Port Moody-Coquitlam Railway
The Port Moody-Coquitlam Railway also known as the Thurston-Flavelle Railway was a short railway line operated by the British Columbia Electric Railway. The line ran from the east end of Burrard Inlet to Coquitlam Lake, British Columbia, Canada.
History
The railway connected the Port Moody-Ioco spur of the Canadian Pacific Railway to the Coquitlam Dam and was built during the early 1910s in-order to haul supplies and materials to the dam. It was built by B.C. Electric in partnership with Robert McNair of the Robert McNair Shingle Company, who signed a twenty-five year deal with B.C. Electric on 1 October 1912. The railway was first estimated to cost $75,000. The railway was use rails built on a right-of-way. McNair would be allowed to use the line, but would have to pay $50,000 towards construction costs and thereafter the same amount every year. The line saw its first seven miles complete on 7 March 1914. A speed limit of was applied to the line. The B.C.E.R. also built a dock for McNair to ship logs from. McNair would ultimately use the line to bring timber from the lake down to his mill. In 1917 the line was re-laid with rail.By 1923, McNair had stopped paying his annual lease. The agreement folded that year, either due to McNair's passing, or an expiration of the agreement. Either way, B.C.E.R. decided to sell the company to Thurston-Flavelle, a timber company, on 14 April 1923. From this point, events become unclear, with multiple sources claiming differing events. According to railway reports, Thurston-Flavelle leased, and then perhaps sold the line to Sig. Hage Timber. According to a City of Coquitlam report, the Robert Dollar company was allowed to use the railway.
Multiple spurs for hauling logs from Dollar Mountain. Eventually, the railway was abandoned, with the rails confiscated.