Beachburg Subdivision
Overview
StatusPartially Ceased operation
OwnerCanadian Northern Railway (1915–23)
Canadian National Railway (1923–96)
Ottawa Central Railway (1998-2008)
Canadian National Railway (2008-present)
Termini
Service
TypeHeavy rail
SystemCanadian Northern Railway (1915–1923)
Canadian National Railway (1923–1996)
Services Super Continental
Northlander
History
Opened1915 (1915)
ClosedApril 2013 (2013-04)
Technical
Line length163.9 mi (263.8 km)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
CN Beachburg Subdivision

miles
0.00
CN Ottawa
3.4
Ellwood Junction
Jct w CPR Ellwood Subdivision
3.5
CPR Ellwood Subdivision Diamond
5.3
Wass
Jct w Walkley Line
5.8
Rideau River Federal Bridge
6.0
Federal
Jct w Smiths Falls Subdivision
11.10
Bells Corners
HWY 417
14.40
Nepean
Jct w Renfrew Subdivision
24.01
Malwood
27.6
Woodlawn
37.8
Ottawa River Bridge Ont/Que
40.21
Pontiac
45.6
Norway Bay
47.90
Bristol
54.2
Clarendon
59.25
Portage Du Fort
60.0
Ottawa River Bridge Que/Ont
66.35
Forester Falls
72.6
Beachburg
82.73
CP Chalk River Sub
86.86
Pembroke
91.61
Hiam
97.0
Alice
105.4
Indian
111.2
Dahlia
116.0
Kathmore
123.2
Achray
133.5
Brawny
140.8
Lake Traverse
151.3
Radiant
163.9
Brent
Alderdale Subdivision
Capreol

The Canadian National Railway's Beachburg Subdivision or "Beachburg Sub" for short, was part of the former Transcontinental Mainline. The Beachburg Sub connected Ottawa to Brent, Ontario.[1]

The line began operating in 1915 as part of Canadian Northern Railway, then in 1923 it became part of the Canadian National Railway. The route passed through a portion of Algonquin Provincial Park in Ontario, where Achray was a station in the park with a passing track on the mainline. The final train through the park was an eastbound freight on November 24, 1995. Abandonment from Pembroke, west to Brent, went through and the rail was lifted at Pembroke west through the park and was completed by September 1997. The remaining line went from Ottawa MP 0.0 to Pembroke MP 88.7

Ottawa Central Railway began operating in 1998 to 2008 as a short-line maintaining local traffic to industries along remaining line out of Walkley Yard in Ottawa. November 3, 2008 CN bought the short line and began running the local traffic and with the intention to discontinue the line from Nepean Junction to Pembroke. Traffic slowed as industry along the line closed or ramped down production. A group called Transport Pontiac-Renfrew (TPR) was working towards a deal to acquire the Beachburg sub for future passenger service to Ottawa and Pembroke and freight service. Without a deal made, in April 2013 CN began removing rail in Pembroke and working east.

A short section of the line between the Ottawa Railway Station and the junction with the Smith Falls Subdivision (after crossing the Canadian Northern Ontario Railway Federal Bridge) is currently owned and operated by VIA Rail, which operates its Corridor service between Ottawa and Toronto.

In 2019, the City of Ottawa announced its intention to acquire a portion of the Beachburg Subdivision right of way for possible eventual use as a belt line in the city's growing O-Train light rail transit system.[2] In 2021, Ottawa City Council approved the purchase of the abandoned section of the Beachburg Subdivision between Nepean Junction and the Ottawa River.[3]

References

  1. Smith, Jeffrey P (2014-10-11). "C.N.Rys. Beachburg Subdivision". C.N.Ry. in Ontario. Retrieved 2018-07-26.
  2. Ali, Hamza. "City of Ottawa exploring purchase of two abandoned south-end railway lines". Capital Current.
  3. "Council briefs: Approvals for more photo radar, small biz tax break, rail corridor purchase". ottawacitizen. Retrieved 2021-10-27.
  • Canadian Trackside Guide 2009, Bytown Railway Society, Inc

Further reading

  • Campbell, Jim (September 2008). Roberts, Earl W. (ed.). "Once Upon the Beachburg Subdivision - Steam Days in Ottawa". Branchline. Vol. 47, no. 8. Bytown Railway Society. pp. 18–19. ISSN 0824-233X. Various reminiscences of Canadian National operations on the line.
  • Robitaille, Sean (May 1997). "A link removed in CN's transcontinental mainline: Beachburg Sub. adieu". Rail & Transit. No. 564. Upper Canada Railway Society. pp. 3–7. ISSN 1193-7971.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.