The Promise Becomes a Reality
Finally, in the fall of 1908, the first train pulled in to town. Before
long regular passenger, freight and mail service was scheduled.
Rivers in
about 1908
The GTP specifically dictated some elements of town design. Street were
to be twenty metres wide. Prime locations were reserved for banks and
hotels.
Because the new town was in the midst of well populated and productive
farmland there was a burst of construction as commercial enterprises
sprang up to meet the growing needs. The usual banks, general stores,
drug and jewelry stores appeared. Some of these would naturally be
housed in quickly erected-frame buildings, but because the economic
importance of the town seemed quite secure many substantial commercial
and residential building appeared in those first years. Some of those,
like the original Grand Trunk Station and the Alexandra Hotel have been
lost, but other such as the Imperial Bank of Commerce, Knox
Presbyterian Church, and the fine houses beside it remain in use today.
Looking
west on Second Avenue – in about 1910
While the Grand Trunk Pacific may not have been successful as a
National enterprise, locally it was an important stimulus to the
economy, a convenience to the citizens, and an influential factor in
the lifestyle of the region. The Town of Rivers owes not only its very
existence to the railway, and great deal of its character and success
came directly down those rails.
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