Scoudouc River piers were part of first railway in New Brunswick - Action News
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New BrunswickRoadside History

Scoudouc River piers were part of first railway in New Brunswick

Down a little path through the woods, off a recreational trail in Shediac, stone piers stretch across the Scoudouc River, an unofficial monument to New Brunswicks railway heyday.

Vast network of rail lines cost a fortune and shaped the province, but now lie abandoned

A head-on shot of gray stone piers extending into the distance in a straight line across a river. The sky is cloudy gray and evergreens and bare birches line the riverbank in the background. The water is shimmering white with a dark reflection of the first pier in the foreground.
When you walk on trails made from old rail lines or come across abandoned railway bridge piers, historian and educator James Upham urges you to take a second to think about the days when trains carried people and stuff all over the province. (Khalil Akhtar/CBC)

Down a little path through the woods, off a recreational trail in Shediac, stone piers stretch across the Scoudouc River, an unofficial monument to New Brunswick's railway heyday.

"This is actually quite a big deal and it just sort of sits here like a lot of things," said James Upham, a roadside history columnist with CBC's Information Morning Moncton.

The Shediac-to-Moncton railroad tracks were the first to go into service in New Brunswick, said Upham.

The inaugural run took place on Aug. 20, 1857.

A black and white sideview photo of a procession of a few dozen people and some horses to the left and a train engine at right. The foreground is a snowy open field. The background is a line of snowcovered evergreens against a light gray sky.
The first locomotive being brought to Shediac from Pointe-du-Chene, by sledge, in the winter of 1857. (New Brunswick Provincial Archives P37/19)

A project that began earlier, to link Saint Andrews and Quebec, had stalled because of a border dispute.

The company behind the Shediac-Moncton project was called the European and North American Railway.

It went on to build many other lines in the province in the decades that followed, including the route between Moncton and Saint John that continues to operate to this day for freight.

Passenger service on that line and beyond, through southwestern New Brunswick and Maine to Montreal, ended in 1994, after which a lot of the track was removed.

A black and white photo of a wooden station house with decorative mouldings beneath the overhang. A man in a suit and hat with his hands in his pockets on the platform. Two sets of empty tracks in the foregound.
Apohaqui Station, in Sussex area, was on a line built for the European and North American Railway in 1859. (Provincial Archives of New Brunswick P58/154)

"This is so hard to explain in a world where we can just hop in a car and drive 120 km/h to get a burger," said Upham.

"But there was a time when the process of trying to get from Moncton to Saint John was a day-long, exhausting, miserable event."

A stagecoach line was in operation, but accommodations were crowded, not terribly comfortable and at the mercy of the weather, he said.

The road could be washed out and travellers would find themselves stuck on one side of a river and forced to stay at whatever lodging could be found.

When rail lines began operating, they revolutionized life in the area, said Upham.

A black and white aerial shot over a town square with a railway station on the left and green space in the centre. Some wooden homes and larger buildings around the sides.
Uphams own family ran a railway for a while. It was called the Upham-Saint Martins Railway. It ran from Upham, N.B., to Saint Martins and was eventually extended out to Hampton, whose train station is shown in this picture, dated around 1900. (New Brunswick Provincial Archives P1123)

"Trying to go see somebody in this other town goes from being a miserable, laborious, potentially days-long process to a thing you can pull off in an afternoon for a cup of tea and then go home."

Likewise, it became possible for passengers to take a day trip to the beach, he said.

The rail line fuelled a lot of growth in Moncton, said Upham, and changed many other communities along the route to Saint John.

"This is where Sussex comes from," he said. "This is where so many of these little communities change so fundamentally because of this exact line, which is now kind of sitting here, mouldering in the woods."

A yellowed map of New Brunswick with a few red lines through it with white dots next to community names.
A detail of a map of the Intercolonial Railway from 1908 shows many of the little communities along the route in New Brunswick, including between Saint John and Shediac. (New Brunswick Museum/X9574)

Similar growth was fuelled by rail construction all over the province and the country, said Upham.

It was fostered by the British and provincial governments.

"This was the Empire investing in the physical infrastructure of this place to get communities connected and to get things moving around," he said.

The level of investment that took place in railway development in the late 1800s is unlike anything that has been seen in quite some time, said Upham.

"If you were a businessperson or an entrepreneur the government here was going to pay you $10,000 per finished mile."

A man sitting on a pile of timbers in the left foreground. A log cabin behind him. Train tracks stretching into the distance from left to right diagonally through a cut of trees. Written in the margin of the old photo: E.&N.A.R. near Harris's Mill-stream looking toward Shediac.
A section of the European and North American Railway line near Shediac in the mid-1800s. (New Brunswick Provincial Archives P1\136.3)

"In the 1850s to '60s, that is a gargantuan amount of money," he said.

Railways were cutting-edge technology at the time, akin to quantum computing or artificial intelligence in modern terms, said Upham.

When even the concept of a metal cook stove seemed innovative to the average person, railways were next level.

"The idea that they were going to build these huge bridges they were going to cut through hills and drive iron steam-powered trains from city to city, this would have sounded crazy to some people."

A white wooden beam bridge on top of stone piers across a narrow stream. Side view. A few people leaning over the railing towards the camera. Shot from roughly 100 metres away. Words in margin: Harris's Mill Stream Bridge.
A train bridge over a mill stream on the Shediac to Moncton line. (New Brunswick Provincial Archives )

It was one of many things that became possible with advances in steam engines, said Upham.

People could cross the Atlantic Ocean in a period of days instead of weeks or months and plan their travel at specific dates and times.

"This is a massive shift in how the world looks at itself, how the world functions and how human beings get around places," he said.

The Shediac-to-Moncton rail line was in use until about 30 years ago.

Michael Rodgers worked on it as a brakeman and locomotive engineer from about 1975 until it shut down in 1990.

A man with gray hair and wearing a green jacket and green and yellow plaid shirt smiles at the camera. In the background is a streetscape with decorative white lights on a restaurant patio and fall decorations including hay bales and gourds.
Mike Rodgers rode the last passenger train on the Shediac-Moncton line in 1959 and later had a job on freight trains in the area. (Submitted by Mike Rodgers)

The biggest customers were in the Scoudouc industrial park, he recalled, including a bottling plant, window factory and scrapyard.

Rodgers also happened to be on the final passenger train to make the run back in 1959.

He was just six years old and lived down the street from the train station in Shediac.

His dad put him and his siblings on board for the short return trip to Pointe-du-Chene, where the train turned around.

"We'd see the train go by all the time. So to get on and go for a ride was a big deal," he said.

A blue and white sign on a stake next to a rail bed.
A lot of old rail line in the province has been converted to recreational trails already. The Trans Canada Trail organization has provided $165,000 to support construction of the Shore-line Trail between Shediac and Moncton and is working closely with locals to facilitate further trail development, said Michael Goodyear, a member of the group's advisory committee for New Brunswick. (Submitted by Michael Goodyear)

Rodgers was part of a group that rallied to save the Shediac train station from demolition.

The building dates back to 1903, he said, and has been turned into a museum, where he works one day a week during tourist season.

As the highway was built and people switched over to cars, the Shediac-to-Moncton line fell out of use, said Upham.

But rails still exist from Painsec Junction to about Scoudouc.

He'd love to see more of that route and others across the province repurposed.

Columnist James Upham visits to railway line that once ran between Moncton and Shediac.

"The network of potential trails sitting in the woods of New Brunswick right now is astonishing."

In the southeast alone, there are old lines between Elgin and Havelock, Harvey Bank and Alma, he noted.

Only portions are used for walking, biking and riding ATVs.

Maps from 100 years ago show rail lines crisscrossing the province, he said.

Highways don't connect communities to the same extent rail lines did, said Upham.

"This network was huge, expensive, took a ton of effort, and it's just sitting here."

A pastel coloured by county map of New Brunswick with many place names.
This map, originally printed in 1893, shows several rail lines in New Brunswick. They are black lines with circles along the route, indicating stops. (New Brunswick Provincial Archives)

According to a document on the New Brunswick government website, the province acquired theformer railway lines in the province belonging to CNR and CPR in 1993, for the purposeof converting most of it to recreational trail.

About 1,100 kilometresof trailsexist, the majority of which are used by motorized recreational vehicles, said Nick Brown, a communications officer with the Department of Natural Resources and Energy Development, in an emailed response.

Other sections have the potential to be developed for recreation as well, he said, but no new projects are in the works.

With files from Information Morning Moncton