Kathy Baker, a member from the Halton-Peel Genealogical Society of the Ontario Genealogical Society sent in a newspaper article about the train stations that were built on the Mississauga line at the turn of the 20th century.
In 1856, the Great Western Railway was completed though Port Credit and Clarkson, connecting Toronto and Hamilton.
The article says ‘The railways were built through historic Mississauga: the Grand Trunk Railway arrived through Malton in 1854, which allowed Malton to develop into a major wheat exporting centre, and the Credit Valley Railway in 1878-81, which was built through Cooksville, Erindale and Streetsville. The last railway, of sorts, to come was the Toronto-Guelph Radial Railway, which operated from1917-1931’.
Read the rest of the story on http://www.insauga.com/historic-train-stations-in-mississauga
The website of the Halton-Peel Genealogical Society is at http://www.haltonpeel.ogs.on.ca/
Their Facebook page is at https://www.facebook.com/groups/774317655963454/
Check the Canadian Week in Review every Monday morning for the latest in Genealogy, Heritage, and History news in Canada.
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