With the completion of the railway on April 7, 1914 and navigation blocked at the
Hansard bridge on the route to Tête Jaune Cache, the company ran the
BX and the
BC Express only from Soda Creek to Fort George. With the construction of the
Pacific Great Eastern Railway underway, the sternwheelers were needed to help deliver equipment and food supplies to the work camps. In 1915, the railway insolvent, work ceased. Despite having a monopoly on river traffic, the
BX finished the season with a $7,000 loss. The
BC Express was reserved for special trips. In 1916 and 1917, sternwheelers were not used on the upper Fraser River at all. Then, in 1918, after an appeal from the
Quesnel Board of Trade, the provincial government granted the BC Express Company a $10,000 per year subsidy to continue river navigation from Soda Creek to Fort George. The request was justified because Quesnel and the other communities along the river had been promised a railroad, but the construction on the PGE had slowed to a crawl and would in fact not to be completed to Prince George until 1952. In the meantime, the settlers and farmers needed a way to ship their produce to market and steamer fares were the most reasonable option. The
BX ran until August 30, 1919, when she was punctured by an infamous rock called the "Woodpecker" and sank with a 100 tons of bagged cement intended for construction of the Deep Creek Bridge. In the spring of 1920, the salvage work was completed and at a cost of $40,000 the
BX was raised and patched sufficiently to get her back to Fort George. The
BC Express pushed her back upstream through the Fort George Canyon and to the shipyard at Fort George. This would be the first time in the history of sternwheelers that one would push another upriver through a canyon. The
BC Express ran until November 1920 and then it joined the
BX on the riverbank at Fort George, where their hulls were abandoned., thus ending the days of the pioneer transportation company that Francis Barnard had established nearly 60 years earlier. ==See also==