Lake Erie and Northern Railway

Lake Erie and Northern Railway
Overview
Reporting markLE&N
LocaleGrand River Valley, Ontario
Dates of operation1916–1955 (end of passenger service)
PredecessorGrand Valley Railway
SuccessorCanadian Pacific Electric Lines
Technical
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Electrification1500 V DC overhead
Length80 km (50 mi)
Route map

miles
 
Grand River Railway
CP Galt Subdivision
0.00
Galt Main Street
0.4
Concession Street, Galt
1.1
West Side Junction
1.5
Scotts
2.1
McPherson
2.2
Stone Haven [Veradoon]
2.5
River Bridge
2.9
Riverside
3.5
Concession No. 8
4.5
Grand River Park [Carrick]
5.3
Lynwood [McCrea]
6.73
Glen Morris
8.1
Irwins
9.4
Robertson
10.9
Blue Lake
(37.90)
Grand Trunk Railway
11.6
Braeside
13.32
Paris
CN Dundas Subdivision
14.4
Leeds
14.7
Faulds
15.2
Oak Park
16.2
Ebor Park
16.5
Stuart
17.3
Dutton [Pitts]
17.6
Hardy
18.6
Golf Club, Brantford
20.3
Grand River Avenue [West Mill Street, Brantford]
Brantford LE&N station (1916–17)
Great Western Railway/CN
21.10
Brantford union station (1917–54)
with Brantford and Hamilton Electric Railway
Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo Railway
Grand River
22.2
Mount Pleasant Road
23.70
Fairchild
25.1
Lundy Lane
25.7
McAllister [McAlister]
26.17
Mount Pleasant
26.7
Doyle
27.73
Maple Grove
28.6
Merritt
29.45
Oakland
30.2
Westbrook
31.2
Bannisters
32.1
Wilsonville
33.0
Boston Road
33.8
Lutesville
34.4
Dundurn
35.7
Round Plains [Stop No. 7]
36.5
Bunker Hill
Black Bridge
over Canada Southern Railway
36.72
Waterford
37.2
Thompsons
38.3
Cherry Valley
39.2
Blaney
40.2
Bloomsburg
41.1
Windham Road
42.1
Colborne
CN Simcoe Subdivision
42.9
Simcoe, North
43.62
Simcoe
44.7
Decou
45.4
Lynn Valley
Port Dover and Lake Huron Railway
46.6
Stickney
48.0
Bowlby
48.6
Blue Line
50.0
Main Street, Port Dover
50.4
Ivey [Ivey's Junction]
51.02
Port Dover (1923 onward)
Port Dover and Lake Huron Railway
Port Dover GTR station (until 1923)
Hamilton and Lake Erie Railway

The Lake Erie and Northern Railway (reporting mark LE&N)[1] was an interurban electric railway which operated in the Grand River Valley in Ontario, Canada. The railway owned and operated a north–south mainline which ran from Galt in the north (now a part of Cambridge) to Port Dover on the shore of Lake Erie in the south. Along the way, it ran through rural areas of Waterloo County, Brant County, and Norfolk County, as well as the city of Brantford, where it had an interchange with the Brantford and Hamilton Electric Railway. Construction on the mainline began in 1913. The railway began operations in 1916 as a subsidiary of the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR), which had purchased the line before construction had finished. In 1931, it was consolidated with the Grand River Railway under a single CPR subsidiary, the Canadian Pacific Electric Lines (CPEL), which managed both interurban railways, though they continued to exist as legally separate entities. Passenger service was discontinued in 1955 but electric freight operations continued until 1961, when the LE&N's electric locomotives were replaced by diesel CPR locomotives and the line was de-electrified. In the same year, service on the mainline from Simcoe to Port Dover was discontinued, but the remainder continued to operate as a branchline which as early as 1975 was known as the CP Simcoe Subdivision.[2] The remainder of the line was officially abandoned in the early 1990s, ending almost seventy-five years of operation.

  1. ^ Brown 2011.
  2. ^ Duncan, Paul (2009). "SIMCOE SUBDIVISION". NiagaraRails.com. Retrieved 8 February 2021.