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Bay of Quinte Railway

Bay of Quinte Railway
Reporting mark BQ
Dates of operation 1897 (1897)–1910 (1910)
Predecessor Napanee, Tamworth and Quebec Railway (1879)
Bay of Quinte Railway and Navigation Company (1881)
Successor Canadian Northern Railway
Track gauge 4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Electrification no
Headquarters Deseronto, Ontario

The Bay of Quinte Railway, originally an 1881 Deseronto, Ontario short line and later a successor to the 1879 Napanee, Tamworth and Quebec Railway, formed part of Edward Rathbun's Bay of Quinte Railway and Navigation Company which served the family's local milling and shipping empire. Initially constructed to bring timber from inland locations to ships in Deseronto, it was acquired by the Canadian Northern Railway in 1910 for inclusion in that company's Ottawa-Toronto mainline. That line was built through Smiths Falls and Sydenham, incorporating the existing BQR track from Sydenham to Napanee-Deseronto, then continued westward through Trenton to Toronto.

After CNoR's 1918 bankruptcy, the CNoR line became part of Canadian National which gradually abandoned it over many decades. The last BQR fragment, from Napanee's historic 1856 Grand Trunk station to a Goodyear tyre factory, was disconnected from the CN mainline at Napanee station in 2010.

In 1848, an American partnership purchased land near Culbertson's Wharf, building a sawmill to process logs from four million acres of timberland in the Trent River, Moira River, Salmon River and Napanee River watersheds. In 1855, Hugo Burghardt Rathbun moved to the area to take over the running of the business under the Rathbun Company name. The growing village was incorporated in 1871 as Mill Point and was renamed Deseronto in 1881. Hugo's son, Edward Wilkes Rathbun expanded the company's enterprises, opening a cedar mill, a flour mill and a sash, door and blind factory; he operated tugboats and lake freighters to carry cargo to Oswego, New York. He later added four passenger ships and, by the 1880s, held a stake in three railways: the Bay of Quinte Railway, the Napanee and Tamworth Railway and Gananoque's Thousand Islands Railway. He operated a 250-acre farm to provide horses for the logging operations and railway car shops to build rolling stock, along with general stores, a newspaper and various manufacturing works. At its 1895 peak, Deseronto's population reached 3338 people and Edward Wilkes Rathbun was a millionaire; an 1896 fire on the timber docks did a quarter million dollars damage and gradual depletion of natural resources (timber and minerals) on which the Rathbun business relied brought the company's activities to a halt by 1916. The Bay of Quinte railway, originally constructed to bring Rathbun's timber to market, was sold to Canadian Northern Railway in 1910 for inclusion in their Ottawa-Toronto mainline. CNoR reached the Pacific coast by 1915, but by 1918 was bankrupt. Canadian National took over the CNoR network in 1923, embargoing the former BQR mainline in 1979 and removing the tracks in 1986.


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