In August 1883, the northward advance of the CP rail head from
Yale passed through Keefers A few miles north of Keefers during construction, a contractor's locomotive struck a rockslide, derailed, fell, and slid down toward the river, but neither the crew were injured nor the locomotive damaged. After CP construction ended, the
Skuzzy was berthed at Keefers until its machinery was removed in 1884. In 1885, about north, a locomotive derailed at the edge of a steep drop. In 1888, a train struck a nightwatchman, crushing his hands and splintering his forearm. In 1892, a passing train struck a plank on the station platform, which inflicted a fatal blow upon a carpenter at work. During the erection of a large stone arch a few miles to the south in 1895, the mast of a derrick broke and fell, fatally injuring a member of the masonry crew. In 1903, the engineer of an eastbound passenger train braked on sighting a massive washout ahead. The crew jumped to safety at the last moment before the locomotive and tender rolled down an embankment to the river edge. In 1907, a freight train struck a boulder and derailed, but the crew escaped serious injury. On watching a landslide destroy the track in 1911, a watchman mounted his
speeder, rushed toward an oncoming passenger train, signalled it to halt, threw his speeder from the track, and saved the passing locomotive from reaching the slide area. In 1912, during the construction of the
Canadian Northern Railway (CNoR) on the east side of the river, a massive landslide destroyed a tunnel. In November 1913, the eastward advance of the CNoR rail head almost reached the shore opposite Keefers. Inkitsaph was the station at that location. In 1916, passengers desperate for food on a snowbound CNoR train, walked across the frozen river to the small Keefer general store. While a westbound freight train was winding around the high rocky cliffs near Keefers in 1929, a bullet crashed through the caboose window. During the
1939 royal tour of Canada, the westbound royal train stayed overnight at Keefers. The lack of any road access would have enhanced security, and the trackside garden was picturesque. In 1953, a truck driver died when a locomotive struck his truck. In 1956, when a
freighthopper fell, the freight car wheels severed his head, legs, and arms. Built in 1884, the standard-design (Bohi's Type 5) single-storey station building with
gable roof and
dormers was destroyed in 1964. The passing track is in length. In 2007, a
Canadian National Railway (CN) locomotive derailed on striking a landslide near Inkitsaph. ==General community==