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10/30/2011

Roundhouse Park is now benched and green!

Click on each image for a closer look!

With the re-installation of the park benches and the removal of the fences protecting the newly re-sodded areas of the park, all traces of the Railway Children production having been in the park are gone. As we can see in these images, everything is now very green again!

Posting by Russ Milland, Photos by Jay Larkin

10/28/2011

"Roundhouses Revived": TRHC featured in Via Rail's Destination magazine


Click on the image above for a closer view!

"Roundhouses Revived ! Second Debut" is an article by Guylaine Spencer in a recent issue of Via Rail's Destinations magazine. It begins:

"Their half-moon shape and brick-and-wood construction distinguishes the buildings from the angular glass-and-steel skyscrapers engulfing them. At first glance, you may not know what to make of these bizarre-looking structures called roundhouses. Although rare today, these railway buildings were once very common. Roughly 3,000 were built across North America, but only about 200 still stand. ......."

Click here to read the entire article.

The photo above of the John Street Roundhouse and the surrounding area is by Doug McFadgen and was taken on November 2, 1972.

Posting by Russ Milland; Photo by Doug McFadgen

10/26/2011

Milestones in the TH&B #70 Van restoration

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Is it a van or is it a caboose? It appears that both names have been used for these unique pieces of rolling stock in North America. As our readers will have noticed in past news postings, TRHA volunteers have been making great progress against the formidable challenge of restoring the TH&B van which had suffered badly from wood rot over the decades in storage.

Here is a recent report and a number of photos of the work in progress from James Rasor who is leading the team in restoring #70:

"We are making progress in leaps and bounds on the Van these days thanks especially to Neville, Jim, Scott and Wilson. Saturday, October 16th was a milestone day for us as it marked the day we removed the temporary support holding up the cupola now that the structure has been repaired on the both the right and left sides of the van. Next week will see the replacement of the tongue and groove siding on the right side of the van up to the cupola as well as the sheathing screws on the outside, another milestone moment for us.

Work has also begun on the restoration of the van's interior equipment with Wilson restoring the stove, coal box, back panels, etc, and Scott beginning the restoration of the large conductor's desk. A great deal of work is still required to strip down the hardware and tongue and groove wood, but we are on our way.

Jim is beginning the long task of repairing all the wood rot on the window frames and Neville continu
es to remove the metal panels on the cupola so we can repair, stabilize, and restore them as much of the metal near the corners and roof have been rusted through and are being held in place by the corner angles only. Of course with the new cupola structure in place, all the panels will be even more stable.

Over the next two weeks we will finalize the electrical design
wanted for lighting and power in the van and then we can start to enclose it fully.

Posting by Russ Milland; Report & photos by James Rasor

10/22/2011

The TRHA rail yard in action!

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Saturdays each week see the most volunteers turning out to not only help with our operations but also to staff our work crews on our various projects. This Saturday was no exception as had sixteen volunteers helping out. Some of the crews worked on re-laying sections of damaged pavers and continued the van restoration.

Today was also a “train move” day with the goal of moving the Jackman passenger car to a different track. As part of this move, we shifted #6213 back out to track #34 and fenced it in alongside #4803 and # 7069 in order free up the turntable. We then took both the Pyke crane and the flatcar out along track #40 to lift the pedestrian bridge out so that both the Cape Race and Jackman can be relocated.

This was perhaps the most interesting crane move thus far and the first time we have seen the crane and flat car move together. We left Cape Race on track 35. Jackman will move from its present location at the end of track 40 to the end of track 39 on Monday morning. the Pyke crane and flat car will be left on the turntable providing yet another different photo opportunity for visitors this week.

Our miniature railway operation started a bit later than normal due to the train moves, but the park was quite busy in terms of visitors and we had lots of riders as well as folks being entertained by the train moves.

Posting by Russ Milland; Photos by Derek Boles

10/20/2011

Last chance to visit the Canada Central Railway in Montreal!

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Perhaps the largest operating model railroad in Canada can be found in Montreal, Quebec. The Canada Central Railway, as it is known, occupies 9,000 square feet of space in a CN building under the railway tracks in downtown Montreal. It has been the site as well of many fine annual railway shows.

Unfortunately, real-life issues associated with rising property costs have resulted in their not being able to renew their lease on the facility which is forcing the dismantling and removal of the layout. CN owns the 9,000-square-foot warehouse space and wants to lease it out at a higher rent, starting next year. They had warned the club five years ago that its time was up.

The club will be holding their final open house this coming weekend on October 29th and 30th from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

The vastness of this railway empire can be seen in the layout plan below which is also available in a much higher resolution image at their website.

The club will be holding their final open house the weekend of Saturday, October 29th and Sunday, October 30th from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

For more information on the weekend event (including how to get there) and to access extensive information about the club and its railway, visit their website by clicking here.

So if you can make the trip to Montreal, this is an opportunity not to be missed.

Posting by Russ Milland

10/18/2011

Putting the Pyke crane to work!

Click on each image for a closer look!

The Roundhouse Park areas formerly occupied by the Railway Children production are now being restored to their former condition. In support of this work, our intrepid TRHA volunteers were busy this week moving our CNR Northern #6213 off the turntable so that we could bring out our Pyke crane to move some heavy lengths of full-size rail onto our flat car. This occupied our crew for a busy four hours and was noteworthy as the first extensive use of the Pyke crane since it arrived. The area being restored has now been re-sodded. The radial tracks are now clear for the delivery of many tons of ballast to be placed between the rails.

Posting by Russ Milland; Pictures by Jay Larkin

10/16/2011

Saturday was the 160th Anniversary of the Groundbreaking for Toronto's first railway!

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At noon on October 15, 1851, hundreds of citizens began to gather in front of Toronto City Hall at the corner of Front and Jarvis streets. There were marching bands and gaily decorated floats and everyone was in a state of excitement. Resplendent in their colourful uniforms were the Sons of Temperance, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows and the Loyal Orange Institution. Soon the crowd was joined by judges, steamboat proprietors, the fire brigade, the members of the provincial legislature, and the railroad commissioners. As the time drew closer to 1 PM, some of the most important personages in the city began to appear. They included the Chief Justice of Canada West, the Sheriff of the County of York, the Chief Magistrate, bishops of various denominations, the Chief Constable and the Mayor of Toronto.

This illustrious congress had gathered to celebrate the inauguration of a new technology. City Hall was an appropriate venue for such a commemoration as it had already hosted the birth of Canada’s telecommunications industry. Just five years earlier in a small room near the Front Street entrance the first telegraph in British North America had been transmitted from Toronto to Hamilton. As the clock tower overhead chimed half past one, the assemblage moved into position to begin the parade, the largest such pageant ever seen in the 17-year history of the City of Toronto. The procession first moved east to Frederick Street, then north to King Street where it turned west. Thousands of people were lined up along both sides of what was then the most important street in Toronto, the commercial spine of the city. Schoolchildren had been given the day off and most of the population turned out to enjoy this grand spectacle that featured 46 different groups and floats. The parade proceeded along King Street for over a kilometer and then turned south on York Street and west on Front past Simcoe where it finally halted in front of the Parliament Buildings of the united Provinces of Canada. By this time it was estimated the crowd comprised 20,000 people, an impressive gathering for a city whose total population was 31,000.

The occasion for this festivity was the start of construction of the Ontario, Simcoe & Huron Railway, the first steam railway to operate in Canada West, as Ontario was then known.

The first trains in Canada East had commenced operations near Montreal in 1836, so the railway era was relatively late coming to Ontario. Before the railway, Canada depended on navigable water routes for transportation but these were frozen for as much as five months of the year. Overland travel by stagecoach was expensive and uncomfortable, even for the elite few who could afford it. Transported goods were frequently damaged on journeys over rough roads and trails.

Torontonians eagerly anticipated the promised delights of newfangled rail transportation with its easy year-round travel and the timely delivery of needed commodities, advantages that were only fantasies before the age of rail. By 1850, the construction of new railways in Canada was seen as the key to the British colony’s economic survival. There were already over 9,000 miles of track in the United States; in Canada there were less than 60.

Now on this October day in 1851, Torontonians were gathered at this vacant lot on the south side of Front Street between Simcoe and John streets to beginning of the railway era. This august event was commemorated by a ceremonial turning of the first sod, a groundbreaking event that a later and less romantic generation would refer to as “shovels in the ground.” Lifting the ceremonial silver spade was the Countess of Elgin, the wife of the Earl of Elgin, the governor-general of Canada. Lord Elgin hovered nearby and was one of the abler members of the British aristocracy to occupy the colonial vice-regal position. Three years earlier in Montreal he had been attacked by an angry Tory mob that burned down the Parliament buildings while they were protesting the Rebellion Losses Bill. One consequence of that riot was that the colonial capital was moved away from Montreal and was at that point ensconced in Toronto across the road from the sod-turning ceremony. After Lady Elgin used her dainty little shovel to lift the pre-cut square of sod, it was deposited into an equally dainty wheelbarrow and carted away by the mayor of Toronto, who was resplendent in knee breeches and ceremonial sword.

Then began the speeches. Lord Elgin commented that ““It may seem a singular application of the division of labour that the lady should dig and the gentleman speak. But this is an age of progress in which we must be prepared for much that is strange.” Elgin was an enthusiastic promoter of railways and a month earlier had attended the Boston Railroad Jubilee, celebrating the building of a railway between Canada and the United States. Elgin had been staying at a hotel in Niagara Falls and had made the journey from there to Boston entirely by rail. The Jubilee had been attended by the most important officials on both sides of the border, including U.S. President Millard Fillmore. Referring to that recent event in his speech, Elgin noted that Americans “never seem more completely at home than when the power of steam is hurrying them over the surface of the earth.”

Following the ceremony, the sod was whisked away and preserved for posterity by a young civil engineer named Sandford Fleming, who would play a principal role in building the new railway and later advance to greater glory as one of Canada’s most illustrious engineers, inventors and scientists.

That night the day’s festivities culminated in a grand ball at St. Lawrence Hall patronized by Governor General Elgin and 400 invited guests. A midnight supper was served and the dancing continued until 2:30 AM. The honorary patroness of the ball was internationally famed soprano Jenny Lind, the “Swedish Nightingale,” who a week later performed at the hall in a concert arranged by American promoter P.T. Barnum. A century later a writer noted that “In such an atmosphere, combining the gala day with a night of gladness, that the people let it be known that they welcomed the coming railway.”

The construction of the Ontario, Simcoe & Huron Railway would occupy the next nineteen months. On October 3, 1852, the first steam locomotive to operate in Canada West arrived in Toronto from Oswego, New York on the steamship "Forwarder." Built by the Portland Company in Portland, Maine, the engine was named the "Lady Elgin," to honour the consort of the governor-general who had turned the first sod a year earlier.

The OS&H was unhappy with the extra costs incurred by customs duties as well as shipping the locomotive across Lake Ontario and sought a local builder for its next locomotive, the "Toronto." On May 16, 1853, that locomotive hauled the first passenger train out of Toronto from a wooden depot that was located close to the eastern entrance of today’s Union Station.

Captions for the images

#1: Lord Elgin was James Bruce, 8th Earl of Elgin, who served as Governor General of Canada from 1847-1854. He was probably the only Governor General who actually risked his life to bring about responsible government in Canada. His efforts helped set the stage for Confederation in 1867.

#2: A bandstand was erected to seat 2,000 people; ten times that many attended the sod-turning.

#3: City Hall at Front and Jarvis streets where the parade began at noon. The municipal offices moved from here to what we today call “Old” City Hall at Queen and Bay streets in the 1890’s. Parts of this building were incorporated into the present St. Lawrence Market.

#4: Toronto looking east from the foot of Parliament Street around the time of the sod-turning. The tall steeple in the centre of this view is St. James Cathedral at King and Church streets, although the steeple wouldn’t actually be completed for another 25 years. The smaller cupola just to the left of it is City Hall, where the parade began.

Click here to access our TRHA "resources" page to view or download the above article, Toronto’s First Railway – The Ontario, Simcoe and Huron Railway, in PDF format with many more pictures and illustrations. The PDF also includes an earlier article which we published here on the history of the "Toronto" steam engine.

Articles and postings by Derek Boles, TRHA Historian

10/14/2011

Video celebrates the 100th anniversary of Winnipeg's Union Station!

Winnipeg's Union Station is celebrating its 100th birthday! The National Film Board has produced a video to mark the occasion. It is described as follows on Youtube:

"In commemoration of the centennial of Winnipeg's Union Station, VIA Rail Canada commissioned the production of an original work exploring the historical significance of trains and train travel, from station to railway, in Winnipeg as well as in the building of Canada. This National Film Board of Canada presentation has been compiled from more than 70 years of material archived in the NFB vaults." - From acclaimed Director/Editor Yves Chaput

Click on the link below to watch this great 2 1/2 minute video!

Posting by Russ Milland

10/12/2011

TRHA wins Heritage Toronto's Community Service Member's Choice Award!

Click on each image for a closer look!

On October 4th, 2011, the annual Heritage Toronto Awards were held at the Koerner Concert Hall at the Royal Conservatory of Music. This annual event acknowledges accomplishments in heritage preservation and interpretation. There were hundreds of people there, including almost everyone of consequence involved with Toronto heritage. The concert hall is a stunning architectural venue in its own right and the event is one of the classiest that I've been able to attend as a remember of the Heritage Toronto board.

The TRHA won the Community Service Member's Choice Award in a field of seven nominees. This is voted on only by the thousand or so members of Heritage Toronto. It includes a cash award of $500. It should be noted that this award is not for the city or any of the professionals involved with our project, but for the community-based volunteers who make the TRHC function. Our volunteers have now been recognized by the city's heritage community and I was told that it was an overwhelming vote in our favour.

The roundhouse also won the William Greer Architectural Conservation & Craftsmanship Award of Excellence. This was given to the heritage architects, the IBI Group and the Roundhouse Development Corporation.

Click here for more information.

Posting by Derek Boles; Photos by Norm Betts

10/10/2011

Weekend Report: Thanksgiving weekend brings progress!

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Thanksgiving weekend was a very successful weekend in terms of the operation of the miniature railway and our attractions such as our CN Northern #6213 steam engine which resided on the turntable allowing visitors to do walk-arounds close to the engine.

But it also was a weekend where our volunteers also made progress as seen in some of these images. Work is progressing well on the restoration of the TH&B caboose with attention being focused this weekend on repainting the stove and on the cupola area of the caboose. Also shown below is our lunch and meeting area which was formally used by the Railway Children production. It is a popular area at the end of a work day to relax discuss weighty matters..

Posting by Russ Milland; Photos by Jay Larkin, Lance Gleich and Russ Milland

10/08/2011

Update on restoration of the Roundhouse Park grounds!

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As those of you who have been following our progress remember, the installation of the Roundhouse Theatre tent for this summer's production of the Railway Children occupied an enormous footprint in Roundhouse Park. This theatrical production shut down on August 14 and the tent was removed in short order but the restoration of Roundhouse Park has turned out to be more time consuming than first thought.

The ground underneath the tent required removal of gravel fill before topsoil could be replaced and the area re-sodded. At the same time, the irrigation sprinkler system which was damaged during sod removal in the spring was being refurbished so that we will be able to enjoy a lush green lawn throughout our operating season in 2012. The removed park utility power posts also required replacement and all this work was subject to wet-weather delays in September.

Unfortunately the ongoing refurbishment of the park caused us to suspend our mini-rail operation the weekend of October 1 & 2. Happily, on the following Thanksgiving weekend (October 8-10), we were able to resume mini-rail operations on our original figure-8 configuration throughout Roundhouse Park. This was only possible because of the hard work of our TRHA members who laboured through the week to make this possible.

On Saturday, October 8, we initiated mini-rail operations powered with what we fondly refer to as our mini-Whit (diesel switcher) locomotive. On Sunday we were able to power the trains with our Sweet Creek #3 steam locomotive. Three of the accompanying photographs show the initial revenue trips of #3 shortly after noon Sunday with passengers through Roundhouse Park. The battleground-like condition of the park is immediately obvious but this didn't seem to discourage the hundreds of happy riders we had throughout the Thanksgiving weekend, all of whom were delighted.

On Thanksgiving Monday, the volume of visitors resulted in our operating a five car train for the very first time as is pictured in the photo at the lower right.

Roundhouse Park will be restored to its pristine condition in short order, sod is scheduled to be complete by Wednesday October 12th.

Posting and photos by Derek Boles

10/06/2011

New TTC subway trains are now operational!

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The newest series of subway trains for the Toronto Transit Commission have now begun to appear in service on Toronto's subway system. In these photos, we see that electronic signs are now featured in the trains with the next subway stop specially lit on the route maps above the doors. Note also that one can now walk down the length of the train with having to go through doors at the end of each car. Finally the front of the train features the more streamlined shape of modern passenger trains.

Posting by Russ Milland; Photos by Stephen Gardiner

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