This year, I'm trying to focus the blog on a little bit more rail history, and I wanted to research a few posts on the crossroads of Eastern Canada, Windsor, Ontario. Windsor is a town not unlike Winnipeg and Chicago. It has a long history of being a major junction for all kinds of railroads, much like Winnipeg and Chicago continue to be.
It might surprise some people to know that the following railways once called on Windsor: Great Western, Wabash (through trackage rights), Norfolk and Western, Norfolk Southern, Pere Marquette, Chesapeake and Ohio, Chessie System, CSX, Canada Southern, Michigan Central, New York Central, Penn Central and Conrail. Some of these railways are, of course, one in the same (CASO, MCRR, NYC) and some are successor roads (Wabash, N&W, NS as well as NYC, PC and Conrail). Still, that's a lot of rail activity for a city with an urban population of 300,000, including suburbs.
Today, the Canadian Pacific (CPKC for the less sentimental), Canadian National and Via Rail still serve the city, alongside one of Canada's oldest short lines, the Essex Terminal Railway.
There are many reasons for Windsor's heavy rail presence throughout its history, not the least of which is Windsor's longstanding status as a major automaker.
Walkerville should be a familiar name to rail passengers, as the city's station was commonly known in Windsor as Walkerville. To the unwary traveller unfamiliar with Windsor, the dual names might have been confusing, much like Fallowfield in Ottawa might be today.
The first railway to have a major passenger station in Walkerville was the Pere Marquette, a Michigan road that was eventually folded into the Chesapeake and Ohio. Its station in Walkerville, like the city's other stations, was impressive.
This shot above, courtesy of blog reader Kevin O'Neil, shows what the old passenger station looked like in the early 1980s. Kevin helped me sort through the many bits of Windsor rail history, which was helpful in putting this first Windsor post together.
In what might be a full-circle moment, the Via Rail Windsor station might once again host through trains, as Via Rail and Amtrak have discussed resuming cross-border passenger service between Chicago and Toronto. The initial plans called for a 2027 startup of service, pending the appropriate customs procedures are in place and track upgrades between the Michigan Central rail tunnel beneath the Detroit River and Walkerville Station. At one point, Via and Amtrak enjoyed popular demand for their service between Chicago and Toronto. I rode the Amtrak from Sarnia to Kitchener once, when I went to visit my sister at university. It was the only time I rode a Superliner.
It will be interesting to see if international passenger service could resume, as this service once enjoyed great success. Windsor Station still boats steady business. It is one of Via's busiest stations, given its multiple trains going to and from Toronto each day.
An honour to see my photo in your blog! The photo of a photo didn’t turn out too bad. ….. I wanted to correct one historical and often misunderstood fact, even among locals here. Walkerville’s absorption into Windsor was not legally an annexation, whereby one community applies to the province to takeover another. The residents of Walkerville certainly felt that way politically, as they lost their identity. But the combination was actually an amalgamation of 4 municipalities: Windsor, Walkerville, Sandwich and East Windsor (colloquially Ford City). It was by no means a friendly amalgamation, but the 3 smaller municipalities saw the handwriting on the wall and decided they could cut a better deal by amalgamating vs. having a deal forced on them by the province. Windsor‘s next expansion was in 1966 when it truly annexed the Town of Riverside, Sandwich East Township, and the urbanized part of Sandwich West Township (colloquially South Windsor) to the failed objection of those municipalities. One other thing. Yes, on a map one might note that Walkerville is geographically “north” in a city that has gradually expanded southward. But if anyone were to speak of “North Windsor” you’d be given a blank stare by the folks who live here. We have an East Side, West Side, West End and South Windsor, but no neighbourhoods described as “North.” Not unlike the Journey song that sings about “South Detroit”. There is no South Detroit. A Southwest Detroit, yes. But South Detroit exists only in the minds of Journey’s lyricists. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for the clarifications, Kevin. There's information you can read online and then there's information from people on the ground. In this case, The research I did online did not align with what you know, as a lifelong resident of Windsor! Thanks for the additional information. The post has been updated.
ReplyDeletekeep up the good work
ReplyDelete