Shortly after the auction, winning bidders aggressively began to set up lumber camps in the Algonquin highland forest. Gilmour established a main depot at Tea Lake, several shanty camps along the company's limits and eventually a mill on
Canoe Lake in the village of Mowat. But a major obstacle quickly became apparent. Gilmour needed to get their logs to Trenton. Canoe and Tea Lakes did flow into the
Oxtongue River, but Oxtongue flowed in the wrong direction, southwesterly into the
Lake of Bays and ultimately
Georgian Bay. Gilmour needed water transport that flowed southeasterly into the Trent River system. Gilmour's solution was an ingenious piece of environmental engineering. Gilmour would drive his logs down the Oxtongue to Lake of Bays, but once there near the village of
Dorset, the logs would be lifted up from the Lake of Bays and carried overland to Raven Lake. From Raven Lake the logs could float southeasterly to the Trenton mill. The system Gilmour employed was the construction of a "tramway". At the base of Lake of Bays Gilmour would construct a jackladder, a conveyor mechanism that carried the logs up the hillside. At the top Gilmour then would construct a log slide. Filled with flowing water, the log slide would float the timber to a damn. Once at the damn a second jackladder would carry the logs to the mouth of Lake Raven. Jackladders and log slides were not new ideas, the lumber industry had been using them for decades. David Gilmour's feat of engineering genius was putting the existing technologies together. The tramway was expensive to construct and maintain. Although mechanized, the operation required over 100 men to operate the engines and monitor the transport the logs along the 1,800 metre journey. A major obstacle was the sheer distance of the journey. Navigating the Ontario waterways, it would take a log drive to travel from the
Algonquin highlands to Trenton. Routinely it could take logs two years to travel from the interior to the Trenton mill, but adding the challenges of the tramway could add an additional 2 years to that journey. A log felled at Canoe Lake in 1894 might not reach Trenton until 1898. Many of the logs rotted or sunk. Because the Algonquin Highland was so far north, the spring thaw occurred much later in the season, shortening the time available for summer log drives before waterways began to freeze up again in the fall. To make matters worse, much of the pine cut from the auctioned tracks was of poor quality. The tramway operated for two seasons before Gilmour abandoned the project in 1896. == The Mill at Canoe Lake ==