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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:08,926 --> 00:00:11,678 NARRATOR: William Cornelius Van Horne 2 00:00:11,762 --> 00:00:14,765 was born on a dirt farm in Illinois. 3 00:00:16,225 --> 00:00:18,268 As a young man, he was given the task 4 00:00:18,352 --> 00:00:21,605 of building the longest, toughest wilderness railroad 5 00:00:21,688 --> 00:00:23,941 on the face of the earth, 6 00:00:24,024 --> 00:00:28,111 a task many considered impossible. 7 00:00:57,391 --> 00:01:00,936 Pa'? 8 00:01:07,192 --> 00:01:10,904 They once roamed the earth by the tens of thousands. 9 00:01:11,822 --> 00:01:13,740 Their whistles spoke of distant places, 10 00:01:13,824 --> 00:01:16,702 of adventure and romance. 11 00:01:19,538 --> 00:01:20,998 Abandoned for decades, 12 00:01:21,081 --> 00:01:23,250 what memories might still be evoked, 13 00:01:23,333 --> 00:01:25,043 what spirits conjured up 14 00:01:25,127 --> 00:01:27,838 from an age left behind so long ago? 15 00:01:29,423 --> 00:01:31,675 (fire crackling, roaring) 16 00:01:47,774 --> 00:01:49,818 (engine revving) 17 00:01:49,901 --> 00:01:51,486 (steam hissing) 18 00:01:51,570 --> 00:01:54,323 (engine clicking) 19 00:02:00,203 --> 00:02:03,582 (whirring) 20 00:02:08,962 --> 00:02:12,215 (machinery squealing) 21 00:02:26,104 --> 00:02:28,231 Their crews considered them living things, 22 00:02:28,315 --> 00:02:30,984 each with a unique personality. 23 00:02:31,068 --> 00:02:33,695 Some were cranky and difficult; 24 00:02:34,571 --> 00:02:37,240 others, good natured and spirited. 25 00:02:45,791 --> 00:02:48,377 2816 has been resurrected 26 00:02:48,460 --> 00:02:50,253 by the Canadian Pacific 27 00:02:50,337 --> 00:02:54,841 in an extraordinary attempt to illuminate history itself, 28 00:02:54,925 --> 00:02:57,761 to summon the spirits of the past. 29 00:03:02,724 --> 00:03:05,394 They were explorers, engineers, 30 00:03:05,477 --> 00:03:08,063 surveyors and guides. 31 00:03:09,773 --> 00:03:12,234 They traveled by boat and foot, 32 00:03:12,317 --> 00:03:14,945 packhorse and raft. 33 00:03:18,115 --> 00:03:19,741 They passed through landscapes 34 00:03:19,825 --> 00:03:22,035 the likes of nothing else on earth. 35 00:03:32,087 --> 00:03:35,340 They fell through ice, slipped from cliffs, 36 00:03:35,424 --> 00:03:39,553 died in rockslides and were lost in rapids. 37 00:03:50,647 --> 00:03:52,566 They followed countless rivers 38 00:03:52,649 --> 00:03:55,986 and many a promising route that ended nowhere. 39 00:04:04,035 --> 00:04:06,913 For years, they searched for an ideal passage 40 00:04:06,997 --> 00:04:11,418 across the vast mountain wilderness of western Canada. 41 00:04:14,504 --> 00:04:17,758 (wind whistling) 42 00:04:33,440 --> 00:04:35,442 Some worked too late into the fall 43 00:04:35,525 --> 00:04:38,361 and were ambushed by snowstorms. 44 00:04:39,488 --> 00:04:40,781 Trapped in makeshift shelters, 45 00:04:40,864 --> 00:04:42,574 they struggled to survive winters 46 00:04:42,657 --> 00:04:45,285 that could last over six months. 47 00:05:04,137 --> 00:05:06,556 After 20 years of exploration 48 00:05:06,640 --> 00:05:09,643 spanning hundreds of thousands of square miles, 49 00:05:09,726 --> 00:05:11,895 at least 40 men had died 50 00:05:11,978 --> 00:05:14,189 and still no ideal route had been found 51 00:05:14,272 --> 00:05:17,025 through the mountains. 52 00:05:18,360 --> 00:05:21,321 The province of British Columbia had joined Canada 53 00:05:21,404 --> 00:05:23,573 on the condition that it would be connected to the east 54 00:05:23,657 --> 00:05:26,493 by a transcontinental railway. 55 00:05:27,619 --> 00:05:30,622 In desperation, the federal government began construction 56 00:05:30,705 --> 00:05:33,500 beside a small church on the edge of the Fraser River 57 00:05:33,583 --> 00:05:35,585 in the spring of 1881. 58 00:05:35,669 --> 00:05:37,045 (train bell ringing) 59 00:05:42,717 --> 00:05:46,763 (whistle blowing) 60 00:05:51,268 --> 00:05:56,022 (engine chugging, wheels squealing) 61 00:06:05,574 --> 00:06:07,492 (engine chugging) 62 00:06:22,966 --> 00:06:26,136 (bell clanging) 63 00:06:26,219 --> 00:06:29,431 Departing from Vancouver, what lies ahead is 64 00:06:29,514 --> 00:06:33,059 one of the longest, toughest railways on earth. 65 00:06:33,143 --> 00:06:35,937 An extraordinary, 3000-mile journey 66 00:06:36,021 --> 00:06:38,064 for a locomotive that first turned a wheel 67 00:06:38,148 --> 00:06:41,151 over 80 years ago. 68 00:07:12,015 --> 00:07:14,225 (whistle blows) 69 00:07:38,083 --> 00:07:41,586 (chugging rapidly) 70 00:08:19,416 --> 00:08:22,252 (whistle blowing) 71 00:08:47,652 --> 00:08:50,030 (chugging rapidly) 72 00:09:07,547 --> 00:09:10,008 The first few miles along the Fraser River flood plain 73 00:09:10,091 --> 00:09:12,177 were easy going for the builders, 74 00:09:12,260 --> 00:09:14,596 at least, until the line turned north 75 00:09:14,679 --> 00:09:17,348 into the jaws of the Fraser Canyon. 76 00:09:22,145 --> 00:09:26,107 Hard granite walls towering 3,000 feet above the river 77 00:09:26,191 --> 00:09:28,443 brought construction to a painful crawl 78 00:09:28,526 --> 00:09:31,362 that would last over six years. 79 00:09:32,781 --> 00:09:36,076 (whistle blowing) 80 00:09:54,552 --> 00:09:56,471 10,000 men worked the Fraser Canyon 81 00:09:56,554 --> 00:09:59,057 in the early 1880s. 82 00:09:59,140 --> 00:10:02,852 6,500 were Chinese. 83 00:10:02,936 --> 00:10:04,687 (explosion thunders) 84 00:10:05,563 --> 00:10:06,564 (horse neighs) 85 00:10:08,149 --> 00:10:10,568 They blasted night and day, 86 00:10:10,652 --> 00:10:12,695 drilling tunnels into the granite rock, 87 00:10:12,779 --> 00:10:15,782 carving roadbeds on the sides of vertical cliffs. 88 00:10:16,825 --> 00:10:19,494 Working with hand tools and black powder, 89 00:10:19,577 --> 00:10:22,580 they averaged barely five feet a day. 90 00:10:25,959 --> 00:10:30,046 In these canyons, six men died for every mile of track laid, 91 00:10:31,464 --> 00:10:34,342 most of them Chinese. 92 00:10:41,099 --> 00:10:43,643 We can only glimpse the courage of these men 93 00:10:43,726 --> 00:10:47,272 in the extraordinary work they left behind. 94 00:11:14,007 --> 00:11:18,386 (whistle blowing) 95 00:11:35,278 --> 00:11:37,739 (engine chugging) 96 00:11:44,662 --> 00:11:46,915 (wheels clacking) 97 00:12:00,678 --> 00:12:02,889 Pa'? 98 00:12:29,374 --> 00:12:31,668 Pa'? 99 00:12:41,177 --> 00:12:43,137 By 1882, 100 00:12:43,221 --> 00:12:45,598 construction moved out of the Fraser Canyon 101 00:12:45,682 --> 00:12:47,767 and east along the Thompson River 102 00:12:47,850 --> 00:12:49,435 as the railway climbed inland 103 00:12:49,519 --> 00:12:52,063 up to the central plateau of British Columbia. 104 00:12:54,816 --> 00:12:56,609 Here the land becomes arid 105 00:12:56,693 --> 00:12:59,988 and the rock gives way to softer sandstone. 106 00:13:03,408 --> 00:13:05,785 It made for easier construction, 107 00:13:05,868 --> 00:13:08,871 but this barren desert absorbs little water. 108 00:13:08,955 --> 00:13:11,958 Torrential rains erode and sculpt sandstone cliffs 109 00:13:12,041 --> 00:13:15,169 into hoodoos that can collapse into mudslides, 110 00:13:15,253 --> 00:13:17,463 and bury the line. 111 00:13:30,727 --> 00:13:32,979 Pa'? 112 00:13:41,571 --> 00:13:43,489 Here, engineers and tracklayers 113 00:13:43,573 --> 00:13:45,992 encountered a new set of obstacles 114 00:13:46,075 --> 00:13:48,661 that could be neither filled, nor bridged, 115 00:13:48,745 --> 00:13:50,872 nor tunneled through. 116 00:13:52,040 --> 00:13:54,667 When construction crews arrived at these lakes, 117 00:13:54,751 --> 00:13:57,253 they fully intended to bridge them and continue. 118 00:13:59,881 --> 00:14:01,215 But when they dropped weights 119 00:14:01,299 --> 00:14:02,800 attached to 400 feet of rope, 120 00:14:02,884 --> 00:14:06,012 they never reached the bottom. 121 00:14:06,095 --> 00:14:09,807 The lakes would be simply too deep to cross. 122 00:14:09,891 --> 00:14:12,560 Trains would have to take the long route around-- 123 00:14:12,643 --> 00:14:14,812 as they do to this day. 124 00:14:34,791 --> 00:14:37,043 (engine chugging rapidly) 125 00:14:49,305 --> 00:14:51,849 Where the ground was flat and the grades easy, 126 00:14:51,933 --> 00:14:54,310 General Manager Van Horne pushed hard 127 00:14:54,394 --> 00:14:55,937 to make up for time and money 128 00:14:56,020 --> 00:14:58,272 lost in the canyons and mountains. 129 00:15:02,944 --> 00:15:04,654 They were Canadians, Americans, 130 00:15:04,737 --> 00:15:07,365 British, Europeans, and Asians. 131 00:15:07,448 --> 00:15:09,867 (men chatting, tools clanking) 132 00:15:09,951 --> 00:15:12,370 They froze in bitter cold 133 00:15:12,453 --> 00:15:14,122 and toiled in fierce summer heat, 134 00:15:14,205 --> 00:15:16,874 eaten raw by insects. 135 00:15:16,958 --> 00:15:18,960 Yet, with bare hands, 136 00:15:19,043 --> 00:15:22,171 they laid as many as six miles of track every day. 137 00:15:25,842 --> 00:15:28,136 In 1882, 138 00:15:28,219 --> 00:15:30,513 nearly 500 miles of track 139 00:15:30,596 --> 00:15:32,682 were laid in a single season-- 140 00:15:32,765 --> 00:15:35,935 a world record and a source of enormous pride 141 00:15:36,018 --> 00:15:37,311 for the track crews. 142 00:15:37,395 --> 00:15:40,815 Pa'? 143 00:15:57,999 --> 00:16:00,251 Pa'? 144 00:16:13,014 --> 00:16:15,183 (whistle blows) 145 00:16:34,285 --> 00:16:38,039 Pa'? 146 00:16:49,634 --> 00:16:51,594 At the railroad town of Revelstoke 147 00:16:51,677 --> 00:16:53,804 the canyons, lakes and deserts 148 00:16:53,888 --> 00:16:56,474 of the interior lay behind. 149 00:16:56,557 --> 00:16:59,644 Relatively easy going, compared to the Selkirk 150 00:16:59,727 --> 00:17:02,104 and Rocky Mountains looming ahead. 151 00:17:11,489 --> 00:17:14,700 General Manager Van Horne was an amateur geologist, 152 00:17:14,784 --> 00:17:18,454 a talented artist, and an accomplished violinist. 153 00:17:19,789 --> 00:17:21,249 Though he was best known 154 00:17:21,332 --> 00:17:24,085 as an all-night, scotch-drinking poker player. 155 00:17:27,838 --> 00:17:30,049 Perhaps his greatest gamble, however, 156 00:17:30,132 --> 00:17:33,010 lay in the route chosen east of Revelstoke. 157 00:17:35,012 --> 00:17:38,182 Van Horne, the CPR, and the government 158 00:17:38,266 --> 00:17:40,935 were anxious to keep powerful American railroads 159 00:17:41,018 --> 00:17:43,062 from moving into Southern Canada. 160 00:17:44,772 --> 00:17:47,441 There were two routes through the mountains being considered: 161 00:17:47,525 --> 00:17:50,403 a northern route recommended by the surveyors, 162 00:17:50,486 --> 00:17:53,197 and a southern route considered much more difficult 163 00:17:53,281 --> 00:17:55,324 by virtually everyone. 164 00:17:55,408 --> 00:17:57,743 A fateful, perhaps reckless, decision was made, 165 00:17:57,827 --> 00:17:59,912 by the railway and government, 166 00:17:59,996 --> 00:18:01,664 to gamble on this southern route, 167 00:18:01,747 --> 00:18:04,166 where no passes were yet known to exist. 168 00:18:06,002 --> 00:18:09,046 An American surveyor by the name of A. B. Rogers 169 00:18:09,130 --> 00:18:11,841 had convinced many, including Van Horne, 170 00:18:11,924 --> 00:18:13,509 that he could find a southern pass 171 00:18:13,593 --> 00:18:15,136 through the Selkirks. 172 00:18:16,971 --> 00:18:19,056 The future of the Canadian Pacific 173 00:18:19,140 --> 00:18:21,934 was now in the hands of two Americans. 174 00:18:22,018 --> 00:18:24,645 One, a brilliant leader and gambler, 175 00:18:24,729 --> 00:18:28,524 the other, a stubborn surveyor considered wildly eccentric. 176 00:18:58,554 --> 00:19:02,058 Pa'? 177 00:19:22,662 --> 00:19:25,206 (water rushing) 178 00:19:41,305 --> 00:19:44,225 Rogers and his guides only traveled in the spring 179 00:19:44,308 --> 00:19:47,853 and summer months up the western face of the Selkirks. 180 00:19:47,937 --> 00:19:50,147 Ominously, they found no evidence 181 00:19:50,231 --> 00:19:52,274 that humans of any kind 182 00:19:52,358 --> 00:19:55,111 had ever ventured amongst these almost vertical slopes. 183 00:19:57,738 --> 00:20:00,241 In the summer of 1882, 184 00:20:00,324 --> 00:20:02,243 when Rogers declared he had discovered 185 00:20:02,326 --> 00:20:04,495 a viable railroad pass, 186 00:20:04,578 --> 00:20:07,665 he did not fully appreciate the nature of the beast 187 00:20:07,748 --> 00:20:10,710 that would come to bear his name. 188 00:20:12,920 --> 00:20:15,005 When engineers and tracklayers 189 00:20:15,089 --> 00:20:17,591 arrived the following season, at the foot of the Selkirks, 190 00:20:17,675 --> 00:20:19,635 they were appalled 191 00:20:19,719 --> 00:20:22,012 by what Rogers had declared a pass. 192 00:20:28,352 --> 00:20:31,063 They would have to build massive looping trestles 193 00:20:31,147 --> 00:20:33,983 to give the railway distance to lessen the steep climb 194 00:20:34,066 --> 00:20:35,359 up the mountain face. 195 00:20:35,443 --> 00:20:37,820 For the men working here, 196 00:20:37,903 --> 00:20:40,281 it was a bad omen. 197 00:20:43,325 --> 00:20:45,411 The trestles were frail, 198 00:20:45,494 --> 00:20:47,580 and prone to fire in the summer 199 00:20:47,663 --> 00:20:50,124 and avalanches in winter. 200 00:20:52,793 --> 00:20:55,713 They were soon replaced with stone pillars, 201 00:20:55,796 --> 00:20:58,299 and eventually, those too were abandoned. 202 00:21:02,303 --> 00:21:04,513 (steam hisses) 203 00:21:26,368 --> 00:21:28,412 In February of 1910, 204 00:21:28,496 --> 00:21:31,081 the chief engineer wrote to Van Horne: 205 00:21:31,165 --> 00:21:33,709 "There has been a terrible accident: 206 00:21:33,793 --> 00:21:37,296 "many men died last night in the valley of the lllecillewaet. 207 00:21:37,379 --> 00:21:39,381 The rest are afraid." 208 00:21:50,810 --> 00:21:51,936 In the early years, 209 00:21:52,019 --> 00:21:54,063 this short stretch of track 210 00:21:54,146 --> 00:21:55,815 would threaten the very survival 211 00:21:55,898 --> 00:21:57,942 of the entire railway. 212 00:22:04,657 --> 00:22:07,576 Some thought Rogers had been more than eccentric. 213 00:22:07,660 --> 00:22:11,455 His ego had led him to promote a route of total madness. 214 00:22:40,609 --> 00:22:43,988 Railway surveyors seek the lowest possible route 215 00:22:44,071 --> 00:22:45,197 through the mountains, 216 00:22:45,281 --> 00:22:47,825 like the rivers they often parallel. 217 00:22:47,908 --> 00:22:50,578 In Rogers Pass, 218 00:22:50,661 --> 00:22:52,830 they used side canyons to build loops, 219 00:22:52,913 --> 00:22:55,749 lengthening the line to give trains more distance 220 00:22:55,833 --> 00:22:57,418 to climb the mountain. 221 00:23:06,594 --> 00:23:08,721 To lower the grade further would require tunnels, 222 00:23:08,804 --> 00:23:11,849 at vastly greater expense. 223 00:23:11,932 --> 00:23:14,810 In 1914, work began 224 00:23:14,894 --> 00:23:17,021 on the five mile Connaught tunnel, 225 00:23:17,104 --> 00:23:19,231 the longest in North America. 226 00:23:19,315 --> 00:23:21,567 This would reduce the grades on the old route 227 00:23:21,650 --> 00:23:24,486 and hide the line from relentless avalanches. 228 00:23:31,744 --> 00:23:33,621 The nine-mile Mount McDonald tunnel 229 00:23:33,704 --> 00:23:35,748 followed in the 1980s, 230 00:23:35,831 --> 00:23:37,458 further reducing the grades. 231 00:23:40,711 --> 00:23:43,589 It would take the CPR 100 years 232 00:23:43,672 --> 00:23:46,008 and 14 miles of tunnels 233 00:23:46,091 --> 00:23:48,677 to finally escape beneath the original line-- 234 00:23:48,761 --> 00:23:51,388 the folly that was Rogers Pass. 235 00:23:51,472 --> 00:23:54,141 (train whistle blowing) 236 00:24:13,243 --> 00:24:15,454 (engine chugging rapidly) 237 00:24:25,255 --> 00:24:27,466 (steam hisses) 238 00:24:52,574 --> 00:24:54,868 (whistle blows) 239 00:24:57,204 --> 00:24:58,914 The deep cliffs and valleys 240 00:24:58,998 --> 00:25:01,291 of the eastern face of the Selkirk Mountains 241 00:25:01,375 --> 00:25:03,085 were no easier for the builders. 242 00:25:06,880 --> 00:25:10,467 As trains begin the long, steep, downhill journey, 243 00:25:10,551 --> 00:25:12,970 they will cross a series of great bridges-- 244 00:25:13,053 --> 00:25:14,888 at the time of construction, 245 00:25:14,972 --> 00:25:17,391 the highest in the world. 246 00:25:39,496 --> 00:25:41,749 At the eastern foot of the Selkirks, 247 00:25:41,832 --> 00:25:44,877 the great steam trains often paused for service 248 00:25:44,960 --> 00:25:47,087 at the railway town of Golden. 249 00:25:47,171 --> 00:25:49,465 The Rocky Mountains lay ahead. 250 00:26:02,061 --> 00:26:04,563 The inhabitants of railroad towns 251 00:26:04,646 --> 00:26:06,106 once lived to serve the appetites 252 00:26:06,190 --> 00:26:08,692 of the steam locomotive. 253 00:26:08,776 --> 00:26:11,570 Water, grease, oil, 254 00:26:11,653 --> 00:26:14,198 coaling, running repairs, day and night, 255 00:26:14,281 --> 00:26:15,532 winter and summer... 256 00:26:15,616 --> 00:26:17,701 preparing them to operate 257 00:26:17,785 --> 00:26:19,453 at the limit of their power. 258 00:26:31,632 --> 00:26:33,550 The locomotive engineer 259 00:26:33,634 --> 00:26:36,178 was the folk hero in the Age of Steam. 260 00:26:42,101 --> 00:26:44,394 (whistle blows twice) 261 00:26:51,527 --> 00:26:53,779 (engine chugs slowly) 262 00:27:27,938 --> 00:27:30,190 On the modern railway, there are two possible routes 263 00:27:30,274 --> 00:27:32,067 for eastbound trains. 264 00:27:32,151 --> 00:27:34,653 If the shorter main line is blocked or damaged, 265 00:27:34,736 --> 00:27:36,697 trains can be diverted on an easier route south, 266 00:27:36,780 --> 00:27:39,950 out of the mountains. 267 00:27:40,033 --> 00:27:43,871 By 1900, the railway sought to relieve the pressure 268 00:27:43,954 --> 00:27:47,040 on the main line, and the terrible grades ahead, 269 00:27:47,124 --> 00:27:50,711 constructing an alternate track south, along the Columbia River, 270 00:27:50,794 --> 00:27:53,046 through a pass called the Crow's Nest. 271 00:27:53,130 --> 00:27:54,923 But to an already long journey, 272 00:27:55,007 --> 00:27:57,342 it would add hundreds of miles. 273 00:28:01,013 --> 00:28:03,473 (gentle acoustic guitar intro playing) 274 00:28:03,557 --> 00:28:08,854 FEMALE VOCALIST: ♪ If you miss the train I'm on ♪ 275 00:28:08,937 --> 00:28:13,358 ♪ You will know that I am gone ♪ 276 00:28:13,442 --> 00:28:17,946 ♪ You can hear the whistle blow ♪ 277 00:28:18,030 --> 00:28:20,741 ♪ A hundred miles ♪ 278 00:28:23,785 --> 00:28:26,914 ♪ Hundred miles, a hundred miles ♪ 279 00:28:26,997 --> 00:28:30,500 -(whistle blows) - ♪ A hundred miles ♪ 280 00:28:30,584 --> 00:28:32,878 ♪ A hundred miles ♪ 281 00:28:32,961 --> 00:28:35,047 ♪ You can hear ♪ 282 00:28:35,130 --> 00:28:37,674 ♪ The whistle blow ♪ 283 00:28:37,758 --> 00:28:41,762 ♪ A hundred miles ♪ 284 00:28:43,347 --> 00:28:45,849 ♪ Lord, I'm one ♪ 285 00:28:45,933 --> 00:28:47,851 ♪ Lord, I'm two ♪ 286 00:28:47,935 --> 00:28:50,687 ♪ Lord, I'm three ♪ 287 00:28:50,771 --> 00:28:53,273 ♪ Lord, I'm four ♪ 288 00:28:53,357 --> 00:28:57,986 ♪ Lord, I'm 500 miles ♪ 289 00:28:58,070 --> 00:29:01,031 ♪ From my home... ♪ 290 00:29:03,533 --> 00:29:07,704 ♪ 500 miles, 500 miles ♪ 291 00:29:07,788 --> 00:29:12,376 ♪ 500 miles, 500 miles ♪ 292 00:29:12,459 --> 00:29:18,173 ♪ Lord, I'm 500 miles ♪ 293 00:29:18,257 --> 00:29:20,217 ♪ From my home... ♪ 294 00:29:22,761 --> 00:29:25,347 ♪ Not a shirt ♪ 295 00:29:25,430 --> 00:29:27,140 ♪ On my back ♪ 296 00:29:27,224 --> 00:29:30,185 ♪ Not a penny ♪ 297 00:29:30,269 --> 00:29:32,562 ♪ To my name ♪ 298 00:29:32,646 --> 00:29:35,899 ♪ Lord, I can't ♪ 299 00:29:35,983 --> 00:29:37,276 ♪ Go a-home ♪ 300 00:29:37,359 --> 00:29:40,821 ♪ This a-way... ♪ 301 00:29:42,906 --> 00:29:47,786 ♪ This a-way, this a-way ♪ 302 00:29:47,869 --> 00:29:52,541 ♪ This a-way, this a-way ♪ 303 00:29:52,624 --> 00:29:55,502 ♪ Lord, I can't ♪ 304 00:29:55,585 --> 00:29:57,754 ♪ Go a-home ♪ 305 00:29:57,838 --> 00:30:00,716 ♪ This a-way... ♪ 306 00:30:03,135 --> 00:30:08,640 ♪ If you miss the train I'm on ♪ 307 00:30:08,724 --> 00:30:12,602 ♪ You will know that I am gone ♪ 308 00:30:12,686 --> 00:30:16,189 (fading out): ♪ You can hear the whistle blow...♪ 309 00:30:16,273 --> 00:30:18,650 NARRATOR: But soon after this easy southern route was opened, 310 00:30:18,734 --> 00:30:20,861 the ultimate nightmare occurred 311 00:30:20,944 --> 00:30:24,364 on an April night in 1903. 312 00:30:24,448 --> 00:30:26,908 (deep rumbling) 313 00:30:48,889 --> 00:30:51,224 At 4:30 a.m., a freight train 314 00:30:51,308 --> 00:30:52,809 had just passed through the mining town 315 00:30:52,893 --> 00:30:54,311 of Frank, Alberta, 316 00:30:54,394 --> 00:30:56,563 when much of Turtle Mountain collapsed. 317 00:31:02,527 --> 00:31:04,696 The train's brakeman, Sid Choquette, 318 00:31:04,780 --> 00:31:06,907 made his way in total blackness 319 00:31:06,990 --> 00:31:09,117 across rocks the size of apartment buildings 320 00:31:09,618 --> 00:31:12,037 in a frantic attempt to stop an express train 321 00:31:12,120 --> 00:31:13,955 coming from the east. 322 00:31:17,626 --> 00:31:19,878 At the last possible moment, 323 00:31:19,961 --> 00:31:22,923 he stopped the Spokane Flyer bound for Washington... 324 00:31:25,175 --> 00:31:27,386 ...saving the lives of hundreds of passengers. 325 00:31:29,638 --> 00:31:33,266 He received an award from the railroad of $25. 326 00:31:36,770 --> 00:31:38,730 Roughly 90 souls on the edge of town 327 00:31:38,814 --> 00:31:40,649 were not so lucky. 328 00:31:40,732 --> 00:31:43,735 They remain buried under the slide to this day. 329 00:31:47,114 --> 00:31:49,366 (wheels clacking) 330 00:31:59,376 --> 00:32:00,710 There would be no easy route 331 00:32:00,794 --> 00:32:03,088 through these mountains after all, 332 00:32:03,171 --> 00:32:05,674 but there is an easy stretch along the Kicking Horse River 333 00:32:05,757 --> 00:32:08,343 before the greatest challenge of all-- 334 00:32:08,427 --> 00:32:11,012 the towering Rocky Mountains ahead. 335 00:32:42,544 --> 00:32:46,006 Pa'? 336 00:32:58,518 --> 00:33:01,438 The railroad town of Field is at the foot 337 00:33:01,521 --> 00:33:05,066 of the steepest stretch of track in the Rockies. 338 00:33:07,152 --> 00:33:09,029 In 1886, the Baldwin Locomotive Works of Philadelphia 339 00:33:09,112 --> 00:33:13,867 designed a special series of locomotives 340 00:33:13,950 --> 00:33:19,080 to help move heavy trains up and down the CPR's Big Hill. 341 00:33:21,917 --> 00:33:24,169 These Consolidation-class engines 342 00:33:24,252 --> 00:33:29,132 were enormously successful, except for number 314. 343 00:33:40,727 --> 00:33:45,023 Descending the Big Hill in 1899, 344 00:33:45,106 --> 00:33:49,653 314 ran away and jumped the track, killing its crew. 345 00:33:50,904 --> 00:33:53,031 Rebuilt and renumbered, 346 00:33:53,114 --> 00:33:55,992 but this time climbing the Big Hill, 347 00:33:56,076 --> 00:34:00,288 it blew itself to pieces, killing another crew. 348 00:34:06,127 --> 00:34:08,630 Repaired again, it worked up and down the Big Hill 349 00:34:08,713 --> 00:34:10,924 for 30 more years, 350 00:34:11,007 --> 00:34:15,512 all the time feared and despised by its crews. 351 00:34:26,898 --> 00:34:28,900 (engine chugging slowly) 352 00:34:38,493 --> 00:34:41,663 Pa'? 353 00:34:41,746 --> 00:34:43,498 (chugging faster) 354 00:34:53,967 --> 00:34:56,845 The 20 miles ahead remain, to this day, 355 00:34:56,928 --> 00:34:59,097 among the most challenging stretches of track 356 00:34:59,180 --> 00:35:02,142 in all of railroading. 357 00:35:12,527 --> 00:35:15,280 Pa'? 358 00:35:22,829 --> 00:35:24,831 (chugging slows) 359 00:35:31,963 --> 00:35:33,965 (metallic screech) 360 00:35:43,433 --> 00:35:46,436 Pa'? 361 00:35:54,444 --> 00:35:56,613 20 years after the railway was opened, 362 00:35:56,696 --> 00:35:59,574 the terrible grades on the Big Hill were reduced 363 00:35:59,658 --> 00:36:02,077 by one of the most famous engineering projects 364 00:36:02,160 --> 00:36:05,413 in the history of railroading-- 365 00:36:05,497 --> 00:36:07,457 the spiral tunnels. 366 00:36:11,378 --> 00:36:13,713 The tunnels give the line additional distance 367 00:36:13,797 --> 00:36:16,883 to climb the steep western face of the Rocky Mountains. 368 00:36:23,890 --> 00:36:25,809 Through both an upper and lower tunnel, 369 00:36:25,892 --> 00:36:27,852 long freight trains cross over themselves 370 00:36:27,936 --> 00:36:30,772 by looping around inside the mountain. 371 00:36:35,193 --> 00:36:37,195 (engine chugging) 372 00:36:47,831 --> 00:36:49,749 (hammer clanging) 373 00:36:49,833 --> 00:36:52,419 The Last Spike was driven at Craigellachie 374 00:36:52,502 --> 00:36:56,548 in the fall of 1885-- an extraordinary accomplishment 375 00:36:56,631 --> 00:36:58,633 for the tiny new country of Canada. 376 00:36:58,717 --> 00:37:03,263 (crowd cheering) 377 00:37:03,346 --> 00:37:04,806 But soon after transcontinental trains 378 00:37:04,889 --> 00:37:06,808 began running from sea to sea... 379 00:37:06,891 --> 00:37:09,060 (train whistle blows) 380 00:37:09,144 --> 00:37:11,688 ...it was apparent the railway had profoundly miscalculated 381 00:37:11,771 --> 00:37:14,899 one significant detail-- 382 00:37:15,942 --> 00:37:18,069 Winter. 383 00:37:18,153 --> 00:37:20,155 (wind gusting, ice crackling) 384 00:37:22,574 --> 00:37:24,325 (ice crackling, rumbling) 385 00:37:32,292 --> 00:37:34,210 Virtually no one had ever ventured 386 00:37:34,294 --> 00:37:36,254 into Rogers Pass in the winter, 387 00:37:36,337 --> 00:37:39,466 and for good reason. 388 00:37:39,549 --> 00:37:42,343 It had among the deepest known snowfalls in the world-- 389 00:37:42,427 --> 00:37:45,305 as much as 60 feet in a single season. 390 00:37:54,063 --> 00:37:57,066 (rumbling) 391 00:38:05,533 --> 00:38:09,829 On February 28, 1910, a gang of 60 men were working 392 00:38:09,913 --> 00:38:12,624 to clear an avalanche in the pass. 393 00:38:12,707 --> 00:38:15,043 At midnight, another slide came down 394 00:38:15,126 --> 00:38:16,753 the opposite side of the valley 395 00:38:16,836 --> 00:38:19,422 and killed all but one. 396 00:38:19,506 --> 00:38:22,717 Most of the men were Japanese. 397 00:38:29,265 --> 00:38:34,145 At least 250 men would die in avalanches in Rogers Pass alone 398 00:38:34,229 --> 00:38:35,980 in the first few years of operation. 399 00:38:39,484 --> 00:38:42,195 When construction began, few could have imagined 400 00:38:42,278 --> 00:38:45,490 the terrible sacrifices the southern route would entail. 401 00:38:48,785 --> 00:38:51,162 The new railway and the country itself 402 00:38:51,246 --> 00:38:53,706 hung on the thinnest of threads. 403 00:38:53,790 --> 00:38:57,085 The mountain sections were ruinously expensive to operate 404 00:38:57,168 --> 00:38:59,796 and the company teetered on bankruptcy. 405 00:38:59,879 --> 00:39:03,716 It would take a miracle to save the Canadian Pacific Railway. 406 00:39:14,894 --> 00:39:17,397 A miracle did occur. 407 00:39:17,480 --> 00:39:20,191 Just over the top of the Continental Divide, 408 00:39:20,275 --> 00:39:22,527 on the east face of the Rocky Mountains, 409 00:39:22,610 --> 00:39:26,364 was a place the surveyors called the most beautiful on earth. 410 00:39:27,657 --> 00:39:30,243 They named it Banff. 411 00:39:39,502 --> 00:39:42,505 Pa'? 412 00:39:45,341 --> 00:39:47,010 The toughest route through the mountains 413 00:39:47,093 --> 00:39:49,971 was also the most spectacular. 414 00:39:50,054 --> 00:39:52,849 This simple irony would help save the railway 415 00:39:52,932 --> 00:39:55,351 and perhaps the country itself. 416 00:39:57,478 --> 00:39:59,564 A national park system followed the railway. 417 00:39:59,647 --> 00:40:01,566 Banff, Lake Louise, 418 00:40:01,649 --> 00:40:06,070 Jasper, Glacier, Yoho. 419 00:40:06,154 --> 00:40:09,699 News of a wilderness Shangri-La spread around the globe, 420 00:40:09,782 --> 00:40:14,495 and the company had a thriving new business: tourism. 421 00:40:18,124 --> 00:40:21,461 Van Horne built a series of great hotels, 422 00:40:21,544 --> 00:40:25,423 including the most famous, at Lake Louise... 423 00:40:28,885 --> 00:40:32,055 ...followed by a fleet of legendary passenger trains 424 00:40:32,138 --> 00:40:34,307 to bring in the tourists. 425 00:40:43,107 --> 00:40:45,109 (bell clanging) 426 00:40:51,783 --> 00:40:53,701 From the summit of the Rocky Mountains, 427 00:40:53,785 --> 00:40:56,704 the big-wheeled Hudson locomotives ran down 428 00:40:56,788 --> 00:41:00,124 the long, fast mountain slope to the prairie below. 429 00:41:00,208 --> 00:41:02,543 A hundred miles an hour was routine 430 00:41:02,627 --> 00:41:05,421 for the great express trains in the Age of Steam. 431 00:41:05,505 --> 00:41:07,507 (easy, bright jazz playing) 432 00:41:15,974 --> 00:41:18,977 Pa'? 433 00:41:22,563 --> 00:41:26,150 As the railway grew and prospered, the country followed. 434 00:41:27,443 --> 00:41:30,863 Trains brought in settlers, opening up the land. 435 00:41:32,323 --> 00:41:34,200 They hauled produce to market, 436 00:41:34,283 --> 00:41:36,285 they built towns and cities. 437 00:41:39,163 --> 00:41:42,166 (whistle blowing) 438 00:41:48,548 --> 00:41:51,092 They took soldiers away to war... 439 00:41:53,177 --> 00:41:55,972 ...remembered by those left behind 440 00:41:56,055 --> 00:41:58,433 by the sound of a lonesome wail. 441 00:42:02,562 --> 00:42:04,564 (train whistle blows) 442 00:42:15,533 --> 00:42:18,619 Pa'? 443 00:42:29,672 --> 00:42:34,552 Van Home's railway grew into a vast network. 444 00:42:34,635 --> 00:42:37,805 The great express trains flowed day and night 445 00:42:37,889 --> 00:42:39,974 across the high grass prairie, 446 00:42:40,058 --> 00:42:42,769 the granite shores of Lake Superior, 447 00:42:42,852 --> 00:42:45,646 the rich farmland of the St. Lawrence Valley, 448 00:42:45,730 --> 00:42:48,149 and finally down to the seaport of Montreal. 449 00:42:48,232 --> 00:42:49,650 (bell clanging) 450 00:42:59,118 --> 00:43:01,621 (clanging continues) 451 00:43:05,625 --> 00:43:08,544 Van Horne completed the impossible railroad 452 00:43:08,628 --> 00:43:11,339 in half the time required by the contract. 453 00:43:12,465 --> 00:43:14,467 The son of an American dirt farmer, 454 00:43:14,550 --> 00:43:16,636 he rose to become one of the greatest figures 455 00:43:16,719 --> 00:43:18,763 in all of Canadian history. 456 00:43:24,018 --> 00:43:26,270 (birds chirping) 457 00:43:28,898 --> 00:43:32,235 But here in Rogers Pass, in the valley of the lllecillewaet, 458 00:43:32,318 --> 00:43:34,570 the legend of Van Horne and his railway 459 00:43:34,654 --> 00:43:36,697 might have had a much different ending. 460 00:43:40,243 --> 00:43:44,330 Their names are worn from wood and stone and lost forever. 461 00:43:46,666 --> 00:43:48,960 They were young and strong. 462 00:43:49,043 --> 00:43:52,672 With bare hands they endured unimaginable hardship. 463 00:44:02,974 --> 00:44:05,726 Pa'? 464 00:44:16,571 --> 00:44:19,448 The route chosen was nearly impossible, 465 00:44:19,532 --> 00:44:23,452 yet they had faith in the future and they found a way. 466 00:44:25,705 --> 00:44:27,623 We know them only by the railway 467 00:44:27,707 --> 00:44:30,877 and the extraordinary country they built: 468 00:44:30,960 --> 00:44:33,045 Canada. 469 00:44:37,300 --> 00:44:39,760 (bell clanging) 470 00:46:41,090 --> 00:46:42,842 (train whistle blowing, echoing into distance) 34547

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