We are selling POSTCARDS for Petrolia Heritage. The postcards are made from card stock featuring shots from around town.There is an amazing pic of the Petrolia Library from the air along with vintage shots from vintage cards. These POSTCARDS are on sale around town and at Victoria Hall before Play performances.Below are the cards available for only 1 dollar each! Petrolia History Book by Charles Whipp and Lee Pethick Edited by Edward Phelps The Book should be ready for sale December 2004 photo & story by David Pattenaude Petrolia Topic ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- by Dillon Carol Gardiner, Liz Welsh, Susie Beynon, April James and of course Caroline Dicocco Caroline Di Cocco Minister of Culture paid a visit to Petrolia library to announce a $15 million grant to libraries in Ontario. It was appropriate that this announcement be made in Petrolia as it has the nicest library in Ontario.
An interesting pic showing the United church in the background while
Grand Trunk Railway Depot During the
oil boom, the need for a railway in Petrolia was desperate. Ox-carts
transporting oil barrels was a common sight on Main Street. But the
railways were not convinced that the oil supply would warrant the cost of
laying track to Pertolia. The town could wait no longer and financed
a spur line from Wyoming. The line was so successful that the Great
Western Railway bought and operated it until amalgamation with the Grand Trunk
Railway in 1882. Canada's oil capital certainly deserved a more dignified station, than a two story frame building. In 1903, this study in Victorian grandeur was erected, from red pressed brick and stone. At each end of the impressive building are circular turrets capped with bellcast roofs and graceful supporting brackets. Above the front entrance, with its fan transom stands a square tower. A circular
theme has been carried out in the interior of paneled Georgian pine, with
restored Ladies and Gentlemen's waiting rooms at each end. The glass
in these rooms is unusually thick and curved to follow the walls. The
center portion housed the general waiting room, ticket office, operators
desk and a baggage room at one end. The building served as a railway
station until 1937, when the Canadian National Railway agreed to lease the
vacant station for A Public Library to the town of Petrolia.
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