About this location

Ernestown railroad station was built for the Grand Trunk Railway Company of Canada. Its cornerstone was laid in 1855

Ernestown station sits on the north side of two sets of still-active tracks, just west of Lennox and Addington County Road #4, near a little sideroad called Link Road.

It has been suggested that political factors were the reason the Ernestown station was preferred over more populated areas like Bath to the east. Unlike Bath, there was no real community in Ernestown.

After the station was built, a community developed. At the same time, Bath, without a station, declined. Today, with the station abandoned, there are only residences left near the station and no real community

The design of the station was used in about 34 different stations in Ontario in 1855-56, as well as several in the United States. Only the stone station has survived; there is no sign of the a freight shed, loading platform wood shed, dwelling house, and barn which once graced the property.

The building is dwarfed today by its surroundings: two active tracks nearby, the road overpass to the east and trees and bushes that obscure the east side and the rear.

In 1992, the site was designated by the Canadian government as a Heritage Railway Station.

For more information please visit: http://vishwawalking.ca/get-lost/ont/ernestown.html


Albums 15

fiso 9 years ago

April 2016

9 photos 381 views View album
ora 10 years ago

August 5th 2015

9 photos 331 views View album
RogerM 11 years ago

June 2014

18 photos 265 views View album
Unknown user 14 years ago

Ernestown Station

20 photos 617 views View album

Comments

Comments

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12 years ago

Locked up tighter than fort knox now but I didn't mind, the interior wasn't why I wanted to visit this particular place. Pretty cool if you ask me!

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13 years ago

Neat, I think I might go check this out.

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15 years ago

Really Great to see everyone's take on this location. Great pix from all.