Destiny Derailed: A History of Cobourg's Railroads 1833-1893,
will be the third book relating the author's interest in Cobourg railway
history. Along with Coal to Canada and Wooden
Cars on Steel Rails, Derailed Destiny reflects his interest
in preserving a rich, but largely unknown, railway heritage. After you
have read the brief description below of Cobourg's railway history,
if you have any additional information or images concerning Cobourg's
rail roads, please contact the author through the link on this site
or through mail directed to Steampower Publishing, 54 Walton Street,
Port Hope, Ontario, Canada L1A 1N1
To date
much of the Cobourg Rail Road (chartered 1834) and the Cobourg &
Peterborough Railway (chartered 1853) has been researched and a manuscript
compiled. The CRR was one of the first rail roads chartered in Canada
West (now Ontario) and although several surveys between Cobourg, on
Lake Ontario, and Rice Lake, fifteen miles north, were undertaken, the
Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837 effectively curtailed further work on
what was a highly speculative venture with a largely unknown technology.
A change
in government funding policy and a return to more optimistic economic
conditions in the early 1850s, led to a second attempt by Cobourg citizens
to build a railway north from their community. At this time the local
entrepreneurs extended their vision beyond Rice Lake to Peterborough.
Unfortunately the Cobourg & Peterborough Railway Company suffered
throughout its existence from the duplicity of certain of its directors,
the unscrupulous practices of its construction contractor and a lack
of practical organizational and operational experience. As part of its
woes, the Company undertook a massive civil engineering project, the
second largest in North America at the time, to cross Rice Lake on a
combination of trestles, 31 Burr Truss bridges, and a single centre
pivot draw bridge complex that extended some 2.2 miles. The ravages
of winter ice, and the actions of the owners of the competing PHL&B
in dismantling some of the iron stays from the bridge combined to force
the railway to terminate operations across Rice Lake by 1861. The railway
became moribund for half a decade.
Cobourg's
civic government revived the C&P in 1866 but the focus of attention
shifted somewhat from reopening the line to Peterborough. Rather a connection
to the Marmora Iron Mine, to the northeast, was the object of Cobourg's
resuscitated rail effort. A group of U.S. investors purchased both the
revived C&P and the Marmora Iron Mine and created the Cobourg, Peterborough
& Marmora Railway & Mining Company in 1867. A new rail line
was constructed from Trent Narrows on the Trent River north to Blairton
and the iron mine there. Ore brought by rail from Blairton to Trent
Narrows was dumped, by a raised trestle onto barges in the Trent River.
A steam boat and barges were contracted to transport the ore on Rice
Lake to Harwood where a steam operated elevator transferred the ore
from the barges to ore cars on the old C&P line. The ore cars were
taken by rail to Cobourg harbour and dumped, from an elevated trestle,
onto harbour land to await transfer to the holds of vessels. These ships
then transported the ore to other ports such as Rochester and Cleveland.
While the CP&MR&MCo enjoyed a very modest success initially,
the devastating North American economic crisis of 1873 significantly
curtailed profits and the Company's future. After 1873 the Company attempted
to court civic leaders in Peterborough to assist in reconstruction of
the Rice Lake Bridge but that town had other railway interests by this
time and expressed reluctance, if not disdain, at the revival effort.
Following a decade of sporadic operation, the CP&MR&MCo became
moribund by the early 1880s.
A Belleville, Ontario, entrepreneur, in 1885, purchased the CP&MR&MCo
in the Court of Chancery for $30,000 and reorganized the company as
the Cobourg, Blairton & Marmora Railway & Mining Company. This
company suffered from underfunding, a lack of market for iron ore, and
the depletion of the timber and lumber from the northern forests. Perhaps
in an effort to end the suffering Cobourg experienced with its own railways,
the Grand Trunk Railway absorbed the CB&MR&MCo in 1893.
Perhaps
the Grand Trunk Railway was primarily interested in gaining access to
Cobourg harbour which it did through the purchase of the CB&MR&MCo.
The original link north to Harwood and Rice Lake was used on rare occasions
for two decades following. Most of the rails were taken up during World
War I and transferred overseas for use in France. Today little exists
to the casual observer of the landscape. Much of the berm has disappeared
into the surrounding land form, the remnants of the bridge complex across
Rice Lake were submerged by the Trent Canal system in 1920 and the track
to Cobourg's harbour was removed in the 1980s. Despite the lack of contemporary
visual evidence there remains a rich railway heritage centred upon Cobourg,
Ontario.
The author
would especially like to correspond with you if you have additional
information, original paperwork, or images of any aspect of Cobourg's
railway heritage as outlined above. Please take the time to contact
him.