Admittedly, this is not really an on-line, railway-served industry - the usual criteria for an 'industry profile' Trackside Treasure post. But two factors have led me to research and publish this post on the long-standing store in Biscotasing, ON, located hard by the now-demolished CPR station at Mile 54.4 of the Nemegos Subdivision.
The first factor was discussion of this photo (below) that I took of the classic scene at 'Bisco' from the front, right dome seat of Prince Albert Park on Sunday May 27, 1984. The VIA (ex-CP) station and parking lot for the station and store are visible at centre. Scheduled to arrive at 1035, our actual stop here was at 1105. (Eastbound we were scheduled in at 1950, arriving at 2057. And two years earlier, a late-running VIA No 1 got us there at 1115.) We made up time, running at 50-55 mph, arriving 11 minutes early into Chapleau. I was travelling west from Kingston to Winnipeg aboard VIA No 1, in roomette 2 of Thompson Manor, which I'd occupied since Kingston. Only two Montreal sleepers, Thompson Manor and Chateau Vercheres were on the train when I boarded, with Prince Albert Park (but no Skyline) added in Toronto. In fact, only five of the twelve cars at Kingston continued west beyond Toronto, with seven new cars added while stopped in Toronto Union! But I digress!
The second factor was interest in the Sudbury-White River route, sparked by my previous post on modelling Northern Ontario, as well as the recent TRIPPING Train 185 TVO documentary. I wanted to learn more about Biscotasing, its history and that store and station. I was fortunate to find an excellent selection of photos in the "Biscotasing, Ontario" Facebook group, albeit mostly undated and uncaptioned. All photos in this post are from this group unless otherwise noted. Individual photographers are not acknowledged because many of the photos are historic in nature, and others do not list the photographer, only the poster. (If you are the photographer of one or more of these photos, I will gladly credit you personally!) This post follows one on modelling CP in Northern Ontario.
Biscotasing is an indigenous word meaning 'a body of water with long arms'. Biscotasi Lake leads to the Spanish River, which flows all the way to Lake Huron near Webbwood, ON. Although a comprehensive history of Biscotasing is beyond the scope of this post, the settlement was established on the shores of Lake Biscotasi by the CPR as early as 1882. While 470 acres were set aside for the CPR, only 30 were cleared. Described alternatively as a construction town or a divisional point, Biscotasing was clearly a major point with a large station and freight shed, though its importance plummeted upon the establishment of Chapleau to the west as a CP yard and shops.
The Hudson's Bay Co. established a trading post in 1887. Sudlen & O'Neil's lumber mill operated from 1894-1898, before being purchased by Booth & Shannon. The post was destroyed by fire, as was the lumber mill in 1913. Both operations were closed down in 1927, the former experiencing another fire, the latter having been sold to lumbermen Pratt and Shanacy. Most of the area's valuable lumber had already been harvested by 1920. A between-the-wars view of the townsite from across the lake:
A store was first established here by J.A. Wright in 1885. I believe this is the current false-front store under construction:
The steps up to the front door had a retractable awning over them. Two different-sized display windows flanked the front door:
A CPR crane lifts the small logging locomotive that was used between the CPR and the mill. Taken to Algonquin Park, it still forms part of the exhibit on logging there. It was donated by David Pratt, son of the original lumberman, in 1958.
Of course, there was more to Biscotasing than the store. A small community that varied in population from hundreds in summertime to as few as 20 in the long winter months, it also featured the large CPR station, two churches and many houses. A school was opened in 1906 and an Ontario Forestry office in 1907. Old-timey photos show simply 'BISCO' painted on the first station, with passengers and bundles of trapped furs piled high on the platform. Here's the station in my 1984 photo, at this point in a two-tone paint scheme, probably grey- or tan-and boxcar red:
The arrival of the diesel era, with CP 4051 and a road repair car or idler car drawing the attention of townspeople in this undated photo:
Now we enter the colour era! The store was clad in wood siding, but later received the ubiquitous Insulbrick covering (below). Note the church at left:
More modern signage and once again, wood siding:
The store functioned as a grocery, hardware, liquor outlet and post office.
The agent's door to the platform, with local residents of the two-legged and four-legged variety:
Dated 1969, with the station and store still Insulbricked:
A busy time in the parking lot (above). This aerial view shows the relative locations of store, CP station footprint and the R[oman] C[atholic] church:
St. Paul's Roman Catholic Church is visible in this screenshot of the TRIPPING documentary, its silver steeple poking through the trees. VIA No 185 is arriving, and this view clearly shows the juxtaposition of the CP mainline with the townsite to the south, the store to the north and beyond it, the former site of the station (below) in what has to be a unique nexus of lake, station and town anywhere in Canada. This would look great on a model railway!
Both churches in Biscotasing are located on hilly land south of the tracks. St. Paul's is now abandoned, though St John the Evangelist [Anglican] Church is still holding services. Over the years, the front stairs were removed, with access through both sides of the rear of the church.
A cold winter's day (above) and St. Paul's as it currently stands, privately-owned and decaying:
That nexus: station, store, rails and lake shown from the south side of the mainline:The station looking worse for wear, on the day before its demolition...
...and day of...
Check out my brother's blog Rolly Martin Country for a compendium of schedules and a ton of other information on the Sudbury-White River CPR passenger services. The station closed in 1966 and town's school was closed in 1972. Some websites insist on calling it a ghost town. As to our 1984 station stop - it's hard to tell if we're actually stopped in my photo, but we were. Up until 1981, VIA system timetables show Biscotasing denoted by Reference Mark 62: "Stops to detrain revenue passengers and on advance notice stops to entrain revenue passengers.", one of ten such stops between Sudbury and Winnipeg. Most other stops were denoted by Reference Mark 9: "Stops on signal.", in other words a flag stop.
After 1981, Biscotasing became a Reference Mark 9 but was a scheduled stop for the June to September RDC runs i.e. VIA Nos 185/186. In the summer schedule, most of No 1/2's stops were transferred to 185/186, then reverting to Nos 1/2 for the fall, winter and spring. The nearest scheduled stops were Cartier and Chapleau.
Today, the store is called the Trading Post and the site gives water access to Biscotasi Lake Park, a provincial backcountry park for canoeists and campers. A popular canoe route follows part of the 338 km Spanish River from here to Agnew Lake near Espanola - 164 kilometres of paddling over six or seven days'.
A modern-day aerial view:
The false front of the store has been obscured by an architecturally glommy patio addition with awning. The transport trailer parked next door, likely for storage, does nothing to redeem its architectural value. The tiny VIA stop (white box beside tracks between store and tracks) nor the current store will warrant further photographical depiction in this post. We will instead wallow in the nostalgia of Biscotasing in its earlier glory days!
Running extra...
An 11-car VIA No 40 headed east from Toronto on May 2. Five deadhead cars trailed the usual six-car buffer car-equipped consist. Now, if only the once-a-week HEP No 45 had been two minutes later, it would have been a stainless-steel symphony or silvery sandwich! Here's the link where you can VIAcariously enjoy the video shot from the Bayridge Drive overpass. It was a no frills shoot!
I'm fortunate to be able to participate in the Railway Modellers Meet of British Columbia Virtual Prologue by ZOOM tonight, along with more than 80 other modellers. Two weeks rom now, I'll be presenting at the second session, "Blog, Paper, Scribblers!'" describing my modelling journey on the learning curve of Kingston's Hanley Spur.
Rehearsals have been going on all week in London and a former airfield. All in preparation for King Charles III's coronation procession. CBC and CNN coverage begin as early as 0400 ET Saturday morning. It should be an occasion fit fo a king! This photo at the airfield reminds me of the Waterloo movie for some reason:Long Live the King!
In the possible under construction photo it appears to be a shed roof behind the false front. The store has actually has a gable roof behind the false front. Could it have been changed, possibly yes but not without a considerable amount of work.
ReplyDeleteYou make a very good point, A. I also noticed that the window/main door openings don't exactly line up correctly as in the other photos. Those steps are the ones that caught my eye. Also, the jutting out to accommodate the shed roof are not shown in the construction photo!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your comment and your keen observation!
Eric
One unexpected benefit of watching the Tripping documentary about the Budds is that it started a conversation between me and my Dad about his childhood spent in Chapleau, where my grandfather worked the RIP track as a rolling stock mechanic. My dad remembes Biscotasing and other smaller points along the CP line. He told me a story of travelling with his hockey team to other towns in the baggage car of the train. There are a million stories like this in Northern Ontario, many of them tied to this line. Thanks for sharing your memories and images of this fascinating community.
ReplyDeleteHi Michael,
ReplyDeleteYes, the TRIPPING documentary started a lot of conversations and interest between modellers, railroaders, enthusiasts and potential passengers.
It would be great to document your Dad's stories. I hesitate to say that, because nobody needs people giving them jobs to do (!) but we have a window of time to download these interesting stories while we can!
Thanks for your comment,
Eric