Every Place Has a Story

The Brill Trolley Buses of Sandon, BC

the_title()
Sandon, 2022
The first thing you notice about Sandon is that the buildings face Carpenter Creek. That’s because in the late 1800s, the town decided to contain the creek in a flume. When the town was rebuilt after a fire in 1900, the creek was boarded over and turned into the main street. Eve Lazarus photo

Thought I’d take a break from my summer break to write up this post about Sandon, a super interesting town in the Kootenays. We dropped by there last week on our way to Nelson because I’d heard it was a ghost town and a graveyard for Vancouver’s Brill Trolley buses. We arrived there via a 10 km dirt road that runs off Highway 31A between New Denver and Kaslo.

Sandon 1890s
Sandon in the 1890s
Ghost Town:

Sandon is much more than a ghost town and its history is staggering. A century and a couple of decades ago, the Slocan silver rush brought people from all over Canada, California, Colorado, Oregon and Idaho. By the late 1890s, Sandon had 29 pubs, banks, three churches, a major redlight district, a soft drink factory, three breweries, a cigar manufacturer, three sawmills, two newspapers, a bowling alley, a bookstore and an opera house. It also had the most advanced electric light system in North America.

Sandon train
CPR steam engine meets Vancouver Brill Trolley Bus at Sandon. Eve Lazarus photo.
Hal Wright:

We crossed the little bridge over the creek and bumped into Hal Wright who was walking up the road schlepping a ladder. Lucky for us because Hal owns most of the town. He is also an authority on the history of the place—his family settled there in the booming 1890s, and he has lived there since 1972 when he co-founded the Sandon Museum with the help of a government grant at age 16.

Sandon trolley bus
Eve Lazarus photo, 2022

As well as owning a chunk of Sandon land, the 1900 City hall and a steam train, Hal also owns the power station. In 2001, he rescued 13 Brills from the scrapyard, and used his long-haul trucking company to bring them up to Sandon for restoration. The goal, he says, is to put them back into service, probably in Vancouver since that’s the only city in Canada left that still runs electric buses.

Brill trolley bus 2289
Hal Wright, Eve Lazarus and Brill 2289. Hal rescued the Brills from a scrapyard in 2001 and brought them to Sandon for restoration. The Brills operated in Vancouver until 1984 when they were retired prior to Expo. July 2022
During his 40-year career as a Vancouver bus driver, my friend Angus McIntyre drove many of these buses – including 2289 shown here and in the previous photo. Angus McIntyre photo, taken at the end of the Nanaimo route at Slocan and Kingsway in 1983
Japanese Internment:

Over the years, Sandon has been besieged by avalanches, floods and fires. In 1900, a fire destroyed most of the business section of the town. Silver prices tanked and mines folded after WW1. Then when things looked bleakest and population declined to around 100 in 1942, Sandon became an internment camp for close to 1,000 Japanese/Canadians. They fixed up abandoned buildings and revived the town. After they left in 1945 the population dropped to 30. Ten years later a flood finished off the lower part of Sandon. Today the population is five.

Sandon powerhouse
The 1916 Silversmith powerhouse provided electricity for the mine. It’s fully functioning and Hal sells power to BC Hydro. Eve Lazarus photo
Sandon Silversmith powerhouse
Powered by a 1905 Westinghouse generator. Eve Lazarus photo

Sandon has a museum, a gift shop and a food truck also owned by Hal, which sees more than 60,000 visitors every year. We saw more tourists in Sandon then we did wandering around many other fully functioning small towns. And, a mine is once again operating in the area. Apparently galena (made up of 20% silver, 60% lead and 20% zinc) is making a come back, and so it seems is Sandon.

Arrow Lake ferry
Our travels that day took us from Vernon, across Arrow Lake by a delightful free ferry, through little towns such as Nakusp and New Denver and included a detour to Sandon and onto Nelson via Kaslo – about 400 kms

© All rights reserved. Unless otherwise indicated, all blog content copyright Eve Lazarus.