat with your bro-in-law Mike a couple of days ago. Small world!
ReplyDeleteMight you be interested in becoming a member of the South Frontenac Museum Society?Your interest in local rail history would be very welcome! let me know: I'm listed in the Frontenac News phone book: under "C&W Kenny"
Not me, Wilma. My father-in-law was Mr. Douglas Pixley.
ReplyDeleteEric
Sorry: I thought you mentioned that your fa-in-law was Warren Gossage!
ReplyDeleteWilma
That's great to hear, A. I've heard of the culvert down at that Sydenham end, but haven't made it down that far. I have watched cycling videos on the trail and there is definitely an extended portion of fill after leaving the rock cut along Wilson Road and going through the sweeping curve. But I was unable to pick out the culvert you're referring to, with the video showing straight ahead and lots of vegetation along the former CN right-of-way.
ReplyDeleteI noticed the trail coming through between houses on both sides, and I've heard of a date-stamped culvert in there, so that must be yours! That would have part of the connection through Sydenham as part of Mackenzie and Mann's Toronto-Ottawa line consolidation, opening in 1913.
If you ever have a chance to snap a photo of that culvert, I would love to see it! (my email is mile179kingstonATyahooDOTca.
Thanks very much for your comment - you live near a very historic little railway line!
Eric