- Barnard's Express
Barnard's Express, later known as the British Columbia Express Company or BX, was a pioneer transportation company that served the
Yale in 1868Cariboo and Fraser Fort George regions inBritish Columbia ,Canada from 1861 until 1921.The company's beginnings date back to the peak of the
Cariboo Gold Rush when hordes of adventurers were descending on the Cariboo region. There was a great demand for transportation of passengers to and from the goldfields, as well as the delivery of mining equipment, food supplies and mail between Victoria andBarkerville .The stage years
The first express service offered on the
Cariboo Road was operated byWilliam Ballou in 1858. Others soon followed, usually one or two man operations where the proprietor himself packed the express goods, either on his back or with the help of a trusty mule.rp|8In December, 1861,
Francis Jones Barnard established apony express from Yale to Barkerville. The company had originally been owned by William Jeffray and W.H. Thain and had been known as the Jeffray and Company's Fraser Express. In the summer of 1862, Barnard merged his company into the British Columbia and Victoria Express Company and won the government contract to deliver the mail.rp|9In 1863 Barnard incorporated a two-horse wagon on the run from Lillooet to
Fort Alexandria . Another freighting company, Dietz and Nelson operated astagecoach between Victoria, Lillooet and Yale, connecting with Barnard's Express.rp|9 In 1863-64, additions like the use of
Quesnelsleigh s in the winter were used instead of wagons. The year of 1864 saw the start of a 14 passenger four-horse stage. Later, with increase of business, the stage was enlarged to a six-horse coach. By 1866 Francis Jones Barnard became the sole proprietor of the horse express business from Victoria to Barkerville and in 1867, Barnard purchased the interests of Dietz and Nelson.Barnard's Express incorporated as the British Columbia Express Company in 1878, and became commonly known as the BX. By then company consisted of Barnard, holding one half interest, with
Stephen Tingley and James Hamilton each holding one quarter interest. In 1884, the bridge across from the Fraser was opened, and trains came to
AshcroftLytton . It was at this time that Stephen Tingley moved his headquarters and established it atSpences Bridge .In 1886 Hamilton had died and Barnard sold out to Tingley who thus became sole owner. That February, Tingley made his final move to Ashcroft and drove continuously until 1897 when he sold the company to a group of Toronto lawyers headed by
Charles Vance Millar . In 1903, Willis West became General Manager, a position he held until the company demise in 1921.The stages
[
Barkerville ] The BC Express Company had a wide variety of stagecoaches. Some only required two horses and were called a "jerky", while others were pulled by four or six horses. Some had closed-in carriages and others were open. For winter travel, the stagecoaches were replaced by sleighs of all sizes, including some that could carry fifteen passengers. Many of the later stagecoaches were Concord stages, built with shock absorbers made from leather springs which made for a more comfortable ride.rp|17In 1876, the company had a stagecoach built in
California specifically for the visit of the Governor General, Lord and Lady Dufferin, who rode in it from Yale toKamloops and back. The coach was painted in the bright red and yellow BX colours and had the Canadiancoat of arms on its front panels. It cost $50 a day to ride in this famous coach, but many visiting diplomats and Englisharistocracy rode in the Dufferin when they went hunting in the Cariboo.rp|19The horses
The first horses used by the company came
VernonOregon . Then, in 1868, 400 head were purchased inCalifornia andMexico and driven to the company's ranch in Vernon. Later, when theCanadian Pacific Railway was completed, most of the company's horses were bought locally or were shipped fromAlberta orSaskatchewan .cite book |last=West |first=Willis|title=Stagecoach and Sternwheel Days in the Cariboo and Central BC|year=1985|publisher=Heritage House|isbn=0-919214-68-1|pages=] rp|14The company had a strict policy that they would not purchase any horses that were broke. The company wanted their horses trained exclusively for staging, a process that generally took three months, even then they were never truly broken and had to be expertly handled.rp|15,16 A
hostler would lead the teams out to the stages only once the baggage had been secured and the passengers and driver were safely seated. Once harnessed to the stage, the reins were given to the driver and he could release the brake. The stage horses often leaped and reared at the start of a trip, but settled into a smooth trot once they were underway. The whip rarely had to be used to encourage them, as they knew the next station meant a good feed and a warm stable.rp|16The stations were approximately 18 miles apart and the teams were changed at each one. The hostlers at the stations took pride in taking care of the company's horses, often competing to see who kept the teams in the best condition. One rule that was strictly followed was that each horse had its own harness, which was cleaned every time it was taken off. To ensure that the horses always had proper shoes, traveling horseshoers with portable
forge s visited the stage stations regularly.rp|17The drivers
[
Stephen Tingley driving a stage near Clinton] The last stage was driven toSoda Creek byCharles G. Major . He was not one of the regular drivers, but the messenger in charge of Barnard's Express between Barkerville and Quesnel. Major took the stage out as he was on his way to Cariboo in the spring, and Mr. Stephen Tingley, best known driver and final owner, took charge on the return trip. Other noted drivers were Stephen Tingley's son,Fred Tingley , Al Young,J.B. Leighton , James Hamilton,W.A. Johnston and William Humphreys.tage routes and fares
An average trip from Yale to Barkerville can be broken down into sections. The custom was at first to drive from Yale to
Spences Bridge (80 miles), the first day - six or seven miles an hour; then the next day from Spence's Bridge to Clinton (50 miles).The best time ever made was by special conveyance from Yale to Barkerville. The 380 miles from Yale to Barkerville was covered in 30 hours of continuous driving. The usual stage time for the same distance was four days.
After the company's headquarters moved to Ashcoft in 1886, the main stageline extended from Ascroft to Barkerville, a distance of 280 miles. Other branch lines led to mining camps and settlements all over the Cariboo.
The stage fare from Ashcroft to Barkerville was $37.50 in the summer and $42.50 in the winter. Passengers who left the train at Ashcroft and boarded a stage at 4am could expect to arrive at 83 Mile House that evening and Barkerville two days later.rp|19
The sternwheeler years
In 1903 it was announced that the
Grand Trunk Pacific Railway would be coming through fromWinnipeg to Prince Rupert via theYellowhead Pass . In anticipation of the influx of new settlers to the region, Charles Millar expanded the company's services intosternwheeler s andautomobiles and extended the route to Fort George.The company built an office and steamer landing at the new town of
South Fort George in 1910.The sternwheelers
The Royal Mail Steamers "BX" and "BC Express" were launched in 1910 and 1912 respectively. Both were built by Alexander Watson Jr. at Soda Creek. The "BX" was built for the route from Soda Creek to Fort George, whereas the "BC Express" was built for the route from Fort George to
Tête Jaune Cache .The captains
The captain of the "BX" was
Owen Forrester Browne , an experienced Fraser River pilot. By the time he took command of the "BX" in 1910, he was already well known in the area, as he had been the captain of the local sternwheeler "Charlotte".The captain of the "BC Express" was
Joseph Bucey , an experiencedSkeena River pilot. On the Skeena, he had piloted the "Inlander" from Port Essington to Hazelton.ternwheeler routes and fares
The "BX" made semi-weekly trips from Soda Creek to Fort George, taking two days for the trip upriver and less than a day for the trip back. In 1910, stage fare from Ashcroft to Soda Creek was $27.50 and the steamer fare from there to Fort George was $17.50. Meals were 75 cents and a berth was $1.50. The stage freight charge was sixty dollars a ton and the steamer freight charge was forty dollars a ton.
Automobiles
[
1912 ] In 1910, the company began running automobiles on the Cariboo Road. A few vehicles, owned by private freighters, had been operating on the road since 1907 and the company realized that they needed to add cars to their services in order to stay competitive.cite book |last=West |first=Willis|title=BX and the Rush to Fort George|year=1949|publisher=BC Historical Quarterly|pages=] rp|168These vehicles worked on the route from Ashcroft toSoda Creek where they met with the company sternwheelers.rp|172These first cars were Winton Sixes purchased from a car manufacturer in
Seattle . The BC Express Company purchased two cars at a cost of $1,500 each and then added a variety of options such as tops at $150, Klaxon horns, $50 andkerosene parking lamps, $75. The Winton Company also provided two drivers, who were also mechanics, as there were few people who knew how to operate and fix a vehicle.rp|172Then the company built a garage and machine shop at Ashcroft and, as there were no service stations, arrangements were also made with
Imperial Oil of Vancouver to supply and deliver in drums the gas and oil that the cars would need. The drums were then placed in key locations along the road.rp|173The company purchased more vehicles throughout the next few years and all were painted red and yellow, the company's colours.rp|173 Although the freighting business remained brisk and the cars were a favourite with travelers, they never turned a very large profit for the company. Although private operators could discontinue their services when the road conditions were poor, the BC Express Company had advertised automobile services in all weather conditions from May to October. Fulfilling that promise meant that a large crew of mechanics and drivers had to be kept on staff. In 1913, it cost the company $67,233 to maintain their fleet of 8 Wintons. The largest sum went for repairs, but $15,835.53 was spent on tires alone. Furthermore the total profits that were made that season was only $3,337.23, which the company believed was not a large figure considering the risk and investment involved.rp|174
The Grand Trunk Pacific Railway
At the end of August 1913, Captain Bucey was taking the "BC Express" up from Fort George to Tête Jaune Cache when he was stopped a cable strung across the river at Mile 141 where the railway was building a bridge.cite book |last=Downs |first=Art |title=Paddlewheels on the Frontier Volume 1|year=1971|publisher=Foremost Publishing|isbn=0888260334|pages= pages 56,57] Although the railway had promised that they would not impede steamer travel on the river, it was apparent that they were doing just that. Bucey turned the "BC Express" back towards Fort George and immediately wired the company's head office at Ashcroft and informed them of the obstruction. The BC Express Company had the Board of Railway Commissioners investigate the situation and the Board came back in the company's favor and told the railway they must build the bridge at Mile 141 and the other at Bear River with lift spans as they had promised. The GTP refused the order, stating that if they changed the level of the bridges they'd have to change the level of the grade. The company took the railway to court for damages and loss of revenue, as they had been earning in excess of $5000 dollars a week on that route, but by the time the case was heard, the
Great War had begun and the company's attorney was engaged in war work and was unable to appear. His replacement, a junior partner with little experience, was unable to prepare and present the evidence properly and the company lost the case.cite book |last=West |first=Willis|title=Stagecoach and Sternwheel Days in the Cariboo and Central BC|year=1985|publisher=Heritage House|isbn=0-919214-68-1|pages= pages 82,83] rp|82-83 Some historians have suggested that the railway built the bridges to impede navigation out of spite and dislike for the BC Express Company because its owner at that time, Charles Vance Millar, had successfully negotiated with theFirst Nations people at Fort George to buy the land that the GTP wanted for their town-site, forcing the GTP to sell some of that prime property to Millar, which he developed and was later called theMillar Addition . [cite book |last=Leonard |first=Frank|title=A Thousand Blunders: The History of the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway in Northern British Columbia|year=1996|publisher=UBC Press|isbn=0-7748-0552-8|pages= pages 212-214] .The wreck of the BX
[
1919 ] With the completion of the railway on April 7, 1914 and navigation blocked on the route to Tête Jaune Cache, the company ran the "BX" and the "BC Express" only from Soda Creek to Fort George. With the construction of thePacific Great Eastern Railway underway, the sternwheelers were needed to help deliver equipment and food supplies to the work camps. However, with the onset of theGreat War ,John Stewart ofFoley, Welch and Stewart called a halt to the PGE's construction. In 1915, the "BX" worked alone, with the "BC Express" reserved for special trips. Despite having a monopoly on river traffic, the "BX" finished the season with a $7000 loss.rp|92In 1916 and 1917, sternwheelers were not used on the upper Fraser River at all. Then, in 1918, after an appeal from the Quesnel Board of Trade, the provincial government granted the BC Express Company a $10,000 per year
subsidy to continue river navigation from Soda Creek to Fort George. The request was justified because Quesnel and the other communities along the river had been promised a railroad, but the construction on the PGE had slowed to a crawl and would in fact not to be completed to Prince George until 1952. In the meantime, the settlers and farmers needed a way to ship their produce to market and steamer fares were the most reasonable option.rp|223rp|93The "BX" ran until August 30th, 1919, when she was punctured by an infamous rock called the "Woodpecker" and sank with a 100 tons of bagged cement intended for construction of the Deep Creek Bridge.rp|94 In the spring of 1920, the salvage work was completed and at a cost of $40,000rp|58 the "BX" was raised and patched sufficiently to get her back to Fort George. The "BC Express" pushed her back upstream through the Fort George Canyon and to the shipyard at Fort George. This would be the first time in the history of sternwheelers that one would push another upriver through a canyon.rp|225
The "BC Express" ran until November 1920 and then it joined the "BX" on the riverbank at Fort George, where their hulls were abandoned.rp|225
Thus ended the days of the pioneer transportation company that Francis Barnard had established nearly 60 years earlier.
ee also
*
Steamboats of the Upper Fraser River in British Columbia
*Cariboo Gold Rush
*Fraser Canyon Gold Rush
*Cariboo References and further reading
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*
*
*Notes
External links
* cite web
author=Dictionary of Canadian Biography
title=Biography of Francis J Barnard
url=http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=5359
accessdate=2007-07-15
* cite web
author=JB Kerr
title=Biographical Dictionary of well-known British Columbians, with a historical sketch
url=http://www.canadiana.org/ECO/PageView/15438/0141?id=d942249bd8f098cd
accessdate=2007-07-15
* cite web
author=Cariboo Gold Rush
title=Barnard's Express Office
url=http://yale.cariboogoldrush.com/tour/barnard.htm
accessdate=2007-07-14
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