RailNews

CPKC 2816 Film Makes Online Debut

Pulse of the Continent, a new documentary about CPKC’s historic “Final Spike Steam Tour,” made its online debut this week. Photo by Justin Franz. 

CPKC 2816 Film Makes Online Debut

Pulse of the Continent, a new documentary about CPKC’s historic “Final Spike Steam Tour,” made its online debut this week to mark the third anniversary of the Canadian Pacific-Kansas City Souther merger. The star of the film is Canadian Pacific H1b 4-6-4 2816 and her crew, which made an impressive 76-day, nearly 10,000-mile journey from Calgary to Mexico City and return in 2024. 

CPKC restored the locomotive to service to celebrate the one-year anniversary of CP and Kansas City Southern. The 2024 trip was historic for several reasons: 2816 became the first steam locomotive to visit Canada, the United States, and Mexico; it was the first main line steam locomotive to run in Mexico since the 1960s; and at 10,000 miles, the tour will likely be remembered as the longest steam excursion featuring a single locomotive. 

Since the locomotive returned to Calgary, it has been stored at CPKC headquarters, and the railroad has been tight-lipped about its future. However, sources close to the railroad say the locomotive is well cared for, and its appearance at a film festival in Calgary last fall under steam suggests that CPKC isn’t finished with the 95-year-old locomotive just yet.

Locomotive 2816 was built by the Montreal Locomotive Works in 1930. The locomotive ran in regular service until 1960, when it was retired and eventually sold to F. Nelson Blount, the founder of Steamtown. In the 1990s, it was reacquired by CP and restored to service in 2001. The locomotive ran for about ten years before being placed in storage in 2012.

—Justin Franz 

This article was posted on: April 15, 2026