Peel Street (aka Windsor St.) was blocked at the bottom of the hill until about 1950.
It might be hard to visualize what's now a wide-wide-wide empty street once filled with important stuff.
But it was.
So you'd cruise down the hill and be forced to stop by a gloriously whimsical blockage in the form of Bonaventure train station.
Once you arrived at St. James and Peel your progress would be halted by the side of venerable old Bonaventure Station, which would force you down Inspector Street further east.
Another way to circumnavigate Bonaventure Station was to scoot down one-block Railroad Street to Chaboillez Square (actually a triangle) and then angle over to Inspector.
The buzzing intersection of Peel and St. James sat a stone's throw from such hotels as the Queen's, Carslake Hotel and Carleton (with Mother Martin's restaurant) and the main post office.
So what's now a lame duck corner of cold breezes and solitude was once important, buzzing and quirky.
Nowadays the demolished area looks like a moonscape or like suburban Iqaluit, flanked by the sad old abandoned Planetarium begging to be set alight to put it out of its misery.
One cannot blame authorities for
scrapping the Grand Trunk Railroad's Bonaventure Station.
The Bonaventure Station, although venerable, it was no architectural gem and there were too many damn railway tracks, with the much posher Windsor Station one block north and the newer Central Station a little further east fulfilling all of the city's needs by 1950
Scrapping Bonaventure Station and the tracks recovered a lot of land for development, but sadly nothing much good came of it as the structures that went up at the corner and all along to St. Henry aren't much to look at.
A couple of devastating fires also contributed to the station's eventual demise.
ReplyDeleteSee: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bonaventure_Station
It was already slated for demolition at the time of the big fire of 1948.
ReplyDeleteThe Belle Epoque for Montreal was ending by 1960.
ReplyDeleteThe Champlain Bridge, PVM, Bank of Commerce, The Metro, and the end of EXPO67 summed it up.
That what, in many cases, replaced heavy industry is much worse.
The Pointe, St Henri and the Harbour may have looked grotty in areas, but, were alive and vibrant w/ life and commerce.
Better and worse at the same time.
Too many cars.
Like Planting The Tree. Infrastructure needs love, care and attention, and MONEY.
A wasteland desert requires little care, tho', and the winds blow thru'
Thank You.
As I remember it, you came down Windsor, along the front of the Bonaventure, cross Notre Dame and then down Colborne to Wellington. Going over to Inspector and down that way only took you to William, where you had a choice of going left or right in order to go to Dalhousie or Ann and another decision because if you took either of those you were going to be at Ottawa Street. So you see, going down Inspector was going to be awkward, mind you, there was compensation in the fact you could play around in the water of the horse trough, which was just opposite the Lowney factory, now occupied by those sought after Condos. Just ask, ..........
ReplyDeleteGriff born
Here is a site that might be of interest regarding Bonaventure and much more.
ReplyDeletehttp://turcotyard.blogspot.ca/2014/12/turcot-yards-origin.html
Ice Shoves and their floods still happened into Nineteen Fifties.
Thank You.
More Neet views.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.flickriver.com/photos/museemccordmuseum/sets/72157607220056699/
Thank You.
Have to laugh at those riverside "ice shove" photos of yesteryear. The power of nature will not be denied! The creation of Bickerdike Pier put an end to most of the Old Port spring flooding.
ReplyDeletePeople today can't believe this could even happen, but it still does in some places, damaging fences and roads as recently as the winter of 2015-16.
See: http://stlawrencepiks.com/seawayhistory/beforeseaway/lachine/
Even More Great Photos here.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.flickr.com/photos/archivesmontreal/with/25784150204/
Thank You.