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Caption: On the east coast of Vancouver Island, roughly 35 miles north of Victoria, Crofton was a good harbour, for a copper smelter (Lenora Mt. Sicker Railway) in early years, transitioning to a timber transload (Osborne Bay Wharf Co.), and eventually a pulp mill (BC Forest Products), with a rail connection down from Osborne Bay on the E&N mainline and a railbarge slip for connection to mainland railways. BCFP established Stuart Channel Transportation to manage railway interchange activity, and acquired 80-ton Whitcomb number 9 (serial 60634 of 1944-11, originally US Navy at Oakland, CA) for power, seen here at Crofthill (BCFP’s railway station name) on Saturday 1971-10-23 when I barely knew anything about industrial railways.
SCT 9 became BCFP 9, then Fletcher Challenge 9 (mill is now Catalyst Paper) and was retired to the BC Forest Discovery Centre on the north side of Duncan, just six miles as a raven flies south from Crofton.
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This is really cool, I would love to see this operation in person some day.
It looks like quite the shelf railway…
Amazing to think you captured one of the few Whitcomb to ply the rails in Canada, probably without realizing it…