Founding and Initial Service , November 2, 1909.The Montreal and Southern Counties Railway Company was established through an act of
Canadian Parliament on June 29, 1897, with a mandate to "lay out, construct and operate, by electricity or any other mechanical power except steam, a railway [...] from a point in or near the northern limit of the
county of Chambly [...] to a point in or near the city of Sherbrooke." In 1905, a bus company running from Montreal to St. Lambert was failing. After amending the company charter, M&SC "was empowered to take [over the bus company] and replace it with an electric railway." It took years to fight opposition to the laying of tracks from the
Montreal Street Railway and to negotiate access to the downstream shoulder of the
Victoria Jubilee Bridge with the
Grand Trunk Railway (GTR). GTR purchased a controlling interest in the company in exchange for a "generous infusion of money to get construction." In spring 1909, M&SC laid tracks along Riverside, Mill, Common, Grey Nun and Youville Streets in Montreal. By end of October, tracks were laid all the way to St. Lambert City Hall. A celebration was held October 31, and official service began on November 1.
Expansion May 28, 1910, service was extended to
Montreal South (now a part of
Vieux-Longueuil at the foot of the
Jacques-Cartier Bridge) and to the city of Longueuil (which at that time covered the Old Longueuil Heritage Site). In 1911 a southern branch was built from the foot of the Victoria bridge, to link St. Lambert to the
Ranelagh Country Club and opened on Labour Day "to accommodate golfers." That branch was then continued east through
Greenfield Park and
Mackayville, junctioning with the GTR main line to St. Hyacinthe. Service to these communities started on November 1, 1912. In 1913 work began to electrify the
Central Vermont Railway line between the GTR junction northeast of Mackayville and Marieville. Interurban service expanded rapidly along this existing track: • June 6, 1913: Service opened all the way to
Richelieu. • September 28, 1913: Service expanded to
Marieville. • May 3, 1914: Opening of service on new track to
St. Césaire. The Company came to a ten-year agreement with town of
Granby to run trains on its Main Street (now
rue Principale). In 1915 and 1916 new tracks were laid from St. Césaire to Granby. Service to Abbotsford and Granby finally opened on April 30, 1916, with a workshop at the corner of Main and Pie-IX Boulevard. On June 1, 1926, there was a new spur opened between Marieville and
Ste. Angèle, after electrifying a rail line previously abandoned by Central Vermont. There were reports in 1915 of further expansion plans—from Longueuil to Boucherville; from Richelieu to Sorel; and from the Country Club to
La Prairie. None of these materialized. Neither was service ever extended from Granby to Sherbrooke as was its original mandate. The creation of the railway coincided with an increase in population in the areas serviced. According to the Census, communities along the railway in
Chambly County grew 36% between 1911 and 1921 censuses; Granby city and surrounding township grew by 35% in the same period, while communities in
Rouville County grew by 8%.
Decline The streetcar was moved out of the city centre of Granby in 1925. Residents and business in Granby complained about the company's operations down its main street. In winter, the streetcar snow plow would leave snow banks that impeded other traffic. A bypass to the CN station in Granby was built and the original Main Street track was discontinued. By 1928 annual ridership was up to 3.5 m passengers, and the company moved 152 metric tonnes of freight. During the
Great Depression, however, ridership fell by 1 million from its peak, and revenue for the company was halved. Service to Longueuil was cut in 1931. A first spur in Longueuil that led to the wharf used by the
Richelieu and Ontario Navigation Company was abandoned in 1915. In 1926, the St. Charles Street portion of the Longueuil line stopped being used. Ultimately service to Longueuil was cut altogether in April 1931, coinciding with the opening of the new
Harbour Bridge. At that same time, the Montreal Tramways Company began offering bus service to Longueuil over the new bridge. (Streetcar tracks were laid on the bridge but never used.) A loop for the streetcars to turn around was installed at the corner of Ste. Hélène and Lafayette Streets in Montreal South, near the foot of the bridge, and became the new end of the line. Throughout the 1930s the railway lost money, but its importance as a means of transportation during the
war years ensured that the company remained a going concern. After the war in 1946, ridership peaked at 5,732,000 annual passengers, primarily on its suburban service. From then on, as car ownership and the regional road network grew, ridership steadily declined. Some time before 1937, the spur leading to Ranelagh Golf Club is abandoned.
Financial Difficulties and End of Service is in the background. From 1916 to 1955, the company only ever covered its annual bond interest once. After-tax operating deficits between 1931 and 1955 totalled $5 million. The parent company, Grand Trunk, struggled from its own financial difficulties and was ultimately nationalized into
Canadian National Railway in 1923. Montreal & Southern Counties continued to operate under the CN Electric Railways division. On November 11, 1951, CN began cutting back its rail service in rural Southeastern Quebec. M&SC stopped electric operation beyond Marieville. CN replaced the service with three daily diesel-powered trains from Waterloo through Granby and Marieville, along the former railway's track until the junction to the St. Hyacinthe subdivision where it would go directly to Montreal's
Central Station. This change coincided with the end of passenger service between Waterloo and Montreal through Granby,
Farnham and
Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu. In 1952, Greenfield Park officials were told that service would soon end. Service over the
Victoria Bridge between St. Lambert and Montreal was stopped on June 15, 1955, as part of the
Saint Lawrence Seaway construction. The downstream shoulder was opened to car traffic. Finally, all operations of the Montreal and Southern Counties Railway ended on October 13, 1956. == Service ==