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until 1910. Wellington
Station was one of the busiest on the E&N route in the 1890s as the town's coal production surged in tandem with its population. With Wellington now connected to the E&N, Dunsmuir proceeded to move most of his shipping operations from Departure Bay to the deep water harbour of Oyster Bay, now known as Ladysmith. Dunsmuir died in 1889 and his family continued the coal and railway businesses until the E&N was sold to Canadian Pacific in 1905. By 1900 major coal mining operations had ceased around Wellington and coupled with the relocation of many of Dunsmuir's company buildings to Ladysmith followed by destructive town fire, traffic at the Wellington station dwindled. During the early 20th century Wellington Station was primarily used by the railway workers themselves as the station had a Roundhouse and a heavy mechanic shop for servicing the steam locomotives was based in Wellington as part of the Wellington Colliery Railway legacy. For many years a steam tower servicing the steam locomotives was also near the current flagstop. In the early-mid-20th century the heavy mechanics work was relocated to Victoria and Wellington become a minor stop on the E&N which had been expanded further North and West.
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today, are where the
Wellington Colliery's scale was located for weighing the coal the miner's produced. It was this scale and siding which was the unlikely catalyst for Wellington Colliery's first bitter miner strike which served to entrench a tone of mistrust and bitterness amongst workers which quickly escalated future confrontations in Wellington, and persisted for decades across Vancouver Island as Wellington miners moved to new towns being built up by the railway and coal industry.
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In 1887, less than a year after completing the E&N railway, Robert
Dunsmuir extended the E&N Railway north to Wellington, connecting up with the Wellington Colliery Railway lines. Wellington was changed from being Mile 77 to Mile 0, and remained the northern terminus of the E&N railway
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The
Wellington Flag stop Station and siding are also the last remnant of the Wellington Colliery Railway which was both a precursor, catalyst and heavy user of the E&N, with the Wellington Colliery eventually being wholly replaced by the E&N. It was the Wellington Colliery Railway and mines
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The old
Wellington Station shut down in the late 1950s, and sat neglected for years. In 1966, the building was purchased by the Wellington Centennial Committee from the CPR, and moved to the southeast corner of Pioneer Park. Plans to restore the building and integrate it into the park were never
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Before the E&N railway was extended to
Wellington, the Wellington stop was part of the Wellington Colliery Railway line joining Wellington's Departure Bay wharf operations with the Wellington Colliery operations scattered around Wellington. The current flagstop site and siding, still in use
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completed, and the building was condemned and demolished, with salvageable material being incorporated into the
Nanaimo Hornets Rugby Clubhouse, which was completed in 1979.
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with the wealth, experience and infrastructure he needed to convince the government, under generous terms, to allow him to build an Island
Railway.
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mainline. The station was named after the town of
Wellington which formed around and next to the Wellington Colliery which was named after
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The current flagstop is a few hundred feet south of the original station and colliery weigh scale and is marked with a simple sign.
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Wellington station is one of the oldest and most historic stops on the
Southern Railway of Vancouver Island Mainline.
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service, which ended in 2011. The station is on the
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16:Railway station in British Columbia, Canada
627:2011 disestablishments in British Columbia
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58:"Wellington station" British Columbia
637:Railway stations in Canada closed in 2011
617:Railway stations in Canada opened in 1888
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109:Learn how and when to remove this message
390:Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington
622:1888 establishments in British Columbia
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517:"Trains For Cameron Lake In October".
612:Via Rail stations in British Columbia
404:Wellington station before the E&N
143:Wellington Road & Jingle Pot Road
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386:Southern Railway of Vancouver Island
47:adding citations to reliable sources
632:Disused railway stations in Canada
555:"Special Project On For Hornets".
498:"Wellington Extension Completed".
413:Precursor and enabling the E&N
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574:"Big Night For Hornets Tonight".
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536:"Old Wellington Station Sold".
34:needs additional citations for
563:(395): 14. September 16, 1976.
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525:(131): 1. September 22, 1910.
305:Esquimalt and Nanaimo Railway
597:Via Rail Station Description
544:(174): 9. November 16, 1966.
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461:"Explore our destinations"
193:Victoria – Courtenay train
368:Nanaimo, British Columbia
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582:(22): 9. April 27, 1979.
576:Nanaimo Daily Free Press
557:Nanaimo Daily Free Press
538:Nanaimo Daily Free Press
506:(16): 2. June 8, 1887.
484:BC Geographical Names
173:49.2069°N 124.0172°W
43:improve this article
426:E&N early years
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135:General information
519:Nanaimo Free Press
500:Nanaimo Free Press
360:Wellington station
309:Following station
301:Preceding station
282:Victoria–Courtenay
263:Following station
250:Preceding station
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41:Please help
36:verification
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269:Nanoose Bay
176: /
164:124°01′02″W
152:Coordinates
606:Categories
447:References
364:Wellington
333:Northfield
327:Main Line
161:49°12′25″N
127:Wellington
99:April 2015
69:newspapers
372:flag stop
320:Courtenay
274:Courtenay
465:VIA Rail
381:Dayliner
376:Via Rail
370:, was a
366:area of
338:Victoria
294:Victoria
259:Via Rail
140:Location
396:History
336:toward
318:toward
315:Nanoose
292:toward
289:Nanaimo
272:toward
212:History
189:Line(s)
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435:Modern
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217:Opened
147:Canada
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