Penticton British Columbia - As part of his 100th birthday celebration, Bill Chapman got the chance
to travel about 75 years back in time, into the depths of BC history.
Chapman is a Penticton resident who hit the century mark on Saturday.
Back on 1 Jan 1947 he was working as a brakeman on CP steam locomotive number 3512.
Chapman was part of a crew that was shipping the train across a section of Slocan Lake in the BC Interior, about 700
kilometres east of Vancouver.
In an unexpected turn of events, the locomotive, its tender and its caboose tipped off a barge attached to the boat
and plunged to the bottom of the lake, which, in its deepest spots, is measured at 300 metres.
The cable that linked the barge to the boat had to be cut to keep the boat from being dragged under, and the train
assembly was never found.
A team of filmmakers recently completed a documentary about the incident, and a search to find the sunken
3512.
It's called "The Last Stop: Canada's Lost Locomotive".
Chapman appears in the film, and with family members surrounding him, he was treated to a home viewing of it one day
last week.
The special screening was courtesy of producer Colten Wilke and other members of his team, and it left Chapman, the
lone surviving member of the train crew, marvelling at the big-screen telling of the CP 3512 story.
"I don't know how to express it, but it's quite exciting," Chapman said in an interview with
CBC.
"You've done a very nice job, a very good job. It's very interesting. It brings back memories," he said to
Wilke.
A Key Member of the Expedition
Aside from being a filmmaker, Wilke is a professional diver, and a commercial fisherman.
According to information released about "The Last Stop", the legend of the lost locomotive had long
fascinated him, so he put together an expedition to find it.
The filmed venture begins with expedition members searching limited local records and doing a logistical survey of
Slocan Lake.
Things kick into high gear when Wilke discovers there is a surviving crew member, Chapman, who joins the team and
provides first-hand accounts that point to a general search area.
It Gives Me Tingles
"The Last Stop" premiered at Cinefest Sudbury in September, and Wilke told CBC a gasp went through the
sold-out theatre when Chapman appeared on screen.
"They almost took the air out of the room. They just weren't expecting it," Wilke said.
The special viewing at Chapman's home marked the first time Chapman himself had seen the finished product.
Daughters Sue Chapman and Elaine Kosma, son Tom Chapman, and other family members were also seeing the film for the
first time.
"It gives me tingles to think that was my dad as a young man, and also how close it all came to me not being
here. It makes us think about him as a young man and the work that he did in that era, and the dangers. Dad goes to
work and we think not too much of it, and this really brings it home," Sue Chapman said after watching
"The Last Stop".
For Bill Chapman, watching the film was a reminder of that fateful moment all those years ago, and just how different
things used to be for railroad workers.
"It was quite an experience, the whole thing. A lot of people don't realize what was going on in those
days," he said.
Wilke said the film has "gotten a lot of interest" and that distribution opportunities "are in the
works."
Author unknown.
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