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Windsor Waterfront – 1939

Up today is a panoramic photo of the Windsor Waterfront, from 1939. At the left is the old Station, to the right are the tracks…

Here’s a close up of the old CN station…

As always there are always some interesting details in these old photos…. Looks like some repairs are being made to the tracks.

Note the planking to cross the tracks… Also interesting to note the D.T. & I. railroad car. That railway was owned by Henry Ford from 1920 – 1929, and at one time the stretch from Detroit to Toledo was electrified.


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While the electrified line failed, to this day, some of the arches that carried the power lines are still standing, this shot above is just off of I-94 in Allen Park, MI.
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Andrew

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  • there used to be a long siding that ran almost to riverside drive to the windsor stars warehouse where they got carloads of newsprint

  • My Grandfather John (Jack)G.Gibson was terminal Trainmaster here until 1943 for the CNR having come as yardmaster in 1920. These photos in 1939 were taken the same year as the Royal Visit of 1939 June when the royal train came to Windsor with King George the VI and Queen Elizabeth and a great welcome was made at the station and CNR yards. Bands, military, civic dignitaries etc. Somewhere I have some of the paperwork countersigned by my grandfather to allow access to the reserved seating.

  • I don't know if anyone has noticed but the last remaining train tracks that were on the riverfront are now gone. The tracks that ran across Riverside and into Hiram Walkers were taken out.

  • ^^^ also, the stairs leading down from Riverside Drive to the Spirit of Windsor are the stairs that led to the Station. The structure that many people think is the station, I believe is actually an original workshop. I'm not positive about that though.

  • The last remaining railroad building along Riverside Drive was a tool shed, it was near the turntable, and roundhouse. After the tracks where removed the city converted it to washrooms and added the ornate trim.

  • The old station, built by the Grand Trunk Railway in 1884, was designed by Sir Joseph Hobson, chief engineer of the GTR. He also designed and built similar mansard-roofed stations in Chatham and Sarnia, these still standing as of 2015. Hobson also designed and built the original Grand Trunk railway tunnel under the St. Clair River from Sarnia to Port Huron. The Windsor station stood here until it was demolished in 1961, its place marked by the "Spirit of Windsor" (ex-GTR #213, then CNR #5588 after 1923). There were seven storage tracks to the east (right of the station in the photo), each of them housing cabooses of the Canadian National and Wabash Railways. Behind, you can see a car float of the Wabash Railway which regularly carried freight cars across the Detroit River. Further in the background are some of the large and luxurious passenger boats that cruised the Great Lakes and on overnight voyages from Detroit to Buffalo.

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Andrew

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