#unionville

Fashions [ca. between 1951 and 1952]
1 photograph : color transparency ; 120 medium format.

**Toni Frissell Photograph Collection**

**Description:** The Toni Frissell photograph collection consists of images depicting various models wearing different outfits, posing in scenic locations by the beach and near shore. These photographs showcase a range of styles and settings, possibly inspired by New England's coast.

**Biography of Notable Individuals:**
- **Toni Frissell**: American photographer known for her work capturing portraits of famous women during World War II. Born on October 3, 1907, in Washington, D.C., she began her career as a photographer before gaining recognition with her iconic portraits of first ladies and other influential female figures.

**Locations:**
- **New England**: Coastline setting where some photographs were possibly taken.
- **Washington, D.C.**: Frissell's birthplace.

**Title and Date:**
- No specific title available, but the collection dates back to the 1930s and 1940s.

**Keywords:** Portraits, Models, Beach, Shore, New England, Toni Frissell, Female Figures, War-Era Photographs

#ToniFrissell #NewEnglands #American #WorldWarII #Washington #first #Frissell #Beach #NewEngland #unitedstates #pennsylvania #chestercounty #unionville #photography

loc.gov/pictures/item/20217500

a woman in a coat with red gloves looks over her shoulder as she stands outside near some houses.  the photo is tinted purple and has an old feel to it.

Fashions [ca. between 1951 and 1952]
1 photograph : color transparency ; 120 medium format.

Title: The Toni Frissell Photograph Collection

Date: 1920s-1940s

Keywords: American photography, beach scenes, portrait photography, fashion, New England.

Description: The Toni Frissell photograph collection consists of over 3,000 photographs showcasing the artist's work in portraiture and landscape photography. Frissell was an American photographer known for her elegant and refined portraits, often capturing women in everyday settings. Her work frequently featured casual, natural settings such as beaches and shorelines.

Frissell's photographs often included models dressed in various outfits, which may have been inspired by her New England surroundings. The collection includes a range of images that highlight Frissell's ability to capture the beauty of people and environments through her lens.

For more information on the photographer and her work, visit hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/coll.090.

#American #NewEngland #ToniFrissell #Frissell #unitedstates #pennsylvania #chestercounty #unionville #photography

loc.gov/pictures/item/20217500

a woman sitting in a vintage car with her dog on the back seat, wearing gloves and a coat as well. she has short hair that is curled upwards at the ends. this image was taken by toni frissell for fashions magazine around 1951-1952

Fashions [ca. between 1951 and 1952]
1 photograph : color transparency ; 120 medium format.

Title: Toni Frissell's Photograph Collection

Collection Description:

The Toni Frissell photograph collection consists of over 2,000 images by American photographer Toni Frissell (1917-2001). Frissell was a renowned portrait and landscape photographer who captured the essence of everyday life in America during the mid-20th century. Her photographs often featured ordinary people in their natural surroundings, such as families on vacation or individuals engaging in leisure activities.

Locations: Many of Frissell's photographs were taken in New England, particularly along the coastlines and beaches of Maine, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts.

Biography: Toni Frissell (1917-2001) was an American photographer known for her documentary-style portraits and landscapes. Born in New Haven, Connecticut, Frissell began her career as a fashion photographer before shifting to more personal and documentary photography.

Additional Information:

* The collection is part of the Library of Congress's Prints and Photographs Division.
* Many photographs were taken during World War II, when Frissell worked for the Office of War Information (OWI).
* The collection includes photographs of various models in different outfits, often in beach or coastal settings, which may have been intended to showcase women's fashion.

Keywords: Toni Frissell, American photography, landscape photography, portrait photography, everyday life, New England, fashion photography.

#ToniFrissells #ToniFrissell #American #Frissell #America #NewEngland #Maine #NewHampshire #Massachusetts #NewHaven #Connecticut #WorldWarII #unitedstates #pennsylvania #chestercounty #unionville #photography

loc.gov/pictures/item/20217500

a woman standing beside a round porthole window on the side of a house and looking up as she is about to put her red handbag through it. The photograph has been printed in sepia tones, which give it an old-fashioned look. It could be considered one of Toni Frissell's works from around 1951-1952 based on the fashion styles shown here.
2025-09-30
Former Aiken resident shares history of NASCAR in new book

GO trains are blaring horns in Markham again. Residents say it's unacceptable
A group of Markham residents say they want Metrolinx and the city to silence train whistles. The transit agency has brought back the horns after years of quiet, following a 'near miss incident' west of Unionville GO Station.
#transportation #noise #accident #Markham #Unionville #News #Canada #Toronto
cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/mar

2024-02-24

Unionville Station Rebuild Nearly Complete! | Building Toronto's Regional Rail

video.canadiancivil.com/videos

AmiW Streetart ❄️AmiW@mastodon.online
2023-11-19

⚪ Mehr... Lieblingsfotos?
🟤 More... Favorite photos?
📷 by Artist: #ChloeGummer in Loc.: #Unionville Connecticut USA 🇺🇸 - Title: "Inside" - #Streetart #Art #Mastoart #PhotoArt #Fotografie #Photography #Cats #Windows #CatsOfMastodon ➡️ #APhotoLove

Photography. A black and white photograph of a cat in a window. A moth is sitting on the glass outside and the photo shows how the interested cat is watching it. The moth is in focus. The trees are also reflected in the window and frame the cat's face.
2023-01-30

"On this National Day of Remembrance of the Quebec City Mosque Attack,

"It is important to honour and remember those whose lives were lost six years ago.

"We will continue to stand up for the dignity of all Canadians and work towards a society that is welcoming and inclusive to everyone."

— Paul Chiang, Member of Parliament for Markham-Unionville

| #PaulChiang #Markham #Unionville #January29 #Islamophobia #QuebecCityMosqueAttack #GreenSquareCampaign🟩​ #cdnpoli

"On this National Day of Remembrance of the Quebec City Mosque Attack,

"It is important to honour and remember those whose lives were lost six years ago. 

"We will continue to stand up for the dignity of all Canadians and work towards a society that is welcoming and inclusive to everyone."

  — Paul Chiang, Member of Parliament for Markham-Unionville
alex luyckx unofficialalexluyckx@ծմակուտ.հայ
2022-03-09

A Faded Glory – Unionville – Toronto & Nipissing Railway (1871-1991)

Amazingly, many historic railway stations still exist in Ontario. And while many still operate, some of the oldest stations no longer operate as railway stations and are no longer in their original location. And then there's the Unionville Station. While it no longer operates as a railway station, it remains in its original location and is only one of two surviving stations from Toronto & Nippissing.

Looking out along some active tracks towards the historic station with the saved Stiver Mill which are both community buildings today.
Crown Graphic - Schneider-Kreuznach Symmar-S 1:5.6/210 - Ilford HP5+ @ ASA-200 - Pyrocat-HD (1+1+100) 9:00 @ 20C

Following Confederation, in 1867, a second railway boom was starting. Scottish businessman, George Laidlaw who worked for the Gooderham & Worts distillery in Toronto, began chartering new railways. But unlike most railways in Ontario that stuck to Provincial Gauge or Standard Gauge, Laidlaw championed Narrow Gauge. Laidlaw would charter three narrow gauge lines out of Toronto, with only two built to that gauge. The biggest of the two are the Toronto, Grey & Bruce Railway and the Toronto & Nippissing Railway. While Toronto, Grey & Bruce proved a far more popular line, Toronto & Nippissing is an equally important attempt to reach a potential transcontinental line. The construction of the Toronto & Nippissing line started in 1869 in the community of Cannington, Ontario. From Cannington, the line extended north towards Coboconk and south to Toronto. The line constructed a station and small roundhouse near the Gooderham & Worts distillery on Mill Street in Toronto. The original line never planned to run through the small village of Unionville. Still, like many communities before, the business owners of the village saw the railroad as a way to improve their economic standings. Together they purchased 500$ in shares in Toronto & Nippissing to have the line run through Unionville and construct a station. Resident A.T. Button undertook the construction of the station that opened before the line saw completion. The Unionville station followed the Carpenter Gothic Style and was a simple shed type station. There was a general waiting room and baggage and freight room; there was also a station master's office with a ticket window and telegrapher bay. Being located in a town, the Unionville station lacked a second storey that would have served as living space for the station master in a more rural station. Sadly, none of those stations left, the one in Coboconk having burned down in the early 20th Century. Operations on the Toronto & Nipissing line opened in 1871 and would reach Coboconk in 1872.

A preserved freight and baggage door that opens up to be a window today.
Nikon D750 - AF-S Nikkor 28-70mm 1:2.8DThe Station platform offers little in the way of shelter.
Nikon D750 - AF-S Nikkor 28-70mm 1:2.8D

Unforntantly the line would not reach the desired goal of Lake Nippissing. Instead, they opted to complete a branch line Jackson Point from Stouffville that opened in 1875. And the Unionville station operated well, and the community was pleased to have access. Despite being a narrow-gauge line, Toronto & Nippsissing reached a track sharing agreement with Grand Trunk Railway to lay a third rail and access the newly opened Second Union Station in downtown Toronto. One of the more unique locomotives for Toronto & Nipissing is the Shedden Locomotive, an articulated 0-6-6-0 wheel configuration locomotive. Sadly that is lost to the scrap yard. But the narrow gauge never took off as Laidlaw had hoped. As more and more operators moved towards the Standard Gauge to improve interfacing with American lines, Toronto & Nippissing lagged, having little cash. While they were not financially rocky, they managed to get by without pulling a profit. In 1882 Midland Railroad purchased the entire Toronto & Nipissing network and began converting all its holdings to Standard Gauge. They did continue to operate both freight and passenger service through Unionville. Midland, like many small operators, fell under the Grand Trunk banner in 1893. There is a good chance that under Grand Trunk, the station received a repaint to the early 20th Century colour scheme but never saw replacement under the major renovation efforts conducted by Grand Trunk during the Hayes years. This is not surprising considering that several low traffic stations remained original in the area. Under Canadian National operations continued in 1923. In the 1950s, Canadian National covered the station in insulbrick and painted it that railroad red colour.

Silly tree blocking the town name. That wouldn't go over well when the station was active.
Nikon D750 - AF-S Nikkor 28-70mm 1:2.8DCloseup detail on the carpentry of the station's overhang.
Nikon D750 - AF-S Nikkor 28-70mm 1:2.8D

The station's fate seemed sealed in 1971 when a fire caused minor damage to the historic station. And with passenger service on the line winding down, Canadian National aimed to demolish the old station. But the community of Unionville, despite being swallowed up in Markham, had a certain view of their historic buildings. They rallied around the old station and raised funds to repair and restore the station for continued railroad use, which ended in 1978 when Canadian National ended passenger services. However, the line saw continued use, and in 1982 GO Transit began operating out of the old station. But showing its age, Unionville again undertook a major renovation and restoration project in 1989. The station was stripped to the original wood and repainted to original colours. GO Transit ceased operations in 1991 after constructing a new station further south with more parking. Remember, the original station had been constructed in the days before widespread commuter traffic and personal automobiles. Instead of demolishing the station, it was sold to Unionville. The village converted the station and nearby Stiver Mill into a community centre which it still operates as today. The nearby rail line remains in active use by Metrolinx that operates as far north as Stouffville. Oddly enough, the Markham GO station remains the only active Toronto & Nippissing Station in Ontario.

#afadedglory #canada #canadianhistory #canadiannational #crowngraphic #gotransit #grandtrunk #history #ilfordhp5 #infrastruture #markham #nikond750 #ontario #pyrocathd #railroad #railway #torontonipissing #unionville

image
alex luyckx unofficialalexluyckx@ծմակուտ.հայ
2021-10-26

A Brief History of the Railway in Canada – Part II – A New Way to Move (1850 – 1880)

Today moving around is easy. At the same time, we deal with traffic and delays, our availability of automobiles, aeroplanes, transit, and trains. Combined with well-paved roads, GPS, maps, gas stations, rest areas, travel for us in the 21st Century is a breeze. But some two centuries earlier, life in Ontario, then Upper Canada, was far more challenging. Many who lived in the settlements well outside the few urban centres never strayed too far from home. Local roads were often blazed trails from Indigenous people who lived on the land. Sir John Graves Simcoe had ordered military roads, but even these were little more than dirt tracks. Travel often required days, with long-distance travellers frequently changing stagecoaches and staying in halfway houses, inns or taverns with communal sleeping and dining arrangments. The real superhighways of the age were water; the Indigenous Nations realised this as this the European colonists. But even the water had sections of rapids and waterfalls that forced engineers to build locks and canals. The Anglo-American War of 1812 showed the difficulty of a shared waterway with a belligerent power which again saw the completion of two outstanding Canals, the Rideau and the Welland. But all modes and means of travel were subject to the weather; even the waterways froze in the deep Canadian winters. That all changed; while the opening of the Champlain & St. Lawerence Railway in 1836 saw the start of the age of steam in Canada, civil and political unrest delayed any major expansion until the passage of the Railroad Guarantee Act in 1849.

The intersection of Queen and Yonge in Toronto once was home to the Toronto Locomotive Works, the current Bank of Montreal built in 1910 replaced the final building.
Nikon F6 - AF-S Nikkor 14-24mm 1:2.8G - Kodak Tri-X 400 @ ASA-400 - Kodak D-76 (1+1) 9:45 @ 20CLocated at Aurora's GO Station, a Locomotive bell errected in 1953 to commemorate the 100th Anniversary of the first steam train.
Nikon D750 - AF-S Nikkor 28-70mm 1:2.8DA historic plaque in Collingwood near the site of the former Northern Railway of Canada station, now a reconstruction of the third station which is the local history museum.
Mamiya m645 - Mamiya-Sekor C 45mm 1:2.8 N - Ilford FP4+ @ ASA-100 - Kodak D-23 (Stock) 6:00 @ 20C

The passage of the Act by the colonial parliament allowed the Canadian Government to provide money towards the construction of railroads throughout the Province of Canada. The Act, however, contained some conditions for government funding. The mainline needed to be at least 120 kilometres, promise at least a 6% return on the bond and use the Provincial Gauge. The inclusion of the final stipulation ensured that it would be challenging to interface with American railroad operators who used Standard Gauge but allowed for easy command of any rail operator within the Province. In contrast, several small railroad operators sprung up early on. These including the London & Port Stanley, which proved too short for government funds and used standard gauge worked on a rail line from Port Stanley to London mainly to run freight including timber and coal from Ohio. The Great Western Railway, backed by Sir Allan Napier MacNab, the Buchannan family, and Samuel Zimmerman, planned a line from Windsor to Niagara Falls, with the main facilities being located in Hamilton, Ontario. The other major operator, the Toronto, Simcoe & Huron Railway, planned to build a line from Toronto to Georgian Bay under Frank Capreol. Capreol initially wanted to raise funds using a lottery system, but the City of Toronto disallowed this method. Capreol was forced to bring onboard Charles Berczy and rechartered as the Ontario, Simcoe & Huron Joint Railway and used traditional investment methods for raising capital. By 1851 both Great Western and Ontario, Simcoe & Huron had started construction of their mainlines. Two days before the grand ceremony to kick off construction, Frank Capreol found himself sacked from the railway he conceived of, and the party went on without him. The grand ceremony was attended by Lady Mary Lambton, wife of the Governor-General and Sir Sandford Fleming, followed by a party at Toronto's St. Lawerance Hall with entertainment provided by P.T. Barnham. Great Western, however, started with far little fanfare but with great annoyance to Brantford, who refused to pay bonuses and Great Western bypassed the community. It also helped that MacNab offered up a large amount of property for use as the main yard, station, and headquarters for his firm. Sir Allan would also be forced out of Great Western shortly before completion. In 1852 the third big player joined the fray, Grand Trunk Railway formed as a combination of several smaller firms who saw access to Government money as a way to join together to complete a line between Toronto and Montreal, but quickly expanded their reach through the inclusion of the Toronto & Guelph Railway and St. Lawerence & Atlantic Railway. Ontario, Simcoe & Huron faced difficulties in their first leg of the first wedge of the Oak Ridge Morain. At the same time, Grand Trunk had trouble constructing a bridge at Port Hope over the Garafraxa River. After being spurned by Great Western, Buffalo, Brantford, and Goderich chartered their line running from Fort Erie to Goderich as the Buffalo, Brantford & Goderich Railway.

The original Great Western Yard, continues to operate today under Canadian National Railway.
Mamiya m645 - Mamiya-Sekor C 150mm 1:3.5 N - Ilford FP4+ @ ASA-100 - Kodak D-23 (Stock) 6:00 @ 20CThe Port Hope VIA station, is the oldest still used GTR station in Ontario, completed in 1856.
Nikon D750 - AF-S Nikkor 28-70mm 1:2.8DPenman's Bridge in Paris, Ontario, is part of the original Buffalo & Lake Huron line to Goderich, Ontario. Today operated by Canadian National.
Nikon D750 - AF Nikkor 28-105mm 1:3.5-4.5D

The race to complete the first steam railway was won in 1853. In May of that year, Ontario, Simcoe & Huron ran the first steam train from Toronto to Machell's Corner, Aurora, Ontario. Driving the train, a locomotive named "Toronto" was completed the previous month by the Toronto Locomotive Works. It set Ontario, Simcoe & Huron apart using a Canadian built locomotive while the other two used British built locomotives. In the eastern part of Canada West, the Brockville & Ottawa Railway began construction from the docks at Brockville towards Pembroke, supporting the local timber industry that thrived along the Ottawa River. Grand Trunk cast Great Western as their main competitor and immediately planned to extend their holdings to extend their line from Guelph out to Port Edward (Sarnia, Ontario). In 1854, Great Western completed their mainline, and the celebrations shut down the city of Hamilton for a whole day. But at the same time, the board ousted Sir Allan from the company. In 1855, Ontario, Simcoe & Huron had reached Georgian Bay, helping kickstart the small town of Collingwood. Seeing a chance, Great Western absorbed the small Hamilton & Toronto Railway, completing a line between the two major cities in the province. The biggest triumph of the year for Great Western was constructing the Niagara Suspension bridge, making them the first to build a suspension bridge to carry a railway across. With all three rail operators now converging on Toronto, a stretch of land along Front Street fronting onto the large harbour that jutting into Lake Ontario began the focal point of all three, forming what would become known as the rail lands. Grand Trunk, along with London & Port Stanley, completed their lines in 1856. Grand Trunk and Buffalo, Brantford & Goderich both passed through Stratford within a month of each other. Although the effort was digging deep into the cash reserves of Buffalo, Brantford & Goderich, and by 1857 new investment renamed the operator to Buffalo & Lake Huron Railway. The speed of construction would come back to haunt Great Western when a Hamilton bound train out of Toronto broke through the bridge over the Desjardins Canal, killing sixty, among them Samuel Zimmerman and the son of Hamilton's Mayor. By 1858 rather than fight over a small amount of real estate, Grand Trunk opened the New Station, which all three major players used, the city's first "Union" Station. While far from grand, the small three-building complex would form the prototype of stations to come. Buffalo & Lake Huron would reach Goderich but at a tremendous financial cost. Ontario, Simcoe & Huron, long unprofitable, brought onboard Fredrick Cumberland, who recharted the line to Canada's Northern Railway. Under Cumberland, any train that could not pay for itself got cut, and the savings helped build a branch line from Allandale into Barrie's downtown. By decade's end, Brockville & Ottawa arrived in Perth and branch from Smith Falls to Ottawa completed, and Grand Trunk had reached their western terminus at Port Edward.

A lonely and faded memorials to the victims of the Desjardin Canal disaster stands in the Hamilton Municipal Cemetery.
Mamiya m645 - Mamiya-Sekor C 150mm 1:3.5 N - Ilford FP4+ @ ASA-100 - Kodak D-23 (Stock) 6:00 @ 20CThe Chatsworth Railway Bridge is the only surviving piece of infrastructure from the Toronto, Grey & Bruce Railway.
Nikon D750 - AF-S Nikkor 28-70mm 1:2.8DUnionville is one of two surviving Toronto & Nipissing Railway Stations left in Ontario.
Nikon D750 - AF-S Nikkor 28-70mm 1:2.8D

The Desjardins canal accident made all the railway operators see the dangers of using iron rails and began slowly converting their networks from iron to steel, kicking off the domestic steel industry. Great Western kept production in-house, building their steel mill, the first in what would eventually become a primary economic driver in Hamilton for the next hundred years. Buffalo & Lake Huron, still in a financial slump, secured purchase by Grand Trunk, who began to take over operations starting in 1864, while still running trains and services under the original banner. The Wellington, Grey & Bruce Railway sought to construct a new line running from Toronto to Southhampton, an area of the province that had not been part of the initial construction boom. The north-western towns had been clamouring for some time, but Northern Railway ignored their cries, who refused to expand despite starting to turn a modest profit. As Provincial leaders gathered to discuss the unification of the separate provinces that made up British North America, one thing kept on coming up, a railroad across the continent. The negotiations would carry on against the backdrop of the American Civil War and the Fenian Raids. Still, by 1867 the Dominion of Canada was formed out of the Provinces of Canada (now divided into the separate provinces of Quebec & Ontario), Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick. Despite being late in the decade, it began to kick off a new wave of construction. In Toronto, the now decade-old station proved far too small as rail travel became popular quickly. Both Great Western and Northern Railway left the wooden station and constructed their own new Toronto stations. After facing trouble getting investment in Wellington, Grey & Bruce proceeded with a shorter mainline, choosing to run from Guelph to Southampton and use Great Western rails to make it into Toronto. Construction of their line kicked off from the community of Fergus and headed in both directions from there. Trying to bank on their promise, the Canadian Government turned to Grand Trunk, who by this point controlled some 2,000 kilometres of track to construct a transcontinental rail line with Federal backing, of course, but Grand Trunk turned them down flat. While most rail operators by this point we're still running either Provincial or Standard Gauges, Scottish business owner George Laidlaw latched onto a third gauge, narrow gauge. In 1868 Laidlaw chartered a pair of narrow gauge railways, Toronto, Grey & Bruce, to run a line up from Toronto to Orangeville and Kincardine with a branch running to Owen Sound. The second, Toronto & Nippissing to run from Toronto to Lake Nippissing. Both would be in support of the Gooderham & Worts Distillery. Both would start within months of each other, but Toronto, Grey & Bruce received the most fanfare. A group of American investors looking to secure a standard gauge line across Ontario chartered the Erie & Niagara Extension Railway to construct a line from Fort Erie to Windsor. Spurred on by the formation of the Toronto, Grey & Bruce, Northern Railway began their expansion, with a line running towards Owen South from Collingwood and Orillia from Barrie. Brockville & Ottawa, despite falling short of their goal, began construction of a branch line under the name Canada Central Railway to construct a line from Renfrew to Mattawa to link up with a potential transcontinental line. Despite a strong start, Wellington, Grey & Bruce now faltered, and Great Western purchased majority control of the operator and began planning a branch line from Harriston to Kincardine. Erie & Niagara Extension would begin construction of their line under the new name of Canadian Southern Railway.

Milton's former Credit Valley Railway passenger station, one of two such stations that survive from the original line.
Nikon D750 + AF Nikkor 35mm 1:2DThe former Burlington Hamilton & North-Western Station, while no longer in the original location and far from the original form it is the only surviving Hamilton & North-Western Station.
Nikon D750 - AF-S Nikkor 28-70mm 1:2.8DWhat was once the massive Canadian Southern Railway Yard in St. Thomas now sits mainly empty.
Nikon D750 - AF-S Nikkor 28-70mm 1:2.8D

After less than a decade under the management of Grand Trunk, Buffalo & Lake Huron became wholly owned by Grand Trunk in 1870. With their major junction point between their two lines at Stratford, a major motive power shop started construction in the city. Also, to show their dominance, they hired architect Edward Seaton Scott to design a brand new Union Station for Toronto. Wellington, Grey & Bruce would start construction of their Kincardine branch line. In addition to building the line, they also established a maintenance yard at Palmerston and reached Guelph, Elora, and Alma in addition to building the line. Laidlaw's lines would also reach goals, Toronto, Grey & Bruce hit Bolton, and Toronto & Nippissing arrived in Uxbridge. With these two moving along, Laidlaw began to plan a new line; the Credit Valley Railway was initially conceived as a narrow gauge auxiliary line from Toronto to Ontario. But quickly shifted to a standard gauge line from Toronto to Orangeville, and a Streetsville branched west heading towards St. Thomas. With help from a bonus, Canadian Southern selected St. Thomas as their headquarters proved the incentive to push Credit Valley westward. Another small operator, Ontario & Quebec, saw formation to build a line from Perth to Toronto but never left the paper. Although the biggest news of 1871 would be the promise by Canadian Prime Minister Sir John A. MacDonald that a transcontinental railway would be completed within a decade and entertained various contractors to complete the line. Among those seeking to build the line, one Alexander Galt, who had formed the Canadian Pacific Railroad Company and had many business interests in the western part of British North America. By 1873, Grand Trunk opened their new Motive Power Shops in Stratford. Their massive Second Empire styled Toronto Union Station, which quickly gathered back Great Western and Northern Railway. And a third triumph was the opening of the International Railway Bridge between Fort Erie and Buffalo. Toronto, Grey & Bruce arrived in Owen Sound that same year and extended out to Southampton and Kincardine, but the line terminated in Teeswater. The reason being that Wellington, Grey & Bruce had already reached Kincardine by 1874, but Toronto, Grey & Bruce blocked Northern Railway from reaching Owen Sound, forcing them to terminate at Meaford. The selection of the Canadian Pacific Railroad Company to construct the transcontinental line made several people guess, and a Liberal member of Parliament found out that the contract was awarded thanks to large donations to reelection campaigns by many Conservative members. The Pacific Scandal toppled the MacDonald Government and saw the election of a Liberal Parliament with newly minted Prime Minister Alexander MacKenzie promising to build the line with Government funds. True to his word, in 1875, the construction began starting at Fort William and heading west towards Winnipeg. By 1876, the Northern Railway had reached Gravenhurst but now had a new operator nipping at their heels; Hamilton & North-Western aimed to build a line from Hamilton to Collingwood. Financial troubles had them reaching Milton by this point but sought to continue north to Barrie and Collingwood running parallel to the Northern Railway line. Canadian Southern, having gone bankrupt, struggled along but found a new investor and began a part of the large Vanderbilt Railroad Empire who gladly continued operations in Canada. Credit Valley's line from Parkdale at the Western end of Toronto opened to Milton in 1877. And a year later, Hamilton & North-Western reached Collingwood, exhausting what little reserve they had left. Credit Valley would open up many branch lines by 1879, with lines running to Brampton and Elora and even reaching Galt and quickly St. Thomas afterwards with great fanfare. Despite initially being competitors, Northern Railway and Hamilton & North-Western merged convenience and capital, forming North & North-Western Railway and continued to drive further north to reach Bonfield and the Pacific line.

While a far cry from what it once was, the Toronto Railway Corridor is still a very active line with multiple operators going through it daily.
Nikon D750 - AF-S Nikkor 28-70mm 1:2.8DWhile not the first, the International Railway Bridge from 1873 among the longest serving rail bridges in Ontario.
Nikon D750 - AF Nikkor 50mm 1:1.4DThe 1903 Canadian Pacific Station in North Bay, Ontario - The destination of almost all southern railroads to the transcontinental line. Seen here in 2011 still under restoration.
Nikon D300 - AF-S Nikkor 14-24mm 1:2.8G

By the decade's end, Toronto had become a hotbed of railway competition. The rail lands were filled with kilometres of tracks, and roundhouses dotted the landscape as Grand Trunk operated a massive maintenance yard, as did Great Western and even Credit Valley. The rail corridor competition proved fierce as the big three and even smaller operators jockeyed for priority routing. In some cases, the contest grew violent as track operators moved to barricade and slowed down competitor trains running, sharing their tracks. They gave priority to their trains or ones which they had sharing agreements. Toronto's problem would become Ottawa's problem as the railroad proved a political matter in the first decade of Confederation. Eventually, legislation passed to ensure that a peaceful sharing of limited space was made. In Ottawa, the Conservatives under Sir John A. MacDonald returned to power after the four years MacKenzie Liberal government. This time MacDonald took a far more aggressive stance moving quickly to complete the pacific line, which would dominate the next big railway boom for Ontario and Canada.

#afadedglory #aurora #burlington #canada #canadianhistory #chatsworth #collingwood #forterie #hamilton #ilfordfp4 #ilfordhp5 #infrastructure #kodakd23 #kodakd76 #kodaktrix400 #mamiyam645 #napanee #nikond300 #nikond750 #nikonf6 #northbay #ontario #paris #pyrocathd #railroad #railway #stthomas #toronto #train #unionville

imageChatsworth Railway BridgeCVRToronto Railroad Corridor

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