The Kettle Valley Railway was a subsidiary of the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) that operated across southern British Columbia, west of Midway running to Rock Creek, then north to Myra Canyon, down to Penticton over to Princeton, Coalmont, Brookmere, Coquihalla and finally Hope where it connected to the main CPR line.
Train on the Kettle Valley Railway crossing trestle at Sirnach Creek, 1916
The Little Tunnel above Naramata, July 2009
First KVR passenger train at Penticton, May 1915
Myra Canyon Rail bridge near Kelowna on August 2, 2003, one month before it was destroyed by a forest fire
The Canadian Pacific Railway, also known simply as CPR or Canadian Pacific and formerly as CP Rail (1968–1996), was a Canadian Class I railway incorporated in 1881. The railway was owned by Canadian Pacific Railway Limited, which began operations as legal owner in a corporate restructuring in 2001.
CP 8137, a rebuilt GE AC4400CWM, in Chesterton, Indiana
An eastbound CPR freight train at Stoney Creek Bridge descending from Rogers Pass
Canadian Pacific Railway Crew laying tracks at lower Fraser Valley, 1883
William Cornelius Van Horne