Volunteers aim to keep a 1882 steam locomotive chugging along in Manitoba
WINNIPEG — A steam locomotive made in 1882 and billed as Canada’s oldest operating one is in need of some tender loving care, and the volunteers who have kept it running on a vintage railway north of Manitoba’s capital are raising funds for the fixup.
Steam Locomotive No. 3, as it’s known, is neither efficient, fast nor energy-conscious compared with more modern locomotives. Shovelling coal into a fire to create steam leads to a lot of dirt, noise and thick black smoke. But for volunteers such as Paul Newsome, a train being powered by steam is unlike any other.
“A steam locomotive is alive, it feels alive. It makes noise, it smells and it responds to what you do to it,” Newsome, general manager of the Vintage Locomotive Society, said in a recent interview in the repair shop where No. 3 sits with its front section open, awaiting replacement tubes.
“You can see the results if you put in a lousy … fire, the steam doesn’t go up. It responds. And it’s almost human. As dumb as that may sound, it’s almost human.”