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The Rural Voice, 1999-10, Page 42Book Review Recalling the railway days Reviewed by Keith Roulston Perhaps there's something about growing up where you hear the train whistle blowing every day that infects the blood. Certainly it infect- ed John R. Hardy, a Hanover photo- grapher and writer who has published Rusty Rails: A photo- graphic record of branchline railways in Midwestern Ontario 1961-1996. Hardy combines his love of photography with his fascination with trains. He grew up on a Colborne Township farm east of Goderich that had its own rail siding, leading to a gravel pit used by the builders of the Guelph-to-Goderich Canadian Pacific Railway in 1907. The beginnings of the book can be traced to a gift of a Kodak camera for a grade 8 graduation present in 1961. With his love of trains it was only natural Hardy should want to photo- graph them. It led to a 35 -year R E t odyssey.that saw him photograph most of the railway stations from Guelph, Stratford and Goderich north. to Owen Sound. A hobby for Hardy, it has become a valuable record of a piece of history for the region. A map at the beginn- ing of the book shows the areas of north Perth, Huron and Wellington and all of Grey and Bruce counties that now don't have a single railway track, though they were once crisscrossed by the ribbons of steel. Better roads and faster cars, first killed off passenger train service while changing manu-facturing and agricultural practices starved many lines for business and led to them finally being abandoned. The role agriculture played in both the good times and the decline of the branchlines is outlined in the brief histories of the different stations that accompany the dozens of photo- graphs. Freight records show that grain, cattle and farm machinery made up the bulk of activity at many of the town and village stations. Most PATTI ROBERTSON'S Unique Residential and Commercial Interiors 135 Victoria Sl., WINGHAM .357-2872 • Custom-made Window Fashions, Bedspreads & Accessories • Fine Domestic & Imported Fabrics • Select Wallcouerings • Furnishings, Lighting & Artwork to suit any interior... 41'1' PEST CONTROL Spider • Cluster Fly • Ant Wasp • Flea Bugs Find Us Hard to Resist P.O. Box 218, Owen Sound, Ontario N4K 5P3 Tom & Karen Merner • Tel: (519) 371-9499 or 1-800-292-3379 38 THE RURAL VOICE towns had grain elevators and stock pens. When cattle were no longer shipped by train and when rail grain shipments dwindled, the railways lost money and pressured the federal government to let them abandon the routes. Hardy's dedication to capturing history is evident from the first chapter as he relates the tale of trying to photograph the last train to travel the Guelph-Goderich CP Rail line — the line that ran through his family's farm (and ironically through his wife Johanna's family's farm a few miles east at Blyth). On December 15, 1988 he booked off work early so he could photograph the last train heading to Goderich as it passed through his in-laws' farm. The train was delayed and after waiting to hours until daylight faded, he finally gave up and headed for his parents' home in Goderich. He made two trips to photograph the Goderich station and had given up for the night when the phone rang at 11 p.m. It was his father-in-law (former Rural Voice columnist Adrian Vos) telling him the train had finally passed through his farm. He went back down to the station, got some photographs of the train arriving, then got up the next day to capture the train's last eastbound trip carrying graders from Champion Road Machinery. Though the emphasis in the book is heavier on Goderich-area railways where he grew up (both the Guelph- Goderich CP Rail and the Goderich- Stratford CN — now the only one of the lines still running, operated by short -line specialist Goderich-Exeter Railway Company), there's some- thing here for nearly everyone who grew up in the train era in midwest- ern Ontario. For me, as someone who grew up with the train from Kincard- ine to Lucknow running through my Kinloss Township farm, that was the photo of the Lucknow rail yard. Hardy's obsession has become a gift to everyone in the area: a record of a vanished era.0 Rusty Rails, John R. Hardy, 167 pgs., $39.95, self -published (John Hardy, 535 Fourth St., Hanover N4N 3E8).