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The 1910 Rogers Pass disaster - 1910 Photographer?
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Canada's Worst Avalanche is the 1910 Rogers Pass Disaster
4 March 2021

Rogers Pass British Columbia - Revelstoke, British Columbia, is home to Canada's worst avalanche disaster.
 
On 4 Mar 1910 an avalanche killed 62 men while they were clearing snow from the railway on a high mountain pass, called Rogers Pass, which runs through the Selkirk Mountains.
 
Revelstoke's history is inextricable from its railway system.
 
The city was founded in the 1880s when the Canadian Pacific Railway (CP) was constructed through the area.
 
Revelstoke was named by the CP, in appreciation of Lord Revelstoke, the head of the UK investment bank that helped save the railway line from bankruptcy in 1885 by buying the company's unsold bonds.
 
So Revelstoke is Revelstoke because of its railway.
 
It's also a very snowy area.
 
The city holds the Canadian record for the snowiest winter.
 
During the winter of 1971-1972, a total of 2,447 centimetres of snow fell on Mt. Copeland, and the town received 779 centimetres.
 
The Rogers Pass line was completed in November 1885.
 
There were snow sheds in the area, which are avalanche prevention structures, but there were vulnerable areas of the track that couldn't be protected.
 
So, men and equipment were often called upon to clear the track after an avalanche buried it in snow.
 
On 4 Mar 1910 a crew headed to clear the tracks from a big slide that had fallen from Cheops Mountain.
 
63 men and a locomotive-driven rotary snowplow were sent to clear the tracks.
 
There was urgency because a westbound CP train was just entering the Rocky Mountains and headed for Vancouver.
 
At 11:30 the crew was almost finished clearing the track when an avalanche came crashing down from Avalanche Mountain.
 
The locomotive and plow were thrown 15 metres and landed upside-down on the ground.
 
The cars behind the locomotive were crushed and 62 out of the 63 workmen were instantly buried in deep snow.
 
Bill Lachance, the locomotive fireman, was the only survivor.
 
Railway men, physicians, and nurses headed to the scene, but there were no casualties to treat.
 
The rescue mission turned into a body recovery mission.
 
Many bodies were found standing upright and frozen in position.
 
Since the Rogers Pass' construction, avalanches have killed over 200 people in the area.
 
Randi Mann.

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