Temagami station

Coordinates: 47°03′49″N 79°47′20″W / 47.06373°N 79.78888°W / 47.06373; -79.78888
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Temagami
Ontario Northland (inter-city rail)
General information
LocationHwy 11 North (West Side)
Temagami, Ontario
Canada
Coordinates47°03′49″N 79°47′20″W / 47.06373°N 79.78888°W / 47.06373; -79.78888
Owned byOntario Northland Railway
Tracks2
Construction
Structure typestone station building, freight shed and earlier wooden station
History
Opened1907
Closed2012
Rebuilt1909
Former services
Preceding station Ontario Northland Railway Following station
Cobalt
toward Cochrane
Northlander North Bay
toward Toronto

Temagami station is a railway station in Temagami, Ontario, Canada.

History[edit]

The station was built in 1907 by the then Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway (now the Ontario Northland Transportation Commission), but it burned down two years later and was subsequently rebuilt.

Circa 1907, the station could be reached from Toronto via Pullman coach equipped trains. The trains would leave Toronto in the evening and reach Temagami early the next morning.[1]

The station housed the office, telegraph and signal equipment, ticket counters and washrooms, and two waiting rooms.

The station was altered in the 1940s and damaged by fire in 1976. In 1996 the current renovations took place. The station is now managed by Temagami Station Restoration Trust.

It was a stop for Northlander trains of Ontario Northland before service was discontinued in 2012, as well as seasonal Dream Catcher Express service.

In 2021 the Government of Ontario announced plans to restore service using Ontario Northland Railway from this station north to either Timminis or Cochrane by the mid 2020s.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Anonymous (1907). "Proceedings of the Ninety-Third Meeting, Toronto, Canada, July 1907". Bi-monthly Bulletin of the American Institute of Mining Engineers. 16–18 (July 1907). American Institute of Mining Engineers: 867–868. Retrieved 16 October 2015.
  2. ^ "Passenger rail service in northeastern Ontario to return by mid-2020s | CBC News".

External links[edit]