Out of Steam – The End of an Era

 
The era of the steam locomotive was coming to an end in the early 1950’s.  New diesel engines were faster and stronger. They didn’t require the types of local maintenance that the roundhouse and yards had been providing. For a time these new engines used local makeshift facilities in the roundhouse, but soon new liquid fuel tanks replaced the coal dock and the roundhouse was no longer vital to operations.

Rivers was still a busy place. No less than twenty-eight crews (one hundred and forty men) were operating between this point between Winnipeg and Melville. An average of sixty carloads of ballast material were being taken from the railway's gravel pit on a daily basis, as roadbeds needed constant attention.

But what we today call “downsizing” was inevitable. In 1954 twenty-three men - four roundhouse and eighteen car-department employees - received termination notices from the Canadian National.
Another result of the increasing advances in locomotive technology was that railway operations became centralized, and as a result the divisional point was transferred to Terrace, and eventually all maintenance was relocated to Prince George, BC and Edmonton, Alberta.

So through the fifties there was a recurring series of lay-off and cuts as CN “rationalized” its operation to fit the new technologies and new realities.

The town witnessed the razing of the Canadian National coal dock, and the lifting of rails that once served the car department, backshop and fuel stockpiles.

In 1958 the railway removed the sixty-foot high smokestack, a landmark above the roundhouse. In 1961 the building was sold to Structural Fabricators Ltd., which held its "open house" there the following year, but soon had the building demolished.




The final days