Daniel Chase Corbin had significant funds, and access to investors, gained through his experience in the building, operation, and sale of small railroads. Consequently, Spokane businessmen seeking a railroad north from Spokane to Colville, but unable to finance the project, approached him. In February 1889, Corbin became general manager, senior officers were largely the New York financiers, and Edward J. Roberts was appointed as chief construction engineer.
To have the line run through their town, Colville residents agreed to secure the right-of-way in the immediate vicinity and donate 40 acres in town for a railroad yard. In March, Cyrus Burns and John Chapman were awarded the grading contract for the whole route. Before leaving for New York to buy steel rails, four locomotives, and passenger and freight cars, Corbin instructed Roberts to build as fast and cheaply as possible. Not only were unlimited curves allowed to fit the topography, but also to avoid the costs of blasting and filling, large tree stumps were to be left in the ground.[1]
Initial construction
The route largely followed the winding old Colville trail and wagon road. Building around stumps greater than three feet in diameter, and other economy measures, gave a construction cost of about $8,604 a mile. At the time, railroads considered $10,000 a mile extremely cheap. By May 1889, 55 miles had been surveyed and 40 miles graded. With little mechanization, mostly the brawn of humans and horses performed the work.
On May 23, two new olive-green locomotives, and 26 new freight cars, arrived. The former were wood-burning Baldwin 2-6-0s, but the name of the road was misspelled "Spokehane." With Corbin driving the first spike, track laying began on May 30. By August 4, 40 miles had been laid to the north end of Loon Lake. Four new Troy passenger cars were delivered to Spokane. A brick depot was rising on the north bank of the river for joint use by the Seattle, Lake Shore & Eastern Railway, the Oregon Railroad and Navigation Company, and the SF&N. That still Sunday, a fire started in a row of frame buildings. Corbin and Roberts were able to rescue valuable papers from their rented offices, before the building ignited in a blaze that scorched 32 city blocks. Temporary company offices were established in two combination cars near the depot site.
By August 21, grading was completed into Colville and tracklaying spanned 48 miles northward. Work trains carried freight and passengers. From September 2, the stage operated between Colville and the advancing rail head. By October 1, the work was beyond Chewelah. On October 18, 1889, the tracks reached the new frame depot at Colville.[1]
Penetrating British Columbia
The rich mineral and lumber resources of BC were alluring. American prospectors had been pouring north along the Columbia and Kootenay river valleys. Corbin recognized that railroads would be strategic for the transport of Kootenay ores.[2] Colville–Little Dalles was completed in August 1890, where the line connected northward with the Columbia and Kootenay Steam Navigation Company (C&KSN), incorporated in 1890. The C&KSN boats reached to the Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) at Revelstoke, and gave access to the West Kootenay mining area.[3]
However, the steamboats were seasonal because of ice in winter and low water in summer. Consequently, Corbin advanced northward another seven miles, buying 158 acres by the river, which he named Northport.[2] The railhead arrived on December 31, 1892.[4] From here, an 1896 prong would be to Rossland along his Columbia & Red Mountain Railway (C&RM) (WA section), and Red Mountain Railway (RMR) (BC section).[2] The first prong was to Boundary opened on June 26, 1893,[4] connecting with the Nelson and Fort Sheppard Railway (N&FS) to become the first American railroad incursion into the West Kootenays. The Troup Junction landing near Nelson would receive Slocan and Kootenay Lake ores by steamboat for transport south on the N&FS and SF&N to American smelters.[4]
In 1919, passenger service to Phoenix ceased,[13] and the tracks were removed back to Copper Junction near Grand Forks.[14] Further abandonments were Molson–Oroville in 1931,[15] Curlew–Molson in 1935,[16] Princeton–Hedley in 1937 (unused since a bridge washout in 1934), Hedley–Kermeos in 1954, Kermeos–border in 1985 (unused since Armstrong bridge near Chopaka washout in 1972),[17][18] Republic–San Poil in 1983, and San Poil–Danville in 2006.[19]
In 1940, the Kettle Falls rail bridge was built on the track diversion that replaced the Marcus bridge, when Marcus was flooded by the reservoir for the Grand Coulee Dam.[20][21]
^"Province, 26 Apr 1931". www.newspapers.com. p. 3. The interstate commerce commission today authorized the Great Northern Railway to abandon twenty-four miles of trackage in Okanogan County, between Molson and Oroville.
^"Vancouver Sun, 5 Mar 1935". www.newspapers.com. p. 15. The last train was run over the Curlew–Molson branch of the Marcus–Republic line of Great Northern Railway last week, the U.S. Railway Commission having given authority to tear up the tracks some months ago.