The
Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR), known as
CP Rail between 1968 and 1996, is a Canadian
Class I railway operated by Canadian Pacific Railway
Limited. Its rail network stretches from Vancouver
to Montreal
, and also
serves major cities in the United States
such as Minneapolis
, Chicago
, and
New York
City
. Its headquarters are in Calgary
, Alberta
.
It owns
approximately 14,000 route miles of track all across Canada and
into the US, stretching from Montreal to Vancouver, as far north as
Edmonton, and, after recently acquiring 2 American Railroads (the
DME, ICE, they own trackage in
North
Dakota
, South
Dakota
, Nebraska
, Wisconsin
, and Iowa
, as well as
two short stretches into two other states including a line to
Kansas City,
Missouri
and a line to Chicago, Illinois
, and into the Powder River Basin
of Wyoming
.
The
railway was originally built between
eastern Canada and British Columbia
between 1881 and 1885 (connecting with Ottawa Valley and Georgian Bay
area lines built earlier), fulfilling a promise
extended to British Columbia when it entered Confederation in 1871. It is
Canada's first
transcontinental railway. Now
primarily a
freight railway, the CPR was for
decades the only practical means of long distance
passenger transport
in most regions of Canada, and was instrumental in the
settlement and
development of
Western Canada. The CP company became one of
the largest and most powerful in Canada, a position it held as late
as 1975. Its primary passenger services were eliminated in 1986
after being assumed by
VIA Rail Canada in
1978. A
beaver was chosen as the railway's
logo because it is one of the national symbols of Canada and
represents the hardworking character of the company. The object of
both praise and condemnation for over 120 years, the CPR remains an
indisputable icon of
Canadian
nationalism.
The
Canadian Pacific Railway is a public company
with over 15,000 employees and market capitalization of 7 billion
USD in 2008.
History
Before the Canadian Pacific Railway, 1870–1881
Creation of the Canadian Pacific Railway was a task originally
undertaken for a combination of reasons by the
Conservative
government of
Prime
Minister Sir John A. Macdonald.
British Columbia
had insisted upon a transport link to the east as a
condition for joining the Confederation of Canada
(initially
requesting a wagon road). The government however, proposed to build
a railway linking the Pacific
province to the eastern provinces within
ten years of July 20, 1871. Macdonald also saw it as
essential to the creation of a unified Canadian nation that would
stretch across the continent.
Moreover, manufacturing interests in Quebec
and Ontario
desired
access to sources of raw materials and
markets in Canada's
west.
The first obstacle to its construction was economic.
The logical route went
through the American Midwest and the city of
Chicago, Illinois
. In addition to this was difficulty of
building a railroad through the
Canadian Rockies, an entirely Canadian
route would require crossing 1,600 km (1,000 miles) of rugged
terrain of the barren
Canadian
Shield and
muskeg of
Northern Ontario. To ensure this routing,
the government offered huge incentives including vast grants of
land in Western Canada.
In 1872,Sir John A. Macdonald and other high-ranking politicians,
tricked by bribes in the Pacific Scandal, granted federal contracts
to
Hugh Allan's "Canada Pacific Railway
Company" (which was unrelated to the current company) and to the
Inter-Ocean Railway Company. Because of this scandal, the
Conservative party was removed from office in 1873. The new
Liberal prime minister,
Alexander Mackenzie, began
construction of segments of the railway as a public enterprise
under the supervision of the Department of Public Works.
The
Thunder
Bay
branch linking Lake Superior
to Winnipeg
was commenced in 1875. Progress was
discouragingly slow because of the lack of public money. With Sir
John A. Macdonald's return to power on October 16, 1878, a more
aggressive construction policy was adopted.
Macdonald confirmed
that Port
Moody
would be the terminus of the transcontinental
railway, and announced that the railway would follow the Fraser and Thompson rivers between Port Moody and
Kamloops
. In 1879, the federal government floated
bonds in London and called for tenders to construct the 206 km
(128 mile) section of the railway from Yale,
British Columbia
to Savona's Ferry
on Kamloops
Lake
. The contract was awarded to
Andrew Onderdonk, whose men started work on
May 15, 1880.
After the completion of that section,
Onderdonk received contracts to build between Yale and Port Moody,
and between Savona's Ferry and Eagle
Pass
.
On October 21, 1880, a new syndicate, unrelated to Hugh Allan's,
signed a contract with the Macdonald government. They agreed to
build the railway in exchange for
$25,000,000 (approximately $625,000,000 in
modern Canadian dollars) in credit from the Canadian government and
a grant of 25,000,000 acres (100,000 km
2) of land.
The government transferred to the new company those sections of the
railway it had constructed under government ownership. The
government also defrayed surveying costs and exempted the railway
from property taxes for 20 years. The Montreal-based syndicate
officially comprised five men:
George Stephen,
James J. Hill,
Duncan McIntyre,
Richard B. Angus, and
John Stewart Kennedy.
Donald A. Smith and
Norman Kittson were unofficial silent
partners with a significant financial interest. On February 15,
1881, legislation confirming the contract received
royal assent, and the
Canadian Pacific Railway Company
was formally
incorporated
the next day.
Building the railway, 1881–1885
The Canadian Pacific Railway began its westward expansion from
Bonfield, Ontario (previously called Callander Station) where the
first spike was driven into a sunken railway tie. Bonfield, Ontario
was inducted into Canadian Railway Hall of Fame in 2002 as the CPR
First Spike location. That was the point where the Canada Central
Railway extension ended. The CCR was owned by Duncan McIntyre who
amalgamated it with the CPR and became one of the handful of
officers of the newly formed CPR. The CPR started in Brockville and
extended to Pembroke. It then followed a westward route along the
Ottawa River passing through places like Cobden, Deux-Rivières, and
eventually to Mattawa at the confluence of the Mattawa and Ottawa
Rivers. It then proceeded cross-country towards its final
destination Bonfield (previously called Callander Station). Duncan
McIntyre and his contractor James Worthington piloted the CPR
expansion. Worthington continued on as the construction
superintendent for the CPR past Bonfield. He remained with the CPR
for about a year until he left the company. McIntyre was uncle to
John Ferguson who staked out future North Bay after getting
assurance from his uncle and Worthington that it would be the
divisional and a location of some importance.
It was
assumed that the railway would travel through the rich "Fertile
Belt" of the North Saskatchewan
River valley and cross the Rocky
Mountains via the Yellowhead Pass
, a route suggested by Sir Sandford Fleming based on a decade
of work. However, the CPR quickly discarded this plan
in favour of a more southerly route across the arid Palliser's Triangle in Saskatchewan
and through Kicking Horse Pass
over the Field
Hill. This route was more direct and closer to the
American border, making it easier for the CPR to keep American
railways from encroaching on the Canadian market. However, this
route also had several disadvantages.
One
consequence was that the CPR would need to find a route through the
Selkirk
Mountains
, as at the time it was not known whether a route
even existed. The job of finding a pass was assigned to a
surveyor named
Major
Albert Bowman Rogers. The CPR
promised him a
cheque for $5,000 and that the
pass would be named in his honour. Rogers became obsessed with
finding the pass that would immortalize his name.
He discovered the
pass in 1883, and true to its word, the CPR named the pass
"Rogers
Pass
" and gave him the cheque. This however, he
at first refused to cash, preferring to frame it, and saying he did
not do it for the money. He later agreed to cash it with the
promise of an engraved watch.
Another obstacle was that the proposed route crossed land was
controlled by the
Blackfoot First Nation. This difficulty was overcome when
a
missionary priest,
Albert Lacombe,
persuaded the Blackfoot chief
Crowfoot that
construction of the railway was inevitable. In return for his
assent, Crowfoot was famously rewarded with a lifetime pass to ride
the CPR. A more lasting consequence of the choice of route was
that, unlike the one proposed by Fleming, the land surrounding the
railway often proved too arid for successful
agriculture. The CPR may have placed too much
reliance on a report from
naturalist
John Macoun, who had crossed the
prairies at a time of very high rainfall and
had reported that the area was fertile.
The greatest disadvantage of the route was in Kicking Horse Pass.
In the first 6 km (3.7 miles) west of the 1,625 metre
(5,330 ft) high summit, the
Kicking Horse River drops 350 metres
(1,150 ft). The steep drop would force the cash-strapped CPR
to build a 7 km (4.5 mile) long stretch of track with a very
steep 4.5% gradient once it reached the pass in 1884. This was over
four times the maximum gradient recommended for railways of this
era, and even modern railways rarely exceed a 2% gradient.
However,
this route was far more direct than one through the Yellowhead
Pass
, and saved hours for both passengers and
freight. This section of track was the CPR's Big Hill
. Safety switches were installed at several
points, the speed limit for descending trains was set at 10 km
per hour (6 mph), and special
locomotives were ordered. Despite these measures,
several serious runaways still occurred.
CPR officials
insisted that this was a temporary expediency, but this state of
affairs would last for 25 years until the completion of the
Spiral
Tunnels
in the early 20th century.

Sir William Cornelius Van Horne.
In 1881 construction progressed at a pace too slow for the
railway's officials, who in 1882 hired the renowned railway
executive
William Cornelius
Van Horne, to oversee construction with the inducement of a
generous salary and the intriguing challenge of handling such a
difficult railway project. Van Horne stated that he would have
800 km (500 miles) of main line built in 1882.
Floods delayed the start of the construction season,
but over 672 km (417 miles) of main line, as well as various
sidings and branch lines, were built that year.
The Thunder Bay
branch (west from Fort William
) was completed in June 1882 by the Department of
Railways and Canals and turned over to the company in May 1883,
permitting all-Canadian lake and rail traffic from eastern Canada
to Winnipeg
for the first time in Canada's history. By
the end of 1883, the railway had reached the Rocky Mountains, just
eight km (5 miles) east of Kicking Horse Pass.
The construction
seasons of 1884 and 1885 would be spent in the mountains of British
Columbia and on the north shore of Lake Superior
.
Many thousands of
navvies worked on the
railway. Many were European immigrants.
In British Columbia,
the CPR hired workers from China
, nicknamed
coolies. A navvy received between $1
and $2.50 per day, but had to pay for his own food, clothing,
transportation to the job site, mail, and medical care. After two
and a half months of back-breaking labour, they could net as little
as $16. Chinese navvies in British Columbia made only between $0.75
and $1.25 a day, not including expenses, leaving barely anything to
send home. They did the most dangerous construction jobs, such as
working with
explosives. The
families of the Chinese who were killed received no compensation,
or even notification of loss of life. Many of the men who survived
did not have enough money to return to their families in China.
Many spent years in lonely, sad and often poor conditions. Yet the
Chinese were hard working and played a key role in building the
western stretch of the railway; even some boys as young as 12 years
old served as tea-boys. In 2006 Prime Minister
Stephen Harper issued a formal apology to the
Chinese population in Canada for their treatment both during and
following the construction of the CPR.
By 1883, railway construction was progressing rapidly, but the CPR
was in danger of running out of funds. In response, on January 31,
1884, the government passed the Railway Relief Bill, providing a
further $22,500,000 in loans to the CPR. The bill received royal
assent on March 6, 1884.
In March 1885, the
North-West
Rebellion broke out in the
District of Saskatchewan.
Van
Horne, in Ottawa
at the
time, suggested to the government that the CPR could transport
troops to Qu'Appelle
, Assiniboia,
in 10 days. Some sections of track were incomplete or had
not been used before, but the trip to Winnipeg was made in 9 days
and the rebellion was quickly put down. Perhaps because the
government was grateful for this service, they subsequently
re-organized the CPR's debt and provided a further $5,000,000 loan.
This money was desperately needed by the CPR.
On November 7, 1885,
the Last Spike
was driven at Craigellachie, British
Columbia
, making good on the original promise.
Four days
earlier, the last spike of the Lake Superior section was driven in
just west of Jackfish,
Ontario
. While the railway was completed four years
after the original 1881 deadline, it was completed more than five
years ahead of the new date of 1891 that Macdonald gave in
1881.
The successful construction of such a massive project, although
troubled by delays and scandal, was considered an impressive feat
of engineering and political will for a country with such a small
population, limited capital, and difficult terrain. It was by far
the longest railway ever constructed at the time. It had taken
12,000 men, 5,000 horses, and 300 dog-sled teams to build the
railway.
Meanwhile, in Eastern Canada, the CPR had
created a network of lines reaching from Quebec City
to St. Thomas, Ontario
by 1885, and had launched a fleet of Great Lakes
ships to link its terminals. The CPR had effected purchases
and long-term
leases of several railways
through an associated railway company, the
Ontario and Quebec Railway
(O&Q).
The O&Q built a line between Perth,
Ontario
, and Toronto
(completed on May 5, 1884) to connect these
acquisitions. The CPR obtained a 999-year lease on the
O&Q on January 4, 1884. Later, in 1895, it acquired a minority
interest in the
Toronto, Hamilton and
Buffalo Railway, giving it a link to New York and the northeast
US.
1886–1900
So many cost-cutting shortcuts were taken in constructing the
railway that regular transcontinental service could not start for
another seven months while work was done to improve the railway's
condition. However, had these shortcuts not been taken, it is
conceivable that the CPR might have had to default financially,
leaving the railway unfinished.
The first transcontinental passenger train
departed from Montreal's Dalhousie Station, located at
Berri Street and Notre Dame Street on June 28, 1886, at 8:00 p.m.
and arrived at Port
Moody
on July 4, 1886, at noon. This train
consisted of two baggage cars, a mail car, one second-class coach,
two immigrant sleepers, two first-class coaches, two sleeping cars,
and a diner (several dining cars were used throughout the journey,
as they were removed from the train during the night, and another
one was picked in the morning).

First Transcontinental Train arrives
in Port Arthur on June 30, 1886
By that
time, however, the CPR had decided to move its western terminus
from Port
Moody
to Gastown
, which was renamed "Vancouver" later that
year. The first official train destined for Vancouver
arrived on May 23, 1887, although the line had already been in use
for three months. The CPR quickly became profitable, and all loans
from the Federal government were repaid years ahead of time.
In 1888,
a branch line was opened between Sudbury
and Sault Ste.
Marie
where the CPR connected with the American railway
system and its own steamships.
That same
year, work was started on a line from London, Ontario
to the American border at Windsor,
Ontario
. That line opened on June 12, 1890.
The CPR
also leased the New Brunswick
Railway in 1890 for 990 years, and built the International Railway of
Maine, connecting Montreal with Saint John,
New Brunswick
in 1889. The connection with Saint John on the
Atlantic coast made the CPR the first truly transcontinental
railway company and permitted trans-Atlantic cargo and passenger
services to continue year-round when sea ice
in the Gulf of St.
Lawrence
closed the port of Montreal during the winter
months.
By 1896, competition with the
Great Northern Railway for
traffic in southern British Columbia forced the CPR to construct a
second line across the province, south of the original line.
Van
Horne, now president of the CPR, asked for
government aid, and the government agreed to provide around $3.6
million to construct a railway from Lethbridge
, Alberta
through
Crowsnest
Pass
to the south shore of Kootenay Lake
, in exchange for the CPR agreeing to reduce freight
rates in perpetuity for key commodities shipped in Western
Canada. The controversial Crowsnest Pass Agreement
effectively locked the eastbound rate on
grain products and westbound rates on certain
"settlers' effects" at the 1897 level. Although temporarily
suspended during
World War I, it was not
until 1983 that the "
Crow Rate" was
permanently replaced by the Western Grain Transportation Act which
allowed for the gradual increase of grain shipping prices. The
Crowsnest Pass line opened on June 18, 1899.
The CPR and the colonization of Canada

One of the CPR's land offerings.
Practically speaking, the CPR had built a railway that operated
mostly in the wilderness. The usefulness of the Prairies was
questionable in the minds of many. The thinking prevailed that the
Prairies had great potential. Under the initial contract with the
Canadian Government to build the railway, the CPR was granted
25,000,000 acres (100,000 km
2). Proving already to
be a very resourceful organization, Canadian Pacific began an
intense campaign to bring immigrants to Canada.
Canadian Pacific agents operated in many overseas locations.
Immigrants were often sold a package that included passage on a CP
ship, travel on a CP train, and land sold by the CP railway. Land
was priced at $2.50 an acre and up. Immigrants paid very little for
a seven-day journey to the West. They rode in Colonist cars that
had sleeping facilities and a small kitchen at one end of the car.
Children were not allowed off the train, lest they wander off and
be left behind. The directors of the CPR knew that not only were
they creating a nation, but also a long-term source of revenue for
their company.
1901–1928
During the first decade of the twentieth century, the CPR continued
to build more lines.
In 1908 the CPR opened a line connecting
Toronto with Sudbury
. Previously, westbound traffic originating
in
southern Ontario took a
circuitous route through
eastern
Ontario.
Several operational improvements were also made to the railway in
western Canada. In 1909 the CPR
completed two significant
engineering
accomplishments.
The most significant was the replacement of
the Big Hill, which had become a major bottleneck in the CPR's main
line, with the Spiral
Tunnels
, reducing the grade to 2.2% from 4.5%. The
Spiral Tunnels opened in August.
On November 3, 1909, the Lethbridge
Viaduct
over the Oldman River
valley at Lethbridge
, Alberta
was
opened. It is 1,624 metres (5,327 ft) long and, at its
maximum, 96 metres (314 ft) high, making it the longest
railway bridge in Canada.
In 1916 the CPR replaced its line through
Rogers
Pass
, which was prone to avalanches, with the Connaught Tunnel, an eight km (5 mile) long
tunnel under Mount
Macdonald
that was,
at the time of its opening, the longest railway tunnel in the
Western
Hemisphere
.
The CPR acquired several smaller railways via long-term leases in
1912.
On
January 3, 1912, the CPR acquired the Dominion Atlantic Railway, a
railway that ran in western Nova Scotia
. This acquisition gave the CPR a connection
to Halifax
, a significant port on the Atlantic
Ocean
. The Dominion Atlantic was isolated from the
rest of the CPR network and used the CNR to facilitate interchange;
the DAR also operated ferry services across the Bay of Fundy
for passengers and cargo (but not rail cars) from
the port of Digby,
Nova Scotia
to the CPR at Saint John, New Brunswick
. DAR steamships also provided connections for
passengers and cargo between Yarmouth
, Boston
and New
York
.
On July
1, 1912, the CPR acquired the Esquimalt
and Nanaimo Railway, a railway on Vancouver Island
that connected to the CPR using a railcar
ferry. The CPR also acquired the
Quebec Central Railway on December
14, 1912.
During
the late 19th century, the railway undertook an ambitious program
of hotel construction, building the Château
Frontenac
in Quebec
City
, the Royal York Hotel
in Toronto, the Banff Springs Hotel
, and several other major Canadian
landmarks.By then, the CPR had competition from three other
transcontinental lines, all of them money-losers. In 1919, these
lines were consolidated, along with the track of the old
Intercolonial Railway and its spurs,
into the government-owned
Canadian National Railways.
When
World War I broke out in 1914, the
CPR devoted resources to the war effort, and managed to stay
profitable while its competitors struggled to remain solvent. After
the war, the Federal government created
Canadian National Railways (CNR,
later CN) out of several bankrupt railways that fell into
government hands during and after the war. CNR would become the
main competitor to the CPR in Canada.
The Great Depression and World War II, 1929–1945
The
Great Depression, which lasted
from 1929 until 1939, hit many companies heavily. While the CPR was
affected, it was not affected to the extent of its rival CNR
because it, unlike the CNR, was debt-free. The CPR scaled back on
some of its passenger and freight services, and stopped issuing
dividends to its shareholders after 1932.
One highlight of the 1930s, both for the railway and for Canada,
was the visit of
King
George VI and
Queen
Elizabeth to Canada in 1939, the first time that the reigning
monarch had visited the country. The CPR and the CNR shared the
honours of pulling the royal train across the country, with the CPR
undertaking the westbound journey from Quebec City to
Vancouver.
Later that year,
World War II began. As
it had done in
World War I, the CPR
devoted much of its resources to the war effort. It retooled its
Angus Shops in Montreal to produce
Valentine tanks, and transported
troops and resources across the country. As well, 22 of the CPR's
ships went to warfare, 12 of which were sunk.
1946–1978
After
World War II, the transportation industry in Canada
changed. Where railways had previously provided almost
universal freight and passenger services,
cars,
trucks, and
airplane started to take traffic away
from railways. This naturally helped the CPR's air and trucking
operations, and the railway's freight operations continued to
thrive hauling resource traffic and bulk commodities. However,
passenger trains quickly became unprofitable.During the 1950s, the
railway introduced new innovations in passenger service, and in
1955 introduced
The Canadian,
a new luxury transcontinental train. However, starting in the 1960s
the company started to pull out of passenger services, ending
services on many of its branch lines. It also discontinued its
secondary transcontinental train
The Dominion in 1966,
and in 1970 unsuccessfully applied to discontinue
The
Canadian. For the next eight years, it continued to apply to
discontinue the service, and service on
The Canadian
declined markedly. On October 29, 1978, CP Rail transferred its
passenger services to
VIA Rail, a new
federal
Crown corporation that is
responsible for managing all intercity passenger service formerly
handled by both CP Rail and CN. VIA eventually took almost all of
its passenger trains, including
The Canadian, off CP's
lines.
In 1968, as part of a corporate re-organization, each of the CPR's
major operations, including its rail operations, were organized as
separate subsidiaries. The name of the railway was changed to CP
Rail, and the parent company changed its name to
Canadian Pacific Limited in 1971.
Its express, telecommunications, hotel and real estate holdings
were spun off, and ownership of all of the companies transferred to
Canadian Pacific Investments. The company discarded its beaver
logo, adopting the new
Multimark logo that
could be used for each of its operations.
1979–present
In 1984
CP Rail commenced construction of the Mount Macdonald Tunnel to augment the
Connaught Tunnel under the Selkirk
Mountains
. The first revenue train passed through the
tunnel in 1988. At 14.7 km (9 miles), it is the longest tunnel
in the
Americas.
During the 1980s, the
Soo Line
Railroad, in which CP Rail still owned a controlling interest,
underwent several changes. It acquired the
Minneapolis,
Northfield and Southern Railway in 1982. Then on February 21,
1985, the Soo Line obtained a controlling interest in the
Milwaukee Road, merging it into its system on
January 1, 1986. Also in 1980 Canadian Pacific bought out the
controlling interests of the
Toronto, Hamilton and
Buffalo Railway (TH&B) from
Conrail
and molded it into the Canadian Pacific System, dissolving the
TH&B's name from the books in 1985.
In 1987 most of CPR's
trackage in the Great
Lakes
region, including much of the original Soo Line,
were spun off into a new railway, the Wisconsin Central, which was
subsequently purchased by CN. Influenced by the
Canada-U.S.
Free Trade
Agreement of 1989 which liberalized
trade
between the two nations, the CPR's expansion continued during the
early 1990s: CP Rail gained full control of the Soo Line in 1990,
and bought the
Delaware and
Hudson Railway in 1991. These two acquisitions gave CP Rail
routes to the major American cities of Chicago (via the Soo Line)
and New York City (via the D&H).
During the next few years CP Rail downsized its route, and several
Canadian
branch lines were either sold
to
short lines or abandoned.
This included all of its lines east of Montreal, with the routes
operating across Maine and New Brunswick to the port of Saint John
(operating as the
Canadian
Atlantic Railway) being sold or abandoned, severing CPR's
transcontinental status (in Canada); the opening of the
St. Lawrence Seaway in the late 1950s,
coupled with subsidized icebreaking services, made Saint John
surplus to CPR's requirements. During the 1990s, both CP Rail and
CN attempted unsuccessfully to buy out the eastern assets of the
other, so as to permit further rationalization. As well, it closed
divisional and regional offices, drastically reduced white collar
staff, and consolidated its Canadian traffic control system in
Calgary, Alberta.
Finally, in 1996, reflecting the increased importance of western
traffic to the railway, CP Rail moved its head office to Calgary
from Montreal and changed its name back to Canadian Pacific
Railway.
A new subsidiary
company, the St.
Lawrence and Hudson Railway, was created to operate its
money-losing lines in eastern North America, covering Quebec
, Southern
and Eastern Ontario, trackage rights
to Chicago,
Illinois
, as well as the Delaware and Hudson Railway in
the U.S. Northeast. However, the new subsidiary,
threatened with being sold off and free to innovate, quickly spun
off losing track to short lines, instituted scheduled freight
service, and produced an unexpected turn-around in profitability.
After only four years, CPR revised its opinion and the StL&H
formally re-amalgamated with its parent on January 1, 2001.
In 2001, the CPR's parent company,
Canadian Pacific Limited, spun off
its five subsidiaries, including the CPR, into independent
companies. Canadian Pacific Railway formally (but, not legally)
shortened its name to Canadian Pacific in early 2007, dropping the
word "railway" in order to reflect more operational flexibility.
Shortly after the name revision, Canadian Pacific announced that it
had committed to becoming a major sponsor and logistics provider to
the 2010 Olympic Winter Games in Vancouver, British Columbia.
On September 4, 2007, CPR announced it was acquiring the
Dakota, Minnesota and
Eastern Railroad from its present owners, London-based
Electra Private Equity. The
transaction is an "end-to-end" consolidation, and will give CPR
access to U.S. shippers of agricultural products, ethanol, and
coal.
CPR
has stated its intention to use this purchase to gain access to the
rich coal fields of Wyoming
's Powder River Basin
. The purchase price is
US$1.48 billion, and future payments of over
US$1.0 billion contingent on commencement of
construction on the smaller railroad's Powder River extension and
specified volumes of coal shipments from the Powder River basin.
The transaction was subject to approval of the U.S.
Surface Transportation Board
(STB), which was expected to take a year. On October 4, 2007, CPR
announced it has completed the financial transactions required for
the acquisition, placing the DM&E and IC&E in a voting
trust with
Richard Hamlin appointed
as the trustee. CPR planned to integrate the railroads' operations
once the STB approves the acquisition. The merger was completed as
of October 31, 2008.
Freight trains
Over half of CP's freight traffic is in
coal,
grain, and
intermodal
freight, and the vast majority of its profits are made in western
Canada.
A
major shift in trade from the Atlantic to the Pacific has caused
serious drops in CPR's wheat shipments through Thunder Bay
. It also ships automotive parts and
assembled automobiles,
sulphur,
fertilizers, other
chemicals, forest products, and other types of
commodities. The busiest part of its railway network is along its
main line between Calgary and Vancouver.
Since 1970, coal has become a major commodity hauled by CPR.
Coal is
shipped in unit trains from coal mines in
the mountains, most notably Sparwood, British Columbia
to terminals at Roberts Bank
and North Vancouver, from
where it is then shipped to Japan
.
The CPR hauls over 34 million tons of coal to the west coast each
year, mainly for export to Japan.
Grain is
hauled by the CPR from the prairies to ports at Thunder Bay (the
former cities of Fort William
and Port Arthur
), Quebec City and Vancouver, where it is then
shipped overseas. The traditional winter export port was
West Saint John, New Brunswick when ice closed the St. Lawrence
River.
Grain has always been a significant
commodity hauled by the CPR; between 1905 and 1909, the CPR
double-tracked its section of track between Fort
William
and Winnipeg
to facilitate grain shipments. For several
decades this was the only long stretch of double-track mainline
outside of urban areas on the CPR.
In 1952, the CPR became the first North American railway to
introduce
intermodal or
"piggyback"
freight service, where truck
trailers are carried on
flat cars.
Containers later replaced most piggyback service. In 1996, the CPR
introduced a scheduled reservation-only short-haul intermodal
service between Montreal and West Toronto called the
Iron
Highway; it utilized unique equipment that was later replaced
(1999) by conventional piggyback flatcars and renamed
Expressway. This service was extended to Detroit with
plans to reach Chicago however CP was unable to locate a suitable
terminal. Loss of the small Detroit terminal and low US traffic
along with loss of the Chrysler Windsor traffic it was later cut
back to Milton, west of Toronto.
Passenger trains
The train
was the primary mode of long-distance transportation in Canada
until the
1960s. Among the many types of people who rode CPR trains
were new immigrants heading for the prairies, military troops
(especially during the two world wars) and upper class tourists. It
also custom-built many of its
passenger car at its
CPR Angus Shops to be able to meet the
demands of the upper class.The CPR also had a line of Great Lakes
ships integrated into is transcontinental service. From 1885 until
1912, these ships linked Owen Sound on Georgian Bay to Fort
William. Following a major fire in December 1911 that destroyed the
grain elevator, operations were relocated to a new, larger port
created by the CPR at Port McNicoll opening in May 1912. Five ships
allowed daily service, and included the S.S.
Assiniboia,
and S.S.
Keewatin built in 1908 which remained in use
until the end of service. Travellers went by train from Toronto to
that Georgian Bay port, then travelled by ship to link with another
train at the Lakehead. After
World War
II, the trains and ships carried automobiles as well as
passengers. This service featured what was to become the last
boat train in North America. The
Steam Boat was a fast, direct connecting train between
Toronto and Port McNicoll. The passenger service was discontinued
at the end of season in 1965 with one ship, the
Keewatin,
carrying on in freight service for two more years. It later became
a marine museum in the United States.
After World War II, passenger traffic declined as automobiles and
aeroplanes became more common, but the CPR continued to innovate in
an attempt to keep ridership up. Beginning November 9, 1953, the
CPR introduced
Budd Rail Diesel
Cars (RDCs) on many of its lines. Officially called "Dayliners"
by the CPR, they were always referred to as
Budd Cars by
employees. Greatly reduced travel times and reduced costs resulted,
which saved service on many lines for a number of years. The CPR
would go on to acquire the second largest fleet of RDCs totaling 52
cars. Only the
Boston and
Maine Railroad had more. This CPR fleet also included the rare
model RDC-4 (which consisted of a mail section at one end and a
baggage section at the other end with no formal passenger section).
On April 24, 1955, the CPR introduced a new luxury transcontinental
passenger train,
The Canadian.
The train provided
service between Vancouver and Toronto or Montreal (east of Sudbury
; the train was in two sections). The train,
which operated on an expedited schedule, was pulled by
diesel locomotives, and used new,
streamlined, stainless steel rolling stock.
Starting in the 1960s, however, the railway started to discontinue
much of its passenger service, particularly on its branch lines.
For
example, passenger service ended on its line through southern
British
Columbia
and Crowsnest Pass
in January 1964, and on its Quebec Central in April 1967, and the
transcontinental train The Dominion was dropped in January
1966. On October 29, 1978, CP Rail transferred its passenger
services to
VIA Rail, a new federal Crown
corporation that was now responsible for intercity passenger
services in Canada. Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney presided
over major cuts in VIA Rail service on January 15, 1990. This ended
service by "The Canadian" over CPR rails, and the train was
rerouted on the former "Super Continental" route via Canadian
National without a change of name. Where both trains had been daily
prior to the January 15, 1990, cuts, the surviving "Canadian" was
(and is) only a three-times-weekly operation.
In addition to inter-city passenger services, the CPR also provided
commuter rail
services in Montreal. CP Rail introduced Canada's first
bi-level passenger cars here in 1970. On October
1, 1982, the
Montreal Urban
Community Transit Commission (MUCTC) assumed responsibility for
the commuter services previously provided by CP Rail. It continues
under the
Metropolitan
Transportation Agency (AMT).
Canadian Pacific Railway currently operates three commuter services
under contract. The
West Coast
Express comprises ten daily trains between downtown Vancouver
and its eastern suburbs on behalf of
TransLink, a regional transit
authority.
GO Transit contracts CPR to
operate six return trips between Milton and downtown Toronto in
Ontario.
In Montreal, 59 daily commuter trains run on
CPR lines from Lucien-L'Allier Station
to Candiac, Rigaud and Blainville–Saint-Jerome
on behalf of the AMT.
Sleeping, Dining and Parlour Car Department
Sleeping cars were operated by a
separate department of the railway that included the dining and
parlour cars and aptly named as the Sleeping, Dining and Parlour
Car Department.
The CPR decided from the very beginning that it would operate its
own sleeping cars, unlike railways in the United States that
depended upon independent companies that specialized in providing
cars and porters, including building the cars themselves. Pullman
was long a famous name in this regard; its
Pullman porters were legendary.
Other early companies included the
Wagner Palace Car Company.
Bigger-sized berths and more comfortable surroundings were built by
order of the CPR's General Manager,
William Van Horne, who was a large man
himself. Providing and operating their own cars allowed better
control of the service provided as well as keeping all of the
revenue received, although profit was never a direct result of
providing food to passengers. Rather, it was the realization that
those who could afford to travel great distances expected such
facilities and their favourable opinion would bode well to
attracting others to Canada and the CPR's trains.
This department also operated the news service which provided the
news agents on passenger trains, who sold small refreshments and
many other items such as playing cards to travelers, who might
otherwise be unable to afford the higher priced
dining car meals. The news service also operated
lunch counters in medium-sized stations at key points (there were
19 of them east of Winnipeg) while the large terminal stations had
dining rooms operated directly by the Dining Car Department (e.g.
the Alouette Room in Montreal's Windsor Station and the Pacific
Room in the Vancouver station).
Express
W. C. Van Horne decided from the very beginning that the CPR would
retain as much revenue from its various operations as it could.
This translated into keeping express, telegraph, sleeping car and
other lines of business for themselves, creating separate
departments or companies as necessary. This was necessary as the
fledgling railway would need all the income it could get, and in
addition, he saw some of these ancillary operations such as express
and telegraph as being quite profitable. Others such as sleeping
and dining cars were kept in order to provide better control over
the quality of service being provided to passengers. Hotels were
likewise crucial to the CPR’s growth by attracting
travellers.
Dominion Express Company was formed independently
in 1873 before the CPR itself, although train service did not begin
until the summer of 1882 at which time it operated over some of
track from Rat Portage (Kenora) Ontario west to Winnipeg, Manitoba.
It was soon absorbed into the CPR and expanded everywhere the CPR
went. It was renamed
Canadian Express Company on
September 1, 1926, and the headquarters moved from Winnipeg, to
Toronto. It was operated as a separate company with the railway
charging them to haul express cars on trains. At major terminals
separate buildings usually next to stations were owned by CPE. At
smaller locations where volume would not warrant a separate
employee the local station agent would act for the Express Company
receiving a commission for all sales made on their behalf.
Express was handled in separate cars, some with employees on board,
on the headend of passenger trains to provide a fast scheduled
service for which higher rates could be charged than for LCL (Less
than Carload Lot), small shipments of freight which were subject to
delay. Aside from all sorts of small shipments for all kinds of
businesses such products as cream, butter, poultry, and eggs were
handled along with fresh flowers, fish and other sea foods some
handled in separate refrigerated cars. Horses and livestock along
with birds and small animals including prize cattle for exhibition
were carried often in special horse cars that had facilities for
grooms to ride with their animals. Automobiles for individuals were
also handled by express in closed boxcars. Gold and silver bullion
as well as cash were carried in large amounts between the mint and
banks etc. Small business money shipments and valuables such as
jewellery were routinely handled in small packets. Money orders and
travellers’ cheques were an important part of the express company’s
business and were used worldwide in the years before credit
cards.
Canadian Express Cartage Department was formed in
March 1937 to handle pickup and delivery of most express shipments
including less-than-carload freight. Their trucks were painted
Killarney (dark) green while regular express company vehicles were
painted bright red.
Express routes using highway trucks beginning in November 1945 in
southern Ontario and Alberta co-ordinated rail and highway service
expanded service to better serve smaller locations especially on
branchlines. Trucking operations would go on to expand across
Canada making it an important transportation provider for small
shipments. Deregulation in the 1980s changed everything, and it was
not long before all trucking services were ended even after many
attempts to change with the times. CanPar was one such
attempt.
Telegraph
The original charter of the CPR granted in 1881 provided for the
right to create an
electric
telegraph and
telephone service
including charging for it. The telephone had barely been invented
but telegraph was well established as a means of communicating
quickly across great distances. Being allowed to sell this service
meant the railway could offset the costs of constructing and
maintaining a pole line along its tracks across vast distances for
its own purposes which were largely for dispatching trains. It
began doing so in 1882 as the separate Telegraph Department. It
would go on to provide a link between the cables under the Atlantic
and Pacific oceans when they were completed. Prior to the CPR line
messages to the west could be sent only via the United
States.
Paid for by the word, a telegram was an expensive way to send
messages but, vital to businesses. An individual receiving a
personal telegram was seen as being someone important except for
those that transmitted sorrow in the form of death notices.
Messengers on bicycles delivered telegrams and picked up a reply in
cities. In smaller locations the local railway station agent would
handle this on a commission basis. To speed things, at the local
end messages would first be telephoned.
In 1931 it became the Communications Department in recognition of
the expanding services provided which included telephones lines,
news wire,
ticker quotations for the
stock market and eventually
teletype machines. All were faster than
mail and very important to
business and the public alike for many decades
before
cell phones and
computers came along.
It was the coming of these newer technologies especially cellular
telephones that eventually resulted in the demise of these services
even after formation in 1967 of
CN-CP Telecommunications in an
effort to effect efficiencies through consolidation rather than
competition. Commercial telegraph service officially ended in 1974.
Deregulation in the 1980s brought about
mergers and the sale of remaining services and facilities.
Radio
On January 17, 1930, the CPR applied for licenses to operate
radio stations in eleven cities from
coast-to-coast for the purpose of organizing its own
radio network in order to compete with the
CNR Radio service. The CNR had built a
radio network with the aim of promoting itself as well as
entertaining its passengers during their travels. The onset of the
Great Depression hurt the CPR's financial plan for a rival project
and in April they withdrew their applications for stations in all
but Toronto, Montreal and Winnipeg.
CPR did not end up pursuing these
applications but instead operated a phantom station in Toronto known as "CPRY",
with initials standing for "Canadian Pacific Royal York" which
operated out of studios at CP's Royal York Hotel
and leased time on CFRB
and
CKGW. A network of affiliates carried
the CPR radio network's broadcasts in the first half of the 1930s,
but the takeover of CNR's Radio service by the new
Canadian Radio
Broadcasting Commission removed CPR's need to have a network
for competitive reasons, and CPR's radio service was discontinued
in 1935.
Steamships
Steamships played an important part in the
history of CP from the very earliest days. During construction of
the line in British Columbia even before the private CPR took over
from the government contractor, ships were used to bring supplies
to the construction sites. Similarly, to reach the isolated area of
Superior in northern Ontario ships were used to bring in supplies
to the construction work. While this work was going on there was
already regular passenger service to the West. Trains operated from
Toronto to Owen Sound where CPR steamships connected to Fort
William where trains once again operated to reach Winnipeg. Before
the CPR was completed the only way to reach the West was through
the United States via St. Paul and Winnipeg. This Great Lakes steam
ship service continued as an alternative route for many years and
was always operated by the railway. It would become the last
operation in North America to feature a special connecting boat
train.
Once the railway was completed to British Columbia the CPR
chartered and soon bought their own steamships. These sleek
steamships were of the latest design and christened with the prefix
Empress in a link to the Orient. Travel to and from the Orient and
cargo, especially imported tea and silk were an important source of
revenue aided by Royal Mail contracts. This was an important part
of the All Red Route to link the British Empire. The other ocean
part was the Atlantic service from England which began with
acquisition of two existing lines, Beaver Line, owned by Elder
Dempster and Allan Lines. These two segments became Canadian
Pacific Ocean Services (later, Canadian Pacific Steamships) and
operated separately from the various lake services operated in
Canada.
These trans-ocean routes made it possible to
travel from Britain
to Hong
Kong
using only the CPR's ships, trains and
hotels. CP’s 'Empress' ships became world-famous for their
luxury and speed. They had a practical role too in transporting
immigrants from much of Europe to Canada especially to populate the
vast prairies. They also played an important role in both world
wars with many of them being lost to enemy action including the
Empress of
Britain.
There were also a number of
rail ferries
operated over the years as well including, between Windsor, Ontario
and Detroit, Michigan from 1890 until 1915. This began with two
paddle-wheelers capable of carrying 16 cars. Passenger cars were
carried as well as freight. This service ended in 1915 when the CPR
made an agreement with the Michigan Central to use their Detroit
River tunnel opened in 1910.
Pennsylvania-Ontario Transportation Company was formed jointly with
the PRR in 1906 to operate a ferry across lake Erie between
Ashtabula, Ohio and Port Burwell, Ontario to carry freight cars,
mostly of coal, much of it to be burned in CPR steam locomotives.
Only one ferry boat was ever operated, the
Ashtabula, a
large vessel which eventually sank in a harbour collision in
Ashtabula on September 18, 1958, thus ending the service.
Canadian Pacific Car and Passenger Transfer Company was formed by
other interest in 1888 linking the CPR in Prescott, Ontario, and
the NYC in Ogdensburg, New York. Service on this route had actually
begun very early, in 1854 along with service from Brockville. A
bridge built in 1958 ended passenger service however, freight
continued until Ogdensburg's dock was destroyed by fire September
25, 1970, thus ending all service. CPC&PTC was never owned by
the CPR.
Bay of Fundy
ferry service was operated for
passengers and freight for many years linking Digby, Nova
Scotia
, and Saint John, New Brunswick
.
Eventually, after 78 years, with the changing times the scheduled
passenger services would all be ended as well as ocean cruises.
Cargo would continue on both oceans with a change over to
containers. CP was an intermodal pioneer especially on land with
road and rail mixing to provide the best service.
CP Ships was the final operation, and in
the end it too left CP ownership when it was sold off in
2005.
BC Coast Steamships
BCCS was established when the CPR acquired in 1901 Canadian Pacific
Navigation Company (no relation) and its large fleet of ships that
served 72 ports along the coast of British Columbia including on
Vancouver Island. Service included the Vancouver-Victoria-Seattle
Triangle Route, Gulf Islands, Powell River, as well as
Vancouver-Alaska service. BCCS operated a fleet of 14 passenger
ships made up of a number of
Princess ships, pocket
versions of the famous ocean going
Empress ships along
with a freighter, three tugs and five rail car barges. Popular with
tourists, the Princess ships were famous in their own right
especially the
Princess Marguerite (II) which became the
last coastal liner operating from 1949 until 1985.
The best known of the
princess ships, however, is the Princess Sophia, which sank
with no survivors in October 1918 after striking the Vanderbilt Reef in Alaska's Lynn Canal
, constituting the largest maritime disaster in the
history of the Pacific Northwest.
These services continued for many years until changing conditions
in the late 1950s brought about their decline and eventual demise
at the end of season in 1974. The
Princess Marguerite was
acquired by the province’s British Columbia Steamship (1975) Ltd.
and continued to operate for a number of years.
British Columbia lake and river services
CP began
a long history of service in the Kootenays region of southern
British Columbia beginning with the purchase in 1897 of the
Columbia and Kootenay Steam Navigation Company which operated a
fleet of steamers and barges on the Arrow Lakes
. Other services were also provided on the
Columbia River, Kootenay Lake
, Okanagan
Lake
, Slocan Lake, and Trout
Lake
. All of these lake operations had one thing
in common, the need for shallow draft therefore sternwheelers were
the choice of ship. Tugs and barges handled rail equipment
including one operation that saw the entire train including the
locomotive and caboose go along. These services gradually declined
and ended in 1975 except for a freight barge on Slocan Lake. This
was the one where the entire train went along since the barge was a
link to an isolated section of track. The
Iris G tug boat
and a barge were operated under contract to CP Rail until the last
train ran late in December 1988. The sternwheel steamship
Moyie on Kootenay Lake was the last CPR passenger boat in
BC lake service, having operated from 1898 until 1957. It became a
beached historical exhibit.
Hotels
To promote tourism and passenger ridership the Canadian Pacific
established a series of first class resort hotels. These hotels
became landmarks famous in their own right.
They include The Algonquin
in St. Andrews
, Château Frontenac
in Quebec
, Royal
York
in Toronto, Minaki Lodge in Minaki Ontario,
Hotel
Vancouver
, Empress
Hotel
in Victoria
and the Banff Springs Hotel
and Chateau Lake
Louise in the Canadian Rockies. Several signature hotels
were acquired from its competitor
Canadian National during the
1980s. The hotels retain their Canadian Pacific heritage but are no
longer operated by the railroad. In 1998
Canadian Pacific Hotels acquired
Fairmont Hotels, an
American company, becoming
Fairmont Hotels and Resorts Inc.
and the combined corporation operated the historic Canadian
properties as well as the Fairmont's U.S. properties until sold in
2006.
Airline
Canadian Pacific Airlines, also called CP Air, operated from 1942
to 1987 and was the main competitor of government owned
Air Canada.
Based at Vancouver
International Airport
, it served Canadian and international routes until
it was purchased by Pacific
Western Airlines which merged PWA and CP Air to create Canadian Airlines.
Special trains
Silk trains
Between
the 1890s and the 1940s, the CPR transported raw silk cocoons from Vancouver, where they had been
shipped to from the Orient, to silk mills in
New
York
and New
Jersey
. A silk train could carry several million
dollars worth of silk, so they had their own armed guards. To avoid
train robberies and so minimize insurance costs, they traveled
quickly and stopped only to change locomotives and crews, which was
often done in under five minutes. The silk trains had superior
rights over all other trains; even passenger trains (including the
Royal Train of 1939) would be put in sidings to make the silk
trains' trip faster. At the end of
World
War II, the invention of
nylon made silk
less valuable so the silk trains died out.
Funeral trains

Funeral train of Prime Minister Sir
John A.
Funeral trains would carry the remains
of important people, such as prime ministers. As the train would
pass, mourners would be at certain spots to show respect. Two of
the CPR's funeral trains are particularly well-known. On June 10,
1891, the funeral train of
Prime
Minister Sir John A.
Macdonald ran from Ottawa to Kingston,
Ontario
. The train consisted of five heavily draped
passenger cars and was pulled by
4-4-0 No.
283.
On
September 14, 1915, the funeral train of former CPR president
Sir William Cornelius
Van Horne ran from Montreal to Joliet
, Illinois
, pulled by 4-6-2 No.
2213.
The Canadian was used as funeral train for former
Prime Minister John Diefenbaker in 1979.
Royal trains
The CPR ran a number of trains that transported members of the
Royal family when they toured Canada. These trains transported
royalty through Canada's scenery, forests, small towns and enabled
people to see and greet them. Their trains were elegantly
decorated; some had amenities such as a post office and barber
shop. The CPR's most notable royal train was in 1939.
In 1939
the CPR and the CNR had the honour of giving King George VI and Queen Elizabeth a rail tour of Canada,
from Quebec
City
to Vancouver
. This was the first visit to Canada by a
reigning Monarch. The steam locomotives used to pull the train
included CPR 2850, a Hudson (
4-6-4) built by
Montreal Locomotive Works
in 1938, CNR 6400, a U-4-a Northern (
4-8-4)
and CNR 6028 a U-1-b Mountain (
4-8-2) type.
They were specially painted royal blue with silver trim as was the
entire train, the locomotives ran 5,189 km (3,224 miles)
across Canada, through 25 changes of crew, without engine failure.
The King, somewhat of a
railbuff, rode in
the cab when possible. After the tour, King George gave the CPR
permission to use the term "
Royal
Hudson" for the CPR locomotives and to display Royal Crowns on
their running boards. This applied only to the semi-streamlined
locomotives (2820–2864), not the "standard" Hudsons
(2800–2819).
School cars
Between 1926 and the early 1960s the CPR ran a school car to reach
people who lived in Northern Ontario, far from schools. A teacher
would travel in a specially designed car to remote areas and would
stay to teach in one area for two to three days, then leave for
another area. Each car had a blackboard and a few sets of chairs
and desks. They also contained miniature libraries. These school
cars were useful in spreading education and literacy.
Silver Streak
Major
filming for the 1976 movie Silver Streak, a fictional comedy
tale of a train trip from Los Angeles
to Chicago
, was done on
the CPR, mainly in the Alberta
area with
station footage at Toronto's Union Station
. The train set was so lightly disguised
as the fictional "AMRoad" that the locomotives and cars still
carried their original names and numbers, along with the
easily-identifiable CP Rail red-striped paint scheme. Most of the
cars are still in revenue service on VIA Rail Canada; the lead
locomotive is extant in Quebec, but the second unit has been
scrapped.
Holiday (Christmas) Train
Starting in 1999, the CPR ran a Holiday Train along its main line
during the months of November and December. The Holiday Train
celebrates the Christmas season and collects donations for
community
food banks. The holiday train
also provides publicity for the CPR and a few of its customers.
Each train has a box car stage for entertainers who are traveling
along with the train. The train is a freight train, but also pulls
vintage passenger cars which are used as lodging/transportation for
the entertainers, and are very accomodating. People that come to
see the train may even come onboard and check out some of the
holiday decorations and vintage passenger cars. Since its launch in
1999, the Holiday Train program has raised more than $2.3 million
CAD and 506 tons of food for North
American food banks. All donations collected in a community remain
in that community for distribution. It collects donations of food
and money (as well as makes its own donations) for the needy to
help better their Christmas.The Holiday train is a very festive,
Christmas themed train. The trains are well decorated; each car as
well as the locomotive and caboose are covered in Christmas lights,
and the trains spread Christmas joy throughout the CP system,
passing through every single major city and town on the CP system.
There are three trains which cover the five main regions of the CP:
- US Northeast
- US Midwest
- Quebec & Ontario
- Manitoba & Saskatchewan
- Alberta & British Columbia
Royal Canadian Pacific
On June 7, 2000, the CPR inaugurated the
Royal Canadian Pacific, a luxury
excursion service that operates between the months of June and
September.
It operates along a 1,050 km (650 mile)
route from Calgary, through the Columbia
River Valley, and Crowsnest Pass
, and returning back to Calgary. The trip
takes six days and five nights. The train consists of up to eight
luxury passenger cars built between 1916 and 1931 and is powered by
first-generation diesel locomotives.
Steam train
In 1998, the CPR repatriated one of its former passenger steam
locomotives that had been on static display in the United States
following its sale in January 1964, long after the close of the
steam era. CPR Hudson
2816 was
re-designated
Empress 2816 following a 30-month
restoration that cost in excess of $1 million. It was subsequently
returned to service to promote public relations. It has operated
across much of the CPR system, including lines in the United
States. It has been used for various charitable purposes, the most
significant of which has been to raise awareness of the need to
provide children with a nourishing breakfast to aid their learning
in school. One hundred percent of the money raised goes to the
nation-wide charity
Breakfast For
Learning — the CPR bears all of the expenses associated with
the operation of the train.
Spirit Train
In 2008, Canadian Pacific partnered with the
2010 Olympic and Paralympic Winter
Games to present a "Spirit Train" tour that featured
Olympic-themed events at various stops.
Colin James was a headline entertainer. Several
stops were met by protesters who argued that the games are slated
to take place on stolen indigenous land.
Locomotives
Steam locomotives

CPR Selkirk locomotive No.
In the CPR's early years, it made extensive use of
American
Standard 4-4-0 steam locomotives and example of this is
the
Countess of Dufferin.
Later, considerable use was also made of the
4-6-0 type for passenger and
2-8-0 type for freight.
Starting in the 20th century, the CPR bought and built hundreds of
Ten-Wheeler type
4-6-0s for passenger
and freight service and similar quantities of
2-8-0s and
2-10-2s for freight.
2-10-2s were also used in passenger service on mountain routes. The
CPR bought hundreds of
4-6-2 Pacifics
between 1906 and 1948 with later versions being true dual purpose
passenger and fast freight locomotives.
The CPR built hundreds of its own locomotives at its shops in
Montreal, first at the
New Shops as the DeLorimer shops
were commonly referred to and at the massive
Angus
Shops that replaced them in 1904.
Some of the CPR's best-known locomotives were the
4-6-4 Hudsons. First built in 1929 they began
a new era of modern locomotives with capabilities that changed how
transcontinental passenger trains ran, eliminating frequent changes
en route. What once took 24 changes of engines in 1886, all of them
4-4-0s except for two of 2-8-0s in the mountains, for between
Montreal and Vancouver became 8 changes. The 2800s (Twenty Eight
Hundreds) as the Hudson type was known, ran from Toronto to Fort
William a distance of 811 miles (1,306 km), while another
lengthy engine district was from Winnipeg to Calgary 832 miles
(1,338 km).
Especially notable were the semi-
streamlined H1 class
Royal Hudson, locomotives that were given
their name because one of their class hauled the Royal Train
carrying King George VI and Queen Elizabeth on the 1939 Royal Tour
across Canada without change or failure. That locomotive, No.
2850, is
preserved in the Exporail exhibit hall of the Canadian
Railway Museum
in St. Constant (Delson) Quebec. One of
the class, No.
2860, was restored by the British
Columbia
government and used in excursion service on the
British Columbia Railway
between 1974 and 1999.
In 1929, the CPR received its first
2-10-4
Selkirk locomotives, the largest
steam locomotives to run in Canada and the British Empire. Named
after the Selkirk Mountains where they served, these locomotives
were well suited for steep grades. They were regularly used in
passenger and freight service. The CPR would own 37 of these
locomotives, including number 8000, an experimental high pressure
engine. The last steam locomotives that the CPR received, in 1949,
were Selkirks, numbered 5930–5935.
Diesel locomotives
In 1937, the CPR acquired its first
diesel-electric locomotive, a
custom built one-of-a-kind switcher numbered 7000. This locomotive
was not successful and was not repeated. Production model diesels
were imported from
American
Locomotive Company (Alco) starting with five model
S-2 yard switchers in 1943 and followed by
further orders.
In 1949, operations on lines in Vermont
were dieselized with Alco
FA1 road locomotives (8 A and 4 B units), 5 Alco RS-2 road switchers, 3 Alco S-2 switchers and
3 EMD E8 passenger locomotives. In
1948
Montreal Locomotive
Works began production of Alco designs.
In 1949,
the CPR acquired 13 Baldwin
designed locomotives from the Canadian Locomotive Company for
its isolated Esquimalt and
Nanaimo Railway, and Vancouver Island
was quickly dieselized. Following that
successful experiment, the CPR started to dieselise its main
network. Dieselization was completed eleven years later, with its
last steam locomotive running on November 6, 1960.
The CPR's
first-generation locomotives were mostly made by General Motors Diesel and Montreal Locomotive Works,
(American Locomotive
Company designs), with some made by the Canadian Locomotive Company to
Baldwin
and Fairbanks Morse
designs.CP was the first railway in North America to pioneer
AC traction diesel-electric
locomotives, in 1984. In 1995 CP turned to General Electric
GE Transportation Systems
for the first production AC traction locomotives in Canada, and now
has the highest percentage of AC locomotives in service of all
North American Class I railways. As of early 2007, 578 of the CPR's
1,669 locomotives are AC.
Roster
- GMD
- SD40-2
- GP35
- SW1200, 1200RSu, 1200RS
- SW1500
- SW900
- SW8
- SW9u
- GP9, GP9u, GP9R
- GP7u
- GP40, GP40-2
- GP38AC, 38-2
- GP39-2
- FP7
- EMD FP9A, F9B
- SW900M
- F9B
- F7B
- SD40-2F
- EMD GP40-2 (DM&E,
ex-IC&E)
- EMD SD40-3 (DM&E, ex-IC&E,
ex-I&M Rail Link)
Rolling stock
- 1655 locomotives
- 1000 stand alone double stack well cars
- 3100 high-capacity covered hopper cars—grain and
fertilizer
- 2897 gondolas
- 474—steel and concentrate
- 1553—mill gondola (primarily used in scrap metal service)
- 306—open coil gondola
- 531—covered coil gondola
- 33—covered flat-bottom gondola
- 1250 high-capacity aluminum coal cars
- 375 light-weight aluminum multi-level cars
- 175 high-capacity traverse coil steel cars
- 620 62-foot high capacity box cars
CPR also has a fleet of boxcars, insulated boxcars, centrebeam
flatcars, auto parts service boxcars, regular flat cars, and a
fleet of tank cars.
Major facilities
CP owns a large number of large yards and repair shops across their
system, which are used for many operations ranging from
intermodal terminals to
classification yards. Below are some
examples of these.
Active hump yards
Hump yards work by using a small
hill over which cars are pushed, before being released down a slope
and switched automatically into cuts of cars, ready to be made into
outbound trains. CP's active humps include:
See also
References
Notes
Sources
External links
Canadian CPR travel links