- British Columbia Electric Railway
Infobox SG rail
railroad_name=British Columbia Electric Railway
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locale=southwesternBritish Columbia andVancouver Island
start_year=1891
end_year=1989
hq_city=The British Columbia Electric Railway (BCER) was a historic Canadian railway which operated in southwestern
British Columbia .Originally the parent company, and later a division, of BC Electric, the BCER operated public transportation in southwestern
British Columbia from its establishment in the mid-1890s, operating streetcar systems in Vancouver, New Westminster, North Vancouver and Victoria.Power was supplied by then-innovative diversion projects at
Buntzen Lake and on theStave River system farther east, all of which were built primarily to supply power for theinterurban s and street railway. A six-mile branch line, theStave Falls Branch , isolated from the main interurban network, ran the six miles / 9.66 km to the power plant and community at Stave Falls from theCanadian Pacific Railway station atRuskin, British Columbia .BCER interurban trams ran along 3 lines between Vancouver and New Westminster (via Burnaby), as well as between Vancouver and Richmond, New Westminster and Chilliwack, and Victoria and North Saanich. During and after the streetcar era, BC Electric also ran
bus andtrolleybus systems in Greater Vancouver and Greater Victoria; these systems subsequently became part ofBC Transit . Trolley buses still run in Greater Vanvouver, but had disappeared from Vancouver Island by 1952.In 1961, the provincial government took over BC Electric, with the railway becoming a division of
Crown corporation BC Hydro . In 1989, BC Hydro sold the railway to a new shortline operator and the railway is now known as theSouthern Railway of British Columbia and is exclusively a freight railway.Part of the
Vancouver Skytrain Expo Line follows the right-of-way of BCER's former Central Park Line through Burnaby to New Westminster. The Burnaby Lake line's right-of-way is largely taken up by theTrans-Canada Highway but sections of it survive as walking and biking powerline trails. The route of the Stave Falls Branch alongHayward Lake is also now a walking trail managed by BC Hydro and the District of Mission, with sections of it south of Ruskin Dam used as local powerline and neighbourhood walking trails.In Victoria, the BCER built an electric interurban railway which connected to its street car system. The line ran along Burnside Road through Saanich to Brentwood, Saanichton and terminated in Deep Bay (Later renamed Deep Cove). The line ran from 1913 to 1924 and was one of three passenger railways to serve the Saanich peninsula for this period. Interurban Road uses or parallels the right of way for much of its distance. From Brentwood to Saanichton, Wallace Drive follows the approximate route of the line. North of the airport, Tatlow road follows the route to Deep Cove. [Castle, Geoffrey "Saanich, An Illustrated History" 1989 The Corporation of the District of Saanich pp. 47-50 (also includes pictures of BCER railcars on this run from the Royal BC Museum collection)]
External links
* [http://www.bcexplorer.org/ BC Electric Railway Pictures, Information on the Buntzen and Stave Projects]
* [http://www.bcer.trams.bc.ca/ History of the BC Electric Railway]
* [http://www.powerpioneers.com/BC_Hydro_History/ Preserving BC Hydro's History]
* [http://collections.ic.gc.ca/ghost/auld.photo.bcer.html History Page]
* [http://www.wcra.org/collection/BCER941.htm An original engine at the WCRA]
* [http://www.bcarchives.gov.bc.ca/cgi-bin/www2i/.visual/img_med/dir_77/d_06454.gifNew Westminster Original GNR Station at North End of the Fraser River Bridge]
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