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From
1887 through to 1900 logging in East Kootenay was accomplished by
horsepower. Sawmills were built near to water or in the centre of
large tracts of merchantable timber, and the logs were felled and
piled for winter transportation by sleds. Some logs were brought
in by horse-drawn wagons. The milled product was used to build local
houses and businesses.
After the arrival of the B.C. Southern Railway in 1898, the sawmills
were able to start responding to the increasing demand from Canada's
prairie provinces. Everything from barn and granary doors to siding
and mouldings were shipped east. Export meant a larger demand for
logs and a way of transporting them to the mills at low cost. The
logging railways of East Kootenay came into being.
Foremost among them was the Staples Lumber Company of Wycliffe.
This company also had portable camps that were transported by rail
from one logging show to the next. They ranged widely in the Cranbrook
and Kimberley area, as demonstrated in the attached map (Camp One). Research
into the workings of this company continues.
Another of the large lumbering companies that used locomotive power
was the Crow's Nest Pass Lumber Company out of Wardner. Peter Lund
and John Breckenridge combined forces to construct the North Star
branch line from Cranbrook
to Kimberley. They went on to fill several tie contracts and in
the process discovered the timber wealth of the area. The Crow's
Nest Pass Lumber Company Ltd. was formed, with the original shareholders
including both William Carlin and Alfred Doyle of Fort Steele.
The CNPL used the Kootenay and St. Mary's Rivers, and their drainages
to transport raw logs to their several mills. They also employed
a large number of logging wagons and sleighs, water flumes, and
other methods of conveyance. But demand outstripped supply and,
in 1909, the Crow's Nest Pass Lumber Company built the first of
five separate logging railways in East Kootenay.
The East Kootenay Railway Company will, over time, take its inspiration
from these strong forebearers and provide a gripping experience
of days gone by.
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