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Home>> People and Communities>> Geographical Communities>> Regional Profiles>> Elk Valley>> Hosmer |
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Hosmer | |||
Adapted from John Kinnear
At one time Hosmer was a thriving boomtown of 1,200 people. The settlement included four hotels, several churches, and even an opera house that ran silent movies. That was back around 1908, when the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR)—who had been kept from developing their own mine in the Elk Valley for 10 years by the Crows Nest Pass Freight Rate Agreement—finally brought Hosmer onstream. Determined to outdo their competition, CPR set about building the most modern, well-constructed facility they could. The site included company houses, the tipple (coal cleaning plant), mine entries, a huge fanhouse, the boiler and power houses, and 240 beehive coke ovens. Though CPR gave the endeavour a good try, by 1914, a combination of badly disturbed geology and economics led them to close the mine forever. Slowly but surely, the people left for other minesites, and CPR reclaimed what it could of its machinery.
Today's Hosmer
is but a shadow of its former self, but there still lies in and
around this quiet hamlet halfway between Fernie and Sparwood, a
veritable treasure trove of sights to see. |
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