Sudbury and Copper Cliff Suburban Electric Railway

The Sudbury & Copper Cliff Suburban Electric Railway is a former interurban electric railway that connected downtown Sudbury and Copper Cliff in Ontario, Canada.

Sudbury and Copper Cliff Suburban Electric Railway
Operation
LocaleGreater Sudbury, Ontario, Canada
Open11 November 1915[1]
Close1 October 1950[1]
StatusClosed
Lines3
Infrastructure
Propulsion system(s)Electricity
Depot(s)Northwest corner of St. Charles Avenue and Notre Dame Avenue[2]
Statistics
Route length6 miles (9.7 km)[1]

History

The early history of the railway was coloured by concerns about Copper Cliff becoming a suburb of Sudbury. An earlier 1906 plan for a Sudbury, Copper Cliff, and Creighton Electric Railway that would have connected the two centres with the now-abandoned mining town of Creighton had been discarded after heavy opposition from Copper Cliff merchants, who feared the decline of the town's commercial core due to competition with Sudbury, which had over six times as many businesses. The same merchants also opposed the new plan, but were overruled by a vote by Copper Cliff ratepayers.[3]

Early on, the railway company was run by Noël Desmarais, a local Franco-Ontarian businessman and grandfather of the financier Paul Desmarais, who later owned and managed the company.[4][5] It began operations in 1912 with a single car that was borrowed from the Toronto Suburban Railway. The car was never returned and operated on the SCCSER until the early 1930s when it was sold for scrap. Service was only provided to Copper Cliff initially, with the lines on Notre Dame and Elgin opening shortly afterwards. The railway received electric power through the Wahnapitae Power Company, which was privately owned until it was acquired by the Hydro-Electric Power Commission of Ontario in 1930.[6]

In 1943, the workers at the railway unionized,[7] but by then its time was nearly over as the SCCSER began buying buses in 1947. The line to Bell Park was the first to close in 1948 with the two other lines ceasing service in 1950. The SCCSER rolling stock sat at the carhouse for more than two years, finally being cut up for scrap in 1953. The SCCSER was reorganized in 1951 and renamed Sudbury Bus Lines Limited. Shortly after, it was purchased for a symbolic $1 by the financier Paul Desmarais, who used it as a platform for buying up a number of bus lines throughout Ontario, allowing him to launch his business empire.[8] Bus operations would continue under the new name until 1966, when the company ceased operations and was replaced by Laurentian Transit, which was a consortium of local private bus companies. It in turn was supplanted by Sudbury Transit in 1972, the direct predecessor to the current GOVA municipal transit agency.[9]

Routes

The SCCSER had three main routes radiating from Elm Street in downtown Sudbury.

Western line

The westerly (and busiest) route ran a short distance from the Elm/Durham intersection to Lorne Street, where it turned south and entered dedicated trackage along the east side of the road. After about 100 metres, the streetcar line and the road angled southwest, running parallel to the Canadian Pacific's Webbwood subdivision. At Gatchell the streetcar line split into two tracks opposite Tuddenham Street to facilitate the passing of cars in rush hour. The line, once again single-track, then continued southwest, passing underneath the INCO railway via a specially-constructed underpass to a junction near Balsam Street in Copper Cliff, where it met the shuttle to the INCO refinery a short distance away. The line then angled northwest and ended at the two-track station near downtown Copper Cliff. It operated right up until the end of rail service in 1950. In addition to this service there was also a short-turn service that ended at Gatchell during peak hours.

Northern line

The northerly route ran from a wye at the Elm/Durham intersection to the SCCSER carhouse at St. Charles Street. This line was entirely single-track and operated for a short distance in the middle of Notre Dame Avenue before entering its own right-of-way on the east side of the road parallel to the CP Stobie Spur. This line operated right up until the end of service in 1950, but had been replaced by buses during peak periods in its last months of operation to clear the line for cars deadheading to and from the carhouse.

Western line

The easterly line ran east in the middle of Elm street for approximately 75 metres before turning south on Lisgar, west on Cedar and south again on Durham. This odd arrangement was rumoured to have existed in order to ensure the carline's passage by a liquor store owned by a controlling interest in the SCCSER, but was more likely done to avoid crossing the CP Stobie Spur twice. Coming to the end of the trackage on Durham, the line entered a private right-of-way on the south side of Elgin Street and angled southeast parallel to the CP mainline through downtown. Passing the CP station at Van Horne, the line turned south across the Nelson Street "Iron" bridge (which was repurposed into a pedestrian bridge and is still used as such today[10] ) and continued in the middle of Nelson Street to John Street, turning east and running one block to Elizabeth Street, where it turned south once again and ran down the middle of Elizabeth to Bell Park on the shore of Ramsey Lake. This line was also entirely single-track and ceased service in 1948 after the tracks on Lisgar Street were accidentally paved over by a contractor doing road repairs there.

The SCCSER today

CopperCliffRailwayRemnant

Today the SCCSER has all but vanished. None of the streetcar equipment was ever retained for preservation. The streetcar alignments on Lorne and Notre Dame have since been obliterated by road-widening projects and all track was removed from city streets. Traces of the right-of-way near Copper Cliff, including the INCO railway underpass are purported to exist, however they could not be found on any satellite photographs of the area.

A fare box used on the railway has survived and is preserved as an artifact at the Flour Mill Museum in the same neighbourhood where the original car barns were located.[11]

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References

  1. Murphy, M. Peter (September–October 2009). "Commemorating the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Abandonment of Electric Street Car and Interurban Service in Many of Canada's Cities". Canadian Rail. Canadian Railroad Historical Association.CS1 maint: date format (link)
  2. "History Hikes: Flour Mill" (PDF). Rainbow Routes. Rainbow Routes Association. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  3. Wallace, Carl Murray; Thomson, Ashley (1993). Sudbury: Rail Town to Regional Capital. Toronto: Dundurn Press. ISBN 9781550021707.
  4. Newman, Peter C. (2014). The Canadian Establishment. Toronto: McClelland & Stewart. ISBN 9781551996905.
  5. Arnopoulos, Sheila McLeod (1982). Voices from French Ontario. Montreal/Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 9780773504066.
  6. Saarinen, Oiva W. (April 2013). From Meteorite Impact to Constellation City: A Historical Geography of Greater Sudbury. Waterloo, Ontario: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. ISBN 9781554588374.
  7. "A Brief History of Unions in Sudbury". RepublicOfMining.com. 27 May 2010. Retrieved 9 May 2016.
  8. "Paul Desmarais". City of Montreal. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  9. Wyatt, David A. "All-Time List of Canadian Transit Systems: Greater Sudbury, Ontario". Retrieved 17 February 2020.
  10. Keowne, Mary Katharine (26 September 2013). "Inco retiree reflects on past days of riding the 'rails' in Sudbury". The Sudbury Star. Retrieved 18 January 2014.
  11. "Flour Mill Museum". Greater Sudbury Public Library. Retrieved 17 February 2020.
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