HomeMy WebLinkAboutYesterday And Today, A Salute to Blyth's 125th Anniversary, 2002-07-31, Page 28I 40.4W0„.„4,04wfwa*.::rwrA
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A new role
The old station haS a new role today as a bed and breakfast .
Congratulations Blyth
on your 125th Anniversary
Pay No Tax*
August 2, 3 & 4
• Discount equivalent
to applicable sales
tax. Excludes sale
merchandise ()tarn SI_
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Visit our century-old building brimming with all lines of wicker,
area rugs, porcelain dolls and accents for your home. Check out 0
our back room for specials. I
Tuesday - Saturday 10 am - 8 pm
Closed Sunday & Monday
Bev Elliott - Proprietor 0
9_4
Directly across from the Theatre
1.1.-411)--AJ
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Best Wishes Blyth on
your 125th Anniversary
Chamney Sanitation Ltd.
Your complete waste disposal company
j04 otieh 50 ve-aia
Auburn 526-7799
NV1INIF 1I NI 1 1I lr 1I NI NI 1/11r 1 III
PAGE 28. THE CITIZEN, YESTERDAY and TODAY, WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 2002.
Off for a festival holiday
The Grand Trunk Railway station WaS a festive place on July 10, 1906 as people gathered to attend a July 12 celebration. (Courtesy Ed Watson)
Patrick Kelly instrumental in railway's arrival in Blyth
Once it was the busiest place in
Blyth but now people turn to the
former London-Huron-Bruce
Railway lands for a place of peace
and quiet.
Whether it's at "The Arch" on the
Blyth Greenway Trail, or at The
Station House Bed and Breakfast,
the east end of the village is a place
to go for relaxation today, unlike a
century ago when it was the hub of
activity.
The rail line, stretching north from
London to Wingham, was one of the
most colourful in western Ontario,
nicknamed the "Butter and Egg
Special" because many people
travelled to London to sell their farm
produce in the markets there. It was
also famous for its rather erratic
timetable with the casual train crew
being known to stop at any point
along the way if a farm family
flagged the train down for a ride.
The railway was truly a part of
Blyth since it was Blyth's first reeve,
the tireless entrepreneur, Patrick
Kelly who played a huge role in the
line being built.
Blyth and its surrounding
farmland had barely emerged from
41) the bush when Kelly arrived in 1866.
In the coming years he would own a
• flour and grist mill, a sawmill and
sash and door factory.
His businesses, however, weren't
going to compete for markets far and
wide if the goods had to be hauled to
Clinton by horse and team before
they could be loaded on a train and
shipped to the eastern seaboard.
Kelly sought to get train service for
his town.
First he approached the Grand
Trunk Railway but the company
showed no interest. So Kelly set off
for Hamilton to talk to the Great
Western Company which had
recently built a railway through
London to Sarnia. •
To back up his argument, Kelly
took with him figures showing the
value of goods like flour, firewood,
tan bark, sheep and cattle being
shipped from the county to the
Buffalo market. Apparently they
were impressed with the
presentation but threw the ball into
Kelly's court by saying he should go
back to the communities along the
proposed route and seek subsidies
for the building of -the railway.
Municipalities along the northern
part 01 the line were asked to give
$25.000. a substantial amount at the
t i me.
Kelly's original plan was to hall
the railway in Blyth but East
Wawanosh. Morris and Wingham
agreed to give subsidies if the
railway was extended to Wingham.
The summer of 1875 brought a
boom to Blyth as hotels were full of
workmen. There were also problems
when, on payday, the workers got
drunk and caused a lot of commotion
in the village.
The _ceremonial first train from
London to Wingham ran on Dec. 11,
1875 with the reeve and councillors
from municipalities along the way
on board. They'd been entertained at
a banquet for 600 at which Kelly was
one of the principal speakers along
with Sir John Carling who had
invested in the company.
In 1876 there was one train a day
leaving Blyth, in the morning, and
one returning in the afternoon or
evening.
The impact of the coming of the
railway was described by the 1879
Belton's Huron County Atlas. "It
struck the village with such force as
to elevate it ... from the proportions
of . . . a backwoods village to those
of a busy and prosperous little
railroad town."
The effects of the railway were
everywhere. In December 1892 The
Huron Expositor reported 23,000
barrels of apples had been shipped
from Blyth to markets as far away as
Chicago. Naturally that created a
market for barrels and two cooper
shops were kept working overtime to
supply the demand.
Edmunson Watson, known as
"Huron's Cattle King" shipped
carloads of of cattle from Blyth and
drove sheep from the Lucknow area
to be shipped to Canadian and
American markets from the little
station.
Arriving about the same time as
the railway was the Grey, Young and _
Sparling salt well which in 1888
shipped an average of five carloads
of salt a day.
By the late 1880s the nearby
brickworks was also shipping
carloads of brick from the. station.
In 1882 both the Great Western,
which built the_ railway, and the
Grand Trunk, which had originally
been approached by Kelly, were in
financial trouble and merged to
become the Grand Trunk.
Later, in 1919, the Grand Trunk
and several other struggling railways
were brought under the wing of
Canadian National Railways, a
crown-owned railway company.
Melda McElroy before her death,
set down some of her memories, and
the memories of other residents no
longer with us now, of the place the
railway held in the lives of the
community.
Luella McGowan recalled
working the dining room of the
Commercial Hotel, now the Blyth
Inn. At the time there were a number
of "sample rooms" in which
salesmen travelling on the railway
would set up displays of their goods
for local merchants. Special dinners
would be served for those arriving
on the 7 p.m. train. and breakfasts
for those leaving on the 7 a.m. train.
She remembered that Bill
Johnston, who met the train with his
bus drawn by a team of horses,
would open the door of the hotel to
announce in a loud voice: "Five
minutes to train time", then take the
waiting salesmen to the station. Dick
Sellers also met the train with a one-
horse dray, hauling the salesmen's
sample trunks to the hotel.
Many students completed their
secondary education at Clinton
Collegiate or attended Clinton
Business College by taking the train
daily to school, Miss McElroy
remembered. It was a long day with
the wain leaving Blyth at 7:20 a.m.
and returning at 7:20 p.m.
By the 1930s many of the Blyth
companies that had helped keep the
railway profitable, had long since
died and the Depression had pushed
the line to a $9,000 loss in 1939. In
December 1940 word leaked out that
Canadian National was trying to
close the line north of Clinton. •
Despite protests, this section of the
line which had lost a grand total of
$966 in 1939, was allowed to be
closed.
Several local residents took a
sentimental journey on the last train
on April 26, 1941. The tracks were
later removed with the steel being
used for the war effort.