Kenora station explained

Kenora
Address:Railway Street,
Kenora, Ontario
Country:Canada
Coordinates:49.7681°N -94.4867°W
Opened:1899
Closed:1990
Other Services Header:Former services

Kenora station is a heritage Canadian Pacific Railway station in Kenora, Ontario.

History

The one-and-a-half-storey, brick and stone railway station was built in 1899.[1] In the early 20th century, the station featured a triangular-shaped garden and fountain area along the left of the structure.[2] The garden area was a feature of many Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) stations of the era, starting in Montreal and going west. The railway felt this help attract settlers to the west. "Station gardens, characterized as effective advertisements for prairie fertility, were a prominent part of these campaigns. The station, especially in the west, was often the focus of the community and a major link with the outside world. Civic boosters said the only evidence of a town's worth immediately seen by a prospective settler was the condition of town's railway station." Kenora's is shown in period photographs as an early example of the CPR railway garden.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Canadian Pacific Railway Station . . Historic Places . October 6, 2015 .
  2. Web site: Arrival of No. 96 at Kenora, Ontario . . Wish You Were Here . University of Saskatchewan Postcard Collection . October 6, 2015 .
  3. von Baeyer . Edwinna . Spring 1996 . The Rise and Fall of the Manitoba Railway Garden . Manitoba History. Manitoba Historical Society . Spring 1996 . 3 October 2015.