MADE
IN HAMILTON
19TH CENTURY
INDUSTRIAL TRAIL
SITE
13
CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAY, 1931
The
former Canadian National Railway station is a monument to the city's long association
with the railway. The Great Western Railway (GWR) was the city's first rail-way.
Around 1850 prominent merchants and politicians led by local lawyer and businessman
Allan MacNab raised money for the Great Western. The City of Hamilton purchased
stock in the new venture. The colonial government guaranteed many of its loans.
The
city bustled with new economic activity even before the railway opened. Construction
activity provided jobs for hundreds of workers. By the time the GWR officially
opened in 1854, it had made Hamilton a boomtown.
As
a Canadian route linking New York and Michigan, the GWR gave ambitious Hamiltonians
access to important new markets. The GWR was absorbed by the larger Grand Trunk
Railway (GTR) in 1882. The GTR became part of the Canadian National Railway
in 1923. From 1854 until CN opened its James Street station in 1931, Hamilton's
main passenger station was located on the north side of Stuart Street near the
foot of Caroline Street. It is now owned by the Labourers International Union
of North America (LIUNA).
In
contrast to the "Moderne"-style TH&B Station (1933), the classical-style
CN Station (1931) was more typical of Canadian railway station architecture
of the period. However, the two buildings do share some important similarities,
such as sparse ornamentation, clean lines and simplified geometry.