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12/31/2009

The Pyke Crane - An Historic Photo & A Video

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Thomas Blampied of Whitby has provided us with this image of the Pyke Crane taken in October of 2006 during major renovations of the station platforms in Union Station. Thomas has an extensive photo library of railway images online. Click here to view them.
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Below we also have a brief video taken by Dave Wetherald of the Pyke Crane being moved in Don Yard as the TRHA and TTR team prepared it for the move. It is being positioned beside the float used to transport it to Roundhouse Park.
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Posting by Russ Milland
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12/30/2009

Lighting Up the Roundhouse!


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As sections of the Roundhouse move to completion, one of the final finish items is building lighting. These two photographs taken on December 21st during aiming trials shows the turntable courtyard and roundhouse doors as they will be lit during non-occupancy hours. Our electrical engineer and designer Deborah Gottesman wanted to capture and display the unique curved form of the building. You will notice the lighting of the clerestory high bay windows emphasizes this curved sweep.
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The turntable has also had it's lighting installed. All portions of the structure will receive unique lighting treatment as we progress. The display tracks next to Bremner Avenue will have plug locations so that exterior lighting of the locomotives and rolling stock may be set up and changed for different exhibits.
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The interior work bays will have two systems of lighting. The first system will handle the vital shop work lighting, and the second will be display lighting, giving us a flexible space.
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Our criteria for our lighting is simple - Safety, Security, and Drama.
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Posting by Orin Krivel; Pictures by Deborah Gottesman

12/29/2009

A Major Milestone: Driving the last Spike on the Miniature Railway!

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Monday, December 28th marked a major milestone in the development of Roundhouse Park. While our TRHA team did not drive an actual last spike to complete the miniature railway, they did complete a host of tasks remaining on the railway to render it operational and operated a miniature train to ensure it was now operational.
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Michael Guy reports that:

"We ran a miniature train consisting of the miniature F7 Diesel plus one of our new TRHC passenger cars around the circuit numerous times while making track adjustments to reduce the number of nuisance derailments that occurred during the first circuits of the track. Several of the crossings needed tweaking and a few rail joints had slight misalignments which were easily fixed with a grinder. These derailments were caused by the use of used rail with different existing wear patterns at the ends. The good news is that most of the track needed little or no work to be usable. There was plenty of interest from passing visitors, many with small children in tow."
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The completion of the miniature railway, its Sweet Creek steam locomotive and the passenger cars adds to a significant list of major milestones in 2009.
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Congratulations to all involved in the development of the railway and the equipment we will be running on it.
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Posting by Russ Milland; Pictures by Stephen Gardiner
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12/28/2009

The Pyke Crane Move - Part 3 - Moving the Crane into the Roundhouse

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In this installment of our news posting of the move of the Pyke Crane to the Roundhouse, we first see (in the upper left picture) the CLC Whitcomb in action moving our #4803 GP9 to a new location. In the middle picture one of the moving crew works on the intake of the engine while we operated the crane from in the cab. In the picture at the right above, we find our CLC Whitcomb #1 beginning the move of the Pyke Crane to the turntable. The fencing was lowered so that we could swing the boom of the crane out of the way and allow us to couple up to it with #1. This pictures clearly shows how small the Whticomb and the crane is compared to #6213 on the track behind them.
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In the picture at the left below, the crane is pulled onto the turntable, in preparation for locating it in stall 15. The middle picture below shows the boom extension being stored in the pit of stall 15 for now. Finally we see (from left to right) Arno Martens, Dan Garcia and Michael Guy posing with the Pyke Crane which is now safely stored in Stall 15.
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Posting by Russ Milland; Pictures by Dan Garcia
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12/27/2009

The Pyke Crane Move - Part 2 - Moving the Crane to the Roundhouse

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Well before sunrise on Tuesday, December 22nd, the Pyke Crane arrived on its float at Roundhouse Park. The float was positioned adjacent to the track just to the east of the coaling tower. Two I Beams were again to used to move the crane from the bed of the float to the track beside it. In the last photo at the lower right, we find the crane almost ready to be moved into the Roundhouse for the winter.
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Posting by Russ Milland; Pictures by Michael Guy and Russ Milland
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12/26/2009

The Pyke Crane Move - Part 1 - Loading the Crane

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On Monday, December 21st, the McCulloch crew worked on loading the Pyke Crane onto the trailer. Dave Wetherald reports on the day's activities as follows:
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"After all the fuss, work, and preparation over the weekend, the Pyke crane was moved west through a couple of switches, then back east to line up beside McCulloch's trailer. The Pyke was then jacked up, moved sideways using rollers on two I-beams, and lowered onto the trailer. The crane was scheduled to be moved to the park very early ( 5 AM ) on Tu
esday morning.
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Toronto Terminal Railways (TTR
) provided official track flagmen for the day as we were fouling (a railway term for "blocking") a still used line that goes east to some of the Port Lands industries. As fate would have it, a CN train (2 engines and 1 tank car ) wanted to go down the track, but as can be seen in the picture below, it was stopped by the red flag from the TTR flagmen. After discussions with TTR and their dispatcher, the train crew decided not to wait for another hour or so and backed up."
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Posting by Russ Milland; Pictures by Dave Wetherald
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12/25/2009

Wishing You All the Best for the Holiday Season!

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The Board of Directors of the Toronto Historical Railway Association wishes all of our volunteers, partners, supporters and readers a Merry Christmas and a safe and satisfying holiday season as we all look forward to an exciting 2010!
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At the above left, we have a picture taken by Stephen Gardiner of the CP Christmas Train as it visits the Toronto area a few weeks ago, The middle image above captures a message found recently in our TH&B Caboose as we renovated it. It reads "Merry Christmas from Malcolm & Kay - 1953". At the right, we post once again a picture (from the picture collection of a globe trotting couple at this website) of a seasonal Christmas exhibit somewhere in South America which offers a humorous takeoff on a famous picture of a century ago of "the French passenger train that didn't stop soon enough".
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Posting by Russ Milland

12/24/2009

Our TRHA Historian Publishes "Toronto's Railway Heritage"

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The TRHA is proud to announce that Derek Boles, our Historian, has published a new book entitled "Toronto's Railway Heritage". As the book's cover states:
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"On May 16, 1853, the first passenger train steamed out of Toronto from a wooden depot that was located near the site of today's Union Station. Over the next century, the railways had a profound impact on the geography and economic fortunes of Toronto and helped transform it from a provincial town into the commercial centre of Canada. To the dismay of many, the railways also swallowed up prime real estate on Toronto's waterfront and isolated its citizens from Lake Ontario, the city's most scenic asset. The struggle between the promoters of unfettered railway development and crusaders for public access to the waterfront culminated during the 1920's with the building of the waterfront railway viaduct and Union Station. This magnificent Beaux-Arts railway terminal is the busiest transportation hub in Canada and is undergoing a $1.5 billion revitalization."
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Toronto's Railway Heritage retails for $24.99 and contains 225 images, a relative bargain compared to the cost of many rail books being published today. The images cover a period of about 80 years, from the mid-19th century to 1930. Each image is accompanied by a 60-70 word caption. There is also a 2,600-word capsule history of Toronto's railways during that period.
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The Author:
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Derek Boles is the historian for the Toronto Railway Heritage Centre and has written and lectured extensively on the railway history of southern Ontario. He publishes the daily ToTyHeritage blog on the Internet and advises the City of Toronto on railway heritage matters. Derek coordinates the annual Doors Open event at Union Station and leads popular monthly tours of the station. He is on the board of Heritage Toronto and is the chair of the Union Station Revitalization Public Advisory Group.
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Note: The book is available from local hobby shops as well as Amazon and Chapters/Indigo
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Posting by Russ Milland

12/23/2009

Next TRHA Union Station Tour on Saturday, December 26th, 2009

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Tired of the Boxing Day Madness and Crowds ... Join us for a relaxing informative tour of Union Station instead on Boxing Day!
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The TRHA offers tours of Union Station on the last Saturday of each month at 11 a.m. Cost is $10 each payable on arrival for the tour. Reservations are not necessary and those interested should meet by the Traveler's Aid counter in the centre of the Great Hall at 10:50 a.m. For more about these tours, click here.

12/22/2009

Weekend Report: Progress on Several Fronts including the Pyke Crane!

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In the picture at the above left, we find Michael Guy admiring the progress that has been made on the development of the scale model of the TRHC's full size CLC Whitcomb diesel switcher with a cab and handrails having been added to the chassis. In the middle photo, Mike Salisbury shows pride in the beautifully machined filler cap systems that he developed for the Sweet Creek locomotive to replace the "drop in" caps that came with the locomotive. In the picture at right, we find our "caboose team" hard at work at restoring the cupola seats and completing the tracing of the lettering on the caboose so that we can't accurately duplicate it when the caboose is repainted.
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One of the most urgent new undertakings this weekend was to prepare the Pyke Crane for an imminent move to Roundhouse Park the following week. Michael Guy reports on the effort as follows:
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"Since we needed to lower the boom and rotate the cab for transport to Roundhouse Park, operation of the engine for a brief period was necessary. The engine is a Detroit Diesel two-stroke, 6V-92T (six cylinders, V arrangement and turbocharged) rated at 550 BHP.
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On Saturday, we worked over the engine to attempt to render it operational but success was mixed. We did start it after clearing a solid plug of ice inside the air intake and several hours of work replacing missing electrical parts. Cooling system problems quickly appeared due to other parts which we suddenly found also to be missing. This caused us to shut the engine down again rather smartly!
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On Sunday, we resumed our work on the Pyke Crane. We made running repairs to the cooling system and the hydraulics. "Persons unknown" had removed the radiator, radiator fan module and hydraulic oil cooler rendering the entire machine inoperable. We “kludged” together enough of a cooling system using hardware store ABS plumbing materials to allow coolant to be reintroduced to the engine. With no actual cooling going on (no radiator or fan) we were not really fully operational but we could quickly make the needed moves. By 3:00 p.m. we had all systems operating and had managed to place the controls in the proper positions so that nothing unexpected was going to happen as we shifted the crane to the needed configuration to allow it to be moved."
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In the picture at the left below we find the crane in the Don Yard waiting to be moved. In the middle picture, bolt holes are being drilled into the turntable bearing for the miniature railway facility. In the picture at the right below, we find Tom Murison's crew painting shingles in the Roundhouse as they continue to make progress on the restoration of Don Station.

Posting by Russ Milland; Pictures by Michael Guy and James Rasor
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12/21/2009

A Brief History of the Railfan Hobby in Canada - Part 5 of 5

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A Brief History of the Railfan Hobby in Canada - Part 5 of 5 by Derek Boles
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In 1972, Canadian Railroad Historical Association members based in Toronto re-established a local chapter known as the Toronto & York Division. The division opened the first Toronto Railway Museum at Harbourfront in 1975. Unfortunately the museum lacked the resources to interpret its modest collection in a compelling presentation and was unable to attract financial support. As Harbourfront was converted into a recreational and residential area, the extensive network of railway tracks that once serviced the piers of the Toronto waterfront was torn up and the museum was facing permanent isolation from the rail network. In 1985, some of the artifacts were retained for a future Toronto railway museum, while others were scrapped or disbursed to other museums and collections.
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In 1976, the Toronto & York Division began sponsoring the annual Toronto Model Railway Show. The show utilized various buildings in the Harbourfront complex until 1981 when it moved to the Queen Elizabeth Exhibit Hall at Exhibition Place. In 1986, the show was shifted to the International Centre near the airport, by which time it had become the largest train show in Canada. When the event was moved to the Congress Centre in the 1990s, attendance figures had already begun to decline and the last show at that venue was held in 2004. A final and unsuccessful attempt was made to stage the train show at an elementary school in the Jane-Finch corridor in 2005.
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The T&Y continues to conduct informal excursions, publish their newsletter Turnout, and hold monthly meetings, although they too are facing the perennial problem of an aging membership and an inability to attract new members. In 2006, the Toronto Railway Historical Association arranged for the T&Y archives to be stored at Union Station. The executives of the TRHA and the T&Y are currently investigating a possible merger of the two organizations and a further pooling of resources.
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The national Canadian Railroad Historical Association continues to thrive and Canadian Rail has evolved into a higher quality periodical that is published bi-monthly. The only regular train event held for the general public in the immediate Toronto area is the Christmas Train Show at the International Centre.
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Another local organization worth noting is the Toronto Transportation Society, founded in 1973 by a group of transportation enthusiasts who shared a common interest in streetcars, buses, subways and railways. The organization's focus is now primarily on transit in and around the Greater Toronto Area rather than on railways. The TTS conducts well-attended monthly meetings, excursions that mostly revolve around buses, and publishes a monthly newsletter Transfer Points. The organization has a number of younger members and maintains an active Internet presence.
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This overview does not include the many professional organizations that exist for railroaders. The Toronto Railway Club has been active since early in the 20th century and features dinner meetings with speakers. There are many professional railroaders who are also railfans although they tend to remain "in the closet." Unfortunately, there is still widespread disdain for railfans among many railroaders in some part due to the irresponsible and sometimes dangerous actions of a very tiny lunatic fringe that tends to gravitate towards any hobby like ours.
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In 2001, the first public meeting of the Toronto Railway Historical Committee was convened at the Scarborough Model Railroad Club to investigate the possibility of organizing a steam locomotive hauled excursion in the Toronto area. Soon thereafter the TRHC became involved with advocating for the establishment of a railway museum at the former Canadian Pacific Railway John St. Roundhouse and began hosting an annual railway heritage fair at the Roundhouse in 2002 during the city-sponsored Doors Open event. In 2003, the TRHC also began hosting Doors Open at Union Station.
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The following year the TRHC became the Toronto Railway Historical Association and was incorporated as a charitable organization in 2005. The ability to issue tax receipts for charitable donations is a critically important factor in convincing collectors to donate historical artifacts for an archive. In recent years, as many pre-eminent railfans have passed away, several Toronto-focused collections of railway artifacts have been dispersed or left the city because there was no suitable archive here in which to deposit them.
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The TRHA is assiduously working as a full partner with the City of Toronto to build the Toronto Railway Heritage Centre, a project that has finally seen much tangible progress in the last couple of years after two decades of inaction. This progress has been well documented on an ongoing basis in the News & Events section of this website. An active and dynamic website is the key to the survival of organizations like ours in the 21t century. In the past year, the TRHA website has received over 4,000,000 hits.
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Part 5 - Images
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#32 - Number 6060 helped open the Canadian Railway Museum at Harbourfront in May 1975.
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#33 - As commercial development began in earnest at Harbourfront, the museum became increasingly untenable, especially when faced with the prospect of a loss of direct rail access.
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#34 - The Harbourfront museum acquired a fairly large collection in the few years that it was operating. Many of these artifacts eventually went to other museums.
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#35 - Canadian National 7988 was a Montreal Locomotive Works Alco S-2 built in 1949. Although it was built five years later than the Toronto Railway Heritage Centre's 7020, it was a sister engine. The locomotive was scrapped in 1989.
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#36 - For a few years, the CRHA's Toronto Model Railway Show was the biggest such event in Canada and one could easily spend two days taking in the entire show.
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#37 - The Canadian Railroad Historical Association's Canadian Rail is the only periodical in Canada devoted to railway history.

#38 - The Toronto Christmas Train Show is now the only such regular event held in the city although the venue is just across the municipal boundary in Mississauga.

#39 - The Toronto Transportation Society has attracted many younger members although their focus is on transit rather than mainline railways. This was the Christmas Lights charter of 2006.
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Posting by Derek Boles, TRHA Historian
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Click here to go back to Part 4. Click here to go back to Part 1.
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12/20/2009

A Brief History of the Railfan Hobby in Canada - Part 4 of 5











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A Brief History of the Railfan Hobby in Canada - Part 4 of 5 by Derek Boles
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At least two Canadian Railroad Historical Association chapters in Ontario split off from the national organization and formed their own organizations. In 1941, the Toronto Chapter became the Upper Canada Railway Society. The beginnings of the UCRS can actually be traced back to 1932, when two neighbours who lived on Grenadier Road, D. W. Knowles and J. H. Allen, called a meeting of all Toronto area railfans whose names had appeared in the U.S. publication Railroad magazine. A small group of railfans was formed as a result of this meeting and continued to meet informally for the next several years. In 1940, this group petitioned to become the Toronto Chapter of the CRHA, before striking out on their own.
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The UCRS operated their first chartered excursion in 1943 aboard Niagara, St. Catharines & Toronto Railway No. 83 (ex Toronto Suburban Ry. No. 107). This was one of the first railfan charters in Canada, predating the first official CRHA charter by five years, although the CRHA had organized several informal excursions in the Montreal area since its inception.
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For many years the UCRS was Toronto's most active railfan organization, sponsoring numerous excursions and holding well-attended monthly meetings. In 1960, the Locomotive Preservation Committee of the UCRS visited the Canadian National Railway Spadina roundhouse for the purpose of choosing a steam locomotive suitable for preservation and presentation to the City of Toronto. The committee chose U-2-g 4-8-4 No. 6213 and it was presented to the city in August 1960 and moved to the Canadian National Exhibition Grounds. The locomotive was maintained by the UCRS for several years, later by members of the Toronto Locomotive Preservation Society. Unlike most "stuffed and mounted" steam locomotives, including 6213's sisters, the engine has been well looked after for the past half-century. In 2009, 6213 was moved to the John Street Roundhouse for incorporation into the Toronto Railway Heritage Centre, where it will be featured as the crown jewel in the museum's collection.
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The UCRS also owned two private cars that, in a touch of class, usually brought up the rear of the organization's railfan excursion trains. The last such car, former Canadian Pacific Railway "Cape Race," is now stored in the John Street Roundhouse and it too has become a TRHC artifact.
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The vicissitudes of the UCRS can be traced in the evolution of its monthly periodical. For many years it was called simply The Newsletter. In 1975, it was renamed Rail & Transit and given a visual makeover twice until 1980 when it reverted to being called The Newsletter and resumed its pre-1975 appearance. In 1992 it was made over and renamed Rail & Transit once again before suspending publication altogether in 1998. Unfortunately this long-running identity crisis has made it difficult for researchers to locate back issues of this periodical in library catalogs.
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The UCRS also published a series of Bulletins, pamphlets devoted to single topics such as individual railways and classes of steam locomotives. As well, they produced booklets and calendars and, on at least one occasion, a substantial book on the history of the Toronto Civic Railways. Unfortunately the UCRS suffered the fate of many railfan organizations, with an aging membership and an inability to attract new and younger members as older members passed away or became less active. Another key factor was the railways' unwillingness to provide opportunities for chartered excursions, the raison d'etre of the UCRS. Sadly the most important railfan organization in Toronto for 60 years terminated its affairs early in the 21st century although the organization's Hamilton chapter continues to hold regular meetings.
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A happier outcome was in store for the CRHA Ottawa Branch, which split off in 1969 to form the Bytown Railway Society. It remains one of Canada's most active and productive railfan organizations. The BRS has acquired and restored railway equipment at the Canada Science & Technology Museum and publishes the monthly newsmagazine Branchline, the definitive Canadian print source for current news of interest to rail enthusiasts. The society also publishes the annual Canadian Trackside Guide, considered the bible of railfans throughout the country. As well, the BRS maintains a busy book publishing program that includes the Traction Heritage Series, two volumes on Canadian National passenger cars and Omer Lavallee's posthumous book Canadian Pacific to the East. Recently the organization created an online searchable index for Branchline that extends back to 1966.
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Part 4 - Images
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#19 - The first general interest publication devoted exclusively to a Toronto railway subject was this booklet distributed in 1953 by the Upper Canada Railway Society. It was published to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the Ontario, Simcoe & Huron Railway, the first steam railway to operate in Ontario.
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#20 - Public interest in the railfan hobby probably peaked in the late 1950s with the retirement of steam locomotives from both Canadian National and Canadian Pacific railways. This 1962 cartoon by the nationally famous Montreal Star cartoonist Doug Wright, himself a railfan, captured the nostalgia of the era.
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#21 - The UCRS continued to publish special bulletins highlighting various aspects of Toronto and southern Ontario railway history.
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#22 - The Upper Canada Railway Society's most lasting legacy was the preservation of CNR 6213 at the Exhibition Grounds. In this February 1960 photo, UCRS members swarm about the locomotive after choosing it for preservation.
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#23 - For many years, the UCRS maintained an information table promoting the railfan hobby at various venues, in this case, the Sportsman's Show of 1963. The TRHA maintains this tradition at the annual Christmas Train Show and other events.
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#24 - From 1964 to 1971, the UCRS sponsored several excursions using Canadian National 6218, now retired in Fort Erie. The engine is seen here leading an excursion between Toronto and Gravenhurst. (Photo by John West)
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#25 - Canadian National 6060 assumed excursion duties in 1973 and operated in the Toronto area until 1980. The locomotive is seen here hauling an excursion out of Union Station. Railfan excursions have completely disappeared from Canadian mainline railways in the 21st century. (Photo by Michael Taylor)
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#28 - The UCRS continued to publish information booklets about the various steam locomotives used in excursion service.
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#29 - The last steam locomotive to haul on excursion out of Toronto was Canadian Pacific's No. 2816 in 2004. The engine is seen here at Union Station in 2003. (Derek Boles)
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#30 - The annual Canadian Trackside Guide published by the Bytown Railway Society is considered the bible of railfanning in Canada.
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#31 - The BRS's Branchline featured extensive coverage of 6213's move to the Toronto Railway Heritage Centre in June 2009.
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Posting by Derek Boles, TRHA Historian
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Click here to read Part 5. Click here to go back to Part 3.
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