Saturday 27 March 2021

K&P Newspaper Articles 1900-1957

Ottawa's Colin Churcher compiled newspaper articles from area newspapers regarding the Kingston & Pembroke over the years.

07/01/1882 - Kingston Daily British Whig - Railway Station Annoyances

Complaint has been made that persons driving into and out of the city have suffered annoyances from the movement and noise of trains at the Tete du Pont Barracks. The railway men feel the force of these grumblings, and have done what they can to meet the wishes of the public, the Superintendent having enjoined as much quietude as possible on the part of the train men and appointed a flag man. It has been suggested that the station be removed to a location nearer the cotton mill. This will be done; in time a new round house will be constructed and the building at present known as such converted into a freight depot.  A correspondent adds: "Some people want the station removed from the barracks. I don't approve of such a thing. If there is to be any change let the barrack gate be abolished and the road straightened. 

18/04/1883 - Kingston Daily British Whig - Railway Round House  

The K. & P. RR. round house will soon be ready for occupation. Ferguson Bros. of Napanee are now [illegible] the roof. The building is [88?] feet front, [133?] feet the half circle. It is [62?] feet deep and contains six stalls. It is frame and was built by R.S. Mowat, one of Kingston’s contractors. A turntable is now being placed in front of the round house. The Superintendent of the Kingston & Pembroke RR. was supervising the removal of the old turn table near the Tete du Pont barracks and changing the tracks so that the shunting of trains will be done away with at that point and the people of Pittsburg have no further grievances to ventilate.

11/05/1900 - Renfrew Mercury

A locomotive from the Kingston Locomotive Works came out this week on the K. & P.R. for transfer to the C.P.R., who were to carry it on to Portage La Prairie, where it would enter service for the Manitoba & Northwestern.

06/06/1912 - Ottawa Journal - K. and P. Train held up by Pest

Millions of caterpillars die on the track and block the coaches with slimy bodies. A butterfly is all right but a caterpillar is all wrong especially when in number that ther are like unto the sand of the sea shore. The Kingston and Pembroke train labored badly on a portion of its journey from Calabodie Tuesday night. The pest, which was very serious last year, is reported to be much worse this year.

Kingston - 19/06/1912 - Ottawa Citizen Duke at Kingston. 

The Duke of Connaught will arrive In the city Wednesday on the morning train over the Kingston and Pembroke Railway at eight o'clock. The cars Cornwall and York will be attached to the train at Sharbot Lake. The Duke will go over to the Royal Military College for the ceremonle. which commence there at 10.30 a.m.

18/06/1957 - Kingston - Kingston and Pembroke Railway Co. 

Has closed down 86 years after its inception. The service was discontinued Saturday following the return to Kingston of the last scheduled train from Sharbot Lake. The company, for half a century a subsidiary of the Canadian Pacific Railway, was chartered in 1871. Its first section spanning the 46.8 miles to Sharbot Lake was opened in June, 1875 There were subsequent extentions to Snow Road and to Renfrew with spur lines serving the Martele iron mines and those at nearby Zanesville. The K and P line was in receivership in 1894. But it I organized four years later and in 1903 passed to the CPR. The Bay of Quinte Railway enjoyed trackage rights over the Kingston line until 1913. 

Before the First World War the Kingston service consisted of a daily passenger and mixed train each way with an extra mixed service as far as Sharbot Lake. The Canadian Locomotive Co. Kingston, built the Kingston company's 11 locomotives. Records show the line's inventory when the CPR took over included seven passenger cars, 50 flat cars and 20 box cars. Captions to three pictures. One of Canada's oldest railway lines was discontinued Saturday when CPR trains 612 and 613 from Kingston to Sharbot Lake and return made their last runs. Train is shown leaving Kingston, with freight, express, mail and passenger cars. Conductor George Giff of Smiths Falls had little passenger business to handle. He was kept busy though with waybills, manifests, etc. of mixed cargo. Train 612 pulls into the deserted station platform at Shatbot Lake 46 miles north of Kingston. Train connected with CPR local train from Toronto and Montreal.

Saturday 20 March 2021

Wilmots Dairy Truck


200th post on this blog! In a continuing effort to improve the local flavour of my vehicle fleet, I assembled a Wilmots Dairy truck out of parts. A cab from an Esso tank truck, a box from a Roco military truck, wheels from a Tyco tranport trailer and chassis from scrap styrene. This truck represents a commercial dairy delivery truck rather than the home delivery truck from which the milkman made numerous stops. I used an image of Wilmots advertising, formatted to fit the side of the truck box and printed. I matched a white for the cab. I've since painted the front fenders, as well as the rear bumper I added, dark blue - the prototype Divco home delivery truck has a blue hood also.

The finished product is at Montreal and Rideau Streets (top photo) and crossing the River Street Bridge:
Here's the prototype, taken by George Lilley in 1948 at the Wilmots Producer Dairy at the Traffic Circle (Queen's University Archives). Note the image on the building sign, matching that on my truck:
Here's a black and white image of my truck on Wellington Street:
And a view of the same truck in the same spot, from the backyards lining the CN Hanley Spur along Wellington Street:
By cutting and pasting the Wilmot graphics, I was able to produce a billboard:
Another possible project - a Wilmots Ford cabover truck: 
And just for fun, a much earlier photo showing the range of horsepower used by the Hemlock Park Dairy, also in Kingston (below). The age of actual horse power was over by my modelled era!

Tuesday 16 March 2021

Another Anglin Coal Truck

 

Many elements of a scene give it a sense of place. One of these elements is prototypical vehicles. In an earlier post, I added to the S. Anglin coal delivery truck fleet.                   

Here's the real thing, delivering to the Royal Bank in 1966:                              
Here's my model, stopped along Rideau Street:
Here's the After and the Before: Released in 1966, the Matchbox No.48 red Dodge tandem dumptruck I started with is at right. I hacksawed off the lip of the box over the cab, and the slanted back of the dumpbox. I removed the dual axles and added a replacement with dual tires. Then it was time to paint the cab red and the box yellow. Printed lettering and logo were cut to fit in the spaces in the dumpbox side supports. The box had a tailgate added, then was painted with dilute black craft paint for the prototypical weathering that dirty coal would provide:
But this truck was meant to work! About to make a delivery on Wellington Street - once an everyday occurrence downtown:
Then it was time to return to the S.Anglin yard to pick up another load!

Monday 15 March 2021

Esso Bulk Tank Upgrading

The previous post included a view of Imperial Oil's bulk tanks along Rideau Street in 1970. Since that's my nominal year for modelling on my HO scale Hanley Spur layout, it inspired me to upgrade my HO scale tanks, which were really just place-holders or mock-ups made of cardstock. 

Looking across CN and CP tracks above the limestone outcropping on the harbour side of Rideau Street, (above) the tanks are showing their age and have a large Esso oval logo. Here's the Before photo, showing my white cardstock tanks and way-too-small logo. In the foregound, closer to water level, is the limestone Imperial Oil warehouse:
My duckunder was a handy workbench, with the tank site just to the left. I taped the cardstock to a piece of foamcore matching my available backdrop space. Each piece is one half of an 8x11 sheet. My previous mock-ups are visible just behind:                                                   
I cut curved pieces of cardstock that I taped in to form the tops of the tanks. Here is the completed bulk tank backdrop. The colour is not so blazingly white:
I decided those former Texaco turquoise tanks had to go! I used a tape-runner to apply adhesive to the parchment-like paper onto the cardstock, which ironically, like the paper came from my wife's side of the layout/craft room! 
I'd photographed a small Esso oval logo, enlarged and dulled by photo-editing, also applied to the paper with tape-runner.
I added a couple of power poles and rearranged the equipment sheds around the tanks. As suggested by modeller Lance Mindheim, keeping a colour palette narrow reduces the suspension of disbelief required by brighter structure colours!

Cabbages and Kings film, 1970

This film profiles some down-on-their-luck men in Kingston, who circulate between downtown streets and the Inner Harbour shoreline, girl-watching in the former and day-drinking in the latter. Along the way, the cops come calling and the cells await. Directed by Peter Duffy, the film is online at vimeo.

The rail enthusiast in me picked out three brief scenes that I've screen-shotted. Two of the men rush to rescue someone in danger in the water, with Esso tanks on Rideau Street in the background. They're crossing tracks in the CP yard, with a CN switchstand at right indicating the Hanley Spur switch to the Imperial Oil limestone warehouse. 

Drinking in front a pile of wooden timbers, the men miss this awesome photo of Anglin's crane and its clamshell bucket taking coal from a Reading hopper car, with their covered coal trestle just visible at right:
And though it doesn't show well in this view, at the left of this frame, a CP switcher pushes a few cars into CP's yard, with basic boat docks visible in foreground and the Woolen Mill visible in the background.

Wednesday 10 March 2021

CSL Package Freighter Fort Henry

FORT HENRY was named for her namesake fortification in Kingston. Hull#150 was launched March 10, 1955, at Collingwood, Ontario by Collingwood Shipyards Ltd., for Canada Steamship Lines Ltd.  
Dimensions: 461’ 6" LOA x 56’ beam x 32’ depth; 5,729 GRT 4,159 NRT. Powered by a 4,500 shp double reduction geared steam turbine built by John Inglis Co. Ltd. of Toronto, Ont. and 2 Foster-Wheeler oil-fired water tube boilers. The vessel was originally planned to be named FORT GARRY and had that name painted on her hull but prior to launch, the name was changed to FORT HENRY. The Whig-Standard published this story on March 11: 
The ship entered service in May of 1955. She was the first of Canada Steamship Lines "Fort Class" package freighters and the only one to have her pilothouse forward. Built for speed, the FORT HENRY could reach speeds of 18 mph. In her early years, the vessel often carried freight upbound loaded through the side doors and grain downbound loaded through her deck hatches.

On December 4, 1956, FORT HENRY struck bottom near the Canoe Rocks, Lake Superior, and was badly damaged. It reached Fort William safely, was unloaded, and spent the winter on the Port Arthur Dry Docks for repairs. It returned to service April 12, 1957. In 1960 her tonnage was changed to 5,729 GRT and 3,707 NRT. Ownership changed in 1970 to Steamship Forwarding Ltd. of Montreal, Que. while still under the management of Canada Steamship Lines.

At the end of the 1979 shipping season the FORT HENRY was laid up in Kingston, Ont. until she was sold for scrap to United Metals Ltd. of Hamilton, Ont. in 1984. (All Canada Steamship Lines package freight service ended before the start of the 1982 shipping season.) The FORT HENRY was towed by tugs GLENEVIS and GLENSIDE to Hamilton, Ont. arriving on June 5, 1984. Scrapping began in 1988. 

Thursday 4 March 2021

CSL's Last Canaller

A little background on Metis: She was the last canal-sized ship built for Canada Steamship Lines (CSL). The 259 foot long carrier was launched in 1956. She was lengthened at Kingston Shipyards to 331 feet in 1959 and deepened by 5 feet. Show in drydock on January 30, 1959 (top photo and below - Queen's University Archives). An internal CSL memo proposing the conversion was copied to shipyard superintendent R.W. Sutton in October, 1958:
Metis went back to work for CSL carrying cargoes for Lake Ontario Cement and usually managed in excess of 80 trips a year. It usually loaded at Picton for Toronto or Rochester and occasionally came up the Welland Canal for Windsor. Metis ended her career as a powered freighter, tying up at Kingston, on August 1, 1983, where I photographed her in 1984 with some of her bigger fleetmates: 
Metis was towed to Toronto on October 29, 1989 and, in time, rebuilt as a barge. The pilothouse was removed and a notch cut in the stern to accommodate a pusher tug. Here she is approaching Bath Lafarge cement plant on June 9, 2018 propelled by the tug Salvage Monarch:

Metis traveled down the Seaway on May 20, 1991, to begin a new career as a barge and has worked on the St. Lawrence and as a stationary storage barge at Green Bay, Windsor and Toronto. Metis is now owned by Essroc Cement and has seen considerable service carrying cargoes from Picton to Rochester as silting in the harbor has prevented the deeper draft Stephen B. Roman from servicing the port. When not in service, Metis is tied up and ready in Toronto.