Ontario Abandoned Places will be rebranded as Ominous Abandoned Places

Erinsville Station

Historic Location Railway in Stone Mills, Ontario, Canada

Jun 10 2015

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Recent status Historic Location
Location # 12223

From the plaque:
This station, built in 1889, was one of six identical stations constructed by the Rathburn Company of Deseronto when they extended a new rail line from Tamworth, which opened in 1884, to Bannockburn, now on highway 62. It was ideally located on flat land at the crossing of the Addington Road on the south shore of Beaver Lake and near the old colonization road.

Its exterior stucco walls are supported by three courses of terra cotta tile and it contains a passenger waiting room, a telegrapher's office, living quarters and a freight shed. Its distinct appearance comes from the two storey hexagon bay windows for the telegrapher. There are no other two storey masonry stations with this floor plan in Canada.

For fifty years, the economic lifeblood of this community flowed through this station. Passengers, marl from Dry Lake near Marlbank used in cement, lumber, cattle, ice and high school students heading from Tamworth exemplify the utilization of the railway. The telegraph office was the only immediate contact with the outside world.

The last train departed May 31, 1941 and the Erinsville Station was closed with the track being removed in December 1941.

To help mark the 175th annicersary of Erinsville, the exterior of this station was refurbished by the Tanworth Erinsville Community Development Committee in 2012 through Canadian Heritage Funding.

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