Matheson
Ontario Northland (inter-city rail)
The original station, taken before 1916.
General information
LocationRailway Street, Matheson, Ontario, Canada
Coordinates48°32′2.70″N 80°27′56.41″W / 48.5340833°N 80.4656694°W / 48.5340833; -80.4656694
Owned byOntario Northland Railway
Platforms1
Tracks2
Construction
Structure typesingle station building
ParkingNo
Former services
Preceding station Ontario Northland Railway Following station
Cochrane
Terminus
Northlander Swastika
toward Toronto

Matheson station is located in the township of Black River-Matheson in Ontario, Canada.

History

An original station was built on the line circa 1908 by the Temiskaming and Northern Ontario Railway; it was destroyed in the Matheson Fire in 1916. The present brick structure was built in its place in 1916. It still remains in place (as of 2020), well-maintained, unused and in good condition.[1] The building contains a cornerstone indicating it was placed in 1916 by William Howard Hearst as Premier of Ontario, T.&N.O Railway Chairman Jacob Lewis Englehart, Denis Murphy and George Wise.[2]

It was a stop for Northlander trains that are owned by Ontario Northland. The station was also a transfer point between the rail service and the Ontario Northland Motor Coach Services to Timmins, South Porcupine and Iroquois Falls.

In 2021 the Government of Ontario announced plans to restore service using ONR from this station north to either Timminis or Cochrane by the mid 2020s.[3]

References

  1. "District of Cochrane". Existing Stations in Ontario. 2010. Retrieved January 7, 2019.
  2. cmh2315fl (August 2017). "Matheson ONR Railway Station (Matheson, Ontario)". flickr photo. Retrieved January 7, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. "Passenger rail service in northeastern Ontario to return by mid-2020s". CBC News. May 26, 2021 [May 25, 2021].
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