Welland, Ontario

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Image:City of Welland logo.gif

Welland (formally The Corporation of City of Welland; 2001 population 48,402) is a city in the Regional Municipality of Niagara in Ontario, Canada.

The city has been traditionally known as the place where rails and water meet, referring to the railways from Buffalo to Toronto and southwestern Ontario, and the waterways of Welland Canal and Welland River, which played a great role in the city's development. Image:Welland-niagara.PNG The city is notable for its large francophone population. Welland is one of few communities in southern Ontario where the percentage of Franco-Ontarians exceeds the overall provincial average.

Welland's nickname is The Rose City.

Contents

History

The city was first settled in 1788 by the United Empire Loyalists. In 1814, Canadian forces led by George Hay, 8th Marquess of Tweeddale, met American invaders near the present-day town site during the Battle of Cook's Mill. After two days of combat, the Americans retreated to Buffalo, New York, ending the War of 1812 on Canadian soil.

The Welland Canal is involved in the history of the area ever since its extension to reach Lake Erie in 1833. A wooden aqueduct was built to carry the Welland Canal over the Welland River at what is now downtown Welland, and the area became known as simply Aqueduct. A lock to cross from the canal to the river and vice versa was also built. A small shantytown soon developed around the facility, providing essential services in what was a convienent stop-over location.

Image:Main Street bridge, Welland.jpg

The growing town was later named Merrittsville, after William Hamilton Merritt, the initiator of the Welland Canal project. This name is still reflected today in the name of the Merrittville Highway (Niagara Road 50), which served as the primary north-south route in central Niagara before the construction of Highway 406. Welland gained its present name when it was incorporated on July 25, 1858. It became a city in 1917.

In addition to the presence of the canal itself, one of the few railway crossings across the canal was also located near Welland. The two factors contributed greatly to the development of heavy industry in Welland. The Plymouth Cordage Company was the first major industrial company to open a plant in Welland in 1906. By 1930s, Welland was an important industry location in the region and was developing rapidly.

In 1960s, the city was starting to outgrow the canal passing through its core. The Welland By-Pass project, started in 1967 and finished in 1973, provided a new, shorter alignment for the Welland Canal by removing it from downtown Welland to the outskirts of the city.

Originally, this was viewed with enthusiasm as the constant traffic on the canal was interfering heavily with transportation within the city. The old alignment of the canal was renamed the Welland Recreational Waterway with the purpose of developing several recreational facilities and tourist attactions along its shores. The plans called for fishing platforms, water slides, boat rental points, as well as marine and rail historical exhibits. Eventually, most of these never came to be.

The effects of the canal relocation were compounded by the gradual, but steady move of industry out of Welland as a trend for global manufacturing was developing. As a result, downtown Welland has seen much deterioration in the years following the project. Stores moved out to the north end of the city, where a retail hub was being developed in and around the Seaway Mall. Downtown became a mix of a ghost town and a ghetto. Local residents looked with envy at Port Colborne, which although still saddled with a canal cutting the city in two, has enjoyed greater success attracting tourists to its happenings such as the Tall Ships Challenge.

Government

The current mayor of Welland is Damian Goulbourne, previously a tourism and development professor at the Niagara College. The Welland city council is made up of the mayor and 12 councillors, each elected in his or her ward.

The City is responsible for fire protection, libraries, parks and recreation and secondary streets, but many municipal services come instead from the broader level of government, the Niagara Region. Regional responsibilities include social welfare, community health, and policing through the Niagara Regional Police.

Image:Welland Civic Centre.jpg

The chief local political issue is the redevelopment of the downtown core area, which has been deteriorated in the years following the Welland By-Pass project. The Civic Square project has been completed after spanning the terms of three city councils and three mayors. The new building, facing both East Main Street and the old canal, houses the city hall and the Welland Public Library. The project is proving to be a catalyst for development, as several new establishments have been opened downtown and some current business are expanding.

Another issue is the Atlas Specialty Steels plant located close to downtown. Although it employed over 3,000 workers at its peak in 1942, business has since declined and operations have been ceased and remaining staff laid off in April 2004. The city is owed a significant amount in unpaid taxes. (new development) The City has cleared the debt owed to it for back taxes. The property's new owners are currently in the talks with the city council about restarting operations and bringing back the manufacturing jobs in exchange for reducing the amount owed to the city, however there is no consensus on how important are the jobs as compared to the owed-back taxes.

Welland is represented in the Canadian House of Commons by John Maloney as part of Welland (electoral district) and in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario by Peter Kormos as part of Niagara Centre.

Demographics

During the 2001 Census, the population of Welland was determined to be 48,402, making Welland the 87th largest city in Canada. The population count remained essentially unchanged since the 1996 Census. In more recent years many new homes have been constructed in the city, but the effect on the population won't be officially known until the 2006 Census.

The Niagara College of Applied Arts and Technology brings people from all over southern Ontario to the city, promoting diversity.

According to the 2001 census, 95.5% of the population is Caucasian, 1.7% Aboriginal, 1.1% Black, 0.2% Korean, and 0.3% of other Asian descent. 17.7% of inhabitants are under the age of 14, while those over 65 account for 16.9%.

In 1914, a local business called Empire Cotton Mills was bought by a Quebec-based company. They brought in twenty French families to work in the mill, giving a start to a francophone community still very alive in the city today. Presently, Welland is one of only three communities in southern Ontario (excluding eastern Ontario) where Franco-Ontarians, as a percentage of the community's population, exceed the provincial average of 4.8%. (The other two are Penetanguishene and Lakeshore.)

Another significant cultural group was established with the opening of the Plymouth Cordage plant. Many workers relocated to Welland from the company's operations in Plymouth, Massachusetts were of Italian origin. To minimise the potential effects of cultural and language barriers, Plymouth Cordage sent four foremen to Welland: one was Italian, one French, one German and one English. The neighbourhood that the company built for its employees (now Plymouth Cordage Heritage District [1]) became the first Italian ethnic neighbourhood in Welland.

Other cultural groups in Welland include the Croatians, the Hungarians, the Polish, and the Ukrainians. Recently, Welland has seen some immigrants from South America, most notably Venezuela and Colombia, settle in the city due to its proximity to the United States border.

Education

Like the rest of Ontario, Welland has access to two public education systems: the regional school boards are the Niagara Catholic District School Board and the District School Board of Niagara.

Thanks to the large population of francophones, both the Conseil scolaire de district du Centre-Sud-Ouest (the French public board) and the Conseil scolaire de district catholique Centre-Sud (the French Catholic board) operate elementary and secondary schools in Welland. École secondaire Confédération and École secondaire catholique Jean-Vanier are the only French public and French Catholic, respectively, secondary schools in the Niagara Region. Jean-Vanier is planned to relocate to a new building in the north end of the city in the near future. Although, the relocation of Jean-Vanier is very much disputed, and is currently being investigated by the Honorable Gerard Kennedy.

There are a total of twenty elementary schools and five secondary schools in Welland. Of these, four elementary schools and two secondary schools are part of French-language boards. All schools offer education in French to some extent.

Due to the abundance of French schools, it is not unusual for parents to opt for French-language education for their children, even if only one or neither of the parents have French heritage. The process further strengthens the bilingual character of Welland.

Economy

Initially, manufacturing firms were the biggest employers in Welland. The plants of companies like Union Carbide, United Steel, and Plymouth Cordage Company had big influence on shaping early Welland. While recent years saw the end of Welland operations for several companies, businesses such as John Deere and Lakeside Steel (a pipe plant formerly owned by Stelco) continue to employ a significant amount of residents.

Due to a large concentration of francophones in the city and resulting large degree of bilingualism, the city has been successful in bringing several call centres to Welland. Correspondingly, Canadian Tire Financial Services is presently Welland's largest employer, employing over 1,000 people in two centres.

Welland's electricity comes from the Sir Adam Beck hydroelectric generation plants at Niagara Falls via Welland Hydro. Thanks to the presence of the massive plant, power remained on in over half of Welland during the 2003 North America blackout until rolling blackouts began the next day in an effort to provide power to areas that hadn't had it for nearly 24 hours.

Geography

Welland is located in the centre of south Niagara. Over the years, urban growth has all but united the northwest part of Welland with the community of Fonthill. To a non-local, the only clue that they have left Welland could be the slightly more upstyle character of Fonthill.

Prior to the Welland By-Pass project, the Welland Canal cut through the centre of Welland. As a result, a very prominent split was created between the east side and the west side of the city. The west side grew primarily to the north, while the east side expanded south. The west side also became the more affluent of the two. Today, even though the canal traffic no longer causes regular interruption in the traffic across the city, the channel lives on as Welland Recreational Waterway. The waterway still serves as a very prominent visual clue when one is crossing it, and it is perhaps for this reason that the east side/west side division is still very much alive in the minds of Wellanders. East side and west side are very commonly used as basic directions.

The communities of Cooks Mills and Dain City have their own separation stories. Cooks Mills, located on the other side of the By-Pass channel than the rest of Welland, has arguably been protected against the impact of urban sprawl, but the necessity of using one of the two highway tunnels to cross the canal causes some residents to head to nearby Niagara Falls instead. Dain City, located in the south of the city where the two channels meet, is separated by the massive approaches to the Townline Tunnel required to provide the low grade for the rail lines that use the tunnel.

Currently, there is a slight movement to develop the northern end of the east side, an area formerly left undeveloped. A community named Hunters Pointe is being built close to the banks of the By-Pass, and the area is poised to see more investment as the construction of a number of big-box stores is planned close to Highway 406.

Technically, both the east side and Dain City are peninsulas, surrounded by the waters of the old and new channels of the Welland Canal and connected to "solid" ground only by the relatively small plug in the old canal along the Townline Tunnel approaches.

Another interesting man-made geographic feature is the Merritt Island, a strip of land approximately five kilometres long and, in some places, less than 100 metres wide. The island was created when the old alignment of the canal was constructed basically parallel to the Welland River and since the abandonment of the old canal has been established as Merritt Park, featuring a popular four kilometre-long paved trail.

Transport

Roads

Image:Highway.406.train.jpg

Highway 406 is the main route out of Welland, leading north to Thorold, St. Catharines and onwards via Queen Elizabeth Way. However, the first nine kilometres of the highway are not a freeway like the 400-Series Highways standard dictates, but rather a standard two-lane highway with at-grade interchanges, and, uniquely among the 400-series highways, an at-grade railway crossing. This is a common source of bottlenecks, especially at the busy intersection with Niagara Road 20, where delays during rush hour can run well in excess of ten minutes. Upgrading the 406 to the freeway standard past the Road 20 intersection will commence in the summer of 2006, but no date has been set for the extension all the way to Welland.

Port Colborne is linked to Welland by Highways 140 and 58. Port Colborne residents then can take the 406 further north.

The Mid-Peninsula Highway, once constructed, can play an important role in the transportation patterns of Welland, as it might cross the Welland Canal along the Highway 58A corridor in the south of the city. Should that occur, Highway 406 will likely be extended to reach the new thoroughfare.

Two of the three tunnels under the canal, Main Street Tunnel and Townline Tunnel, are located in Welland, just east of the main urbanised area.

Railways

Welland is the location of one of only two remaining railway crossings across the Welland Canal. Canadian National Railway (CN) and Penn Central each own one line running through the Townline Tunnel. There is also a CN north-south line running through the east wide of Welland and beside the old Atlas Specialty Steels plant, but it is now rarely used. No passenger trains stop in Welland; closest VIA Rail stations are in St. Catharines and Niagara Falls. There was once a tram line connecting Welland with Thorold, but the service was discontinued and the right-of-way of the line is now used as a recreational trail.

In the past, trains crossed the Welland Canal by the means of a swing bridge. The rail line, cutting across south Welland in a slight arc, has largely been disused since the completion of the Townline Tunnel.

Air

The closest airport to Welland is the Welland-Port Colborne Airport on the western edge of the city. Even though it contains a Customs Canada station due to its proximity to the United States, it is a small field airport and is not served by any regular links. Most air travellers use either Toronto's Lester B. Pearson International Airport or Hamilton's John C. Munro International Airport. The Buffalo Niagara International Airport is also used by some, as it is the closest, although it requires the travellers to cross the American border.

Public Transit

The city runs Welland Transit, a public transport service. Welland Transit has 11 routes of scheduled bus services covering the city, but the ridership rates remain low. Also provided is Welland-St. Catharines Connection, a link to the St. Catharines public transit system which offers a connection from Welland Transit's downtown terminal to Brock University terminal in Thorold.

For areas too outlying to be serviced by regular buses, Welland Transit runs a service named Trans-Cab that offers taxi connections to the bus routes for a small extra fee. Welland Transit is also in charge of Handi-Trans, a door-to-accessible-door service using lift-equipped vehicles that provides transportation for individuals who are unable to use regular Welland Transit service.

Events

Niagara Food Festival, marketed as The Peninsula's Tastiest Party, takes place on the Merritt Island in city's downtown every September and brings crowds from the entire region in addition to the locals.

Niagara Regional Exhibition, running since 1853, is held at the Fairgrounds in the north end of the city every fall.

Farmers' Market, held downtown in the Market Square, features up to 60 vendors offering food, produce and homemade items every Saturday morning, year-round.

Communities

See also

External links

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References

  • Lewis, William H. Aqueduct Merrittsville and Welland : a history of the city of Welland : the beginning years, A.M.W Publications, 1997. ISBN 0968274307.
  • Lewis, William H. Aqueduct Merrittsville and Welland : a history of the city of Welland, volume 2 : the continuing years, A.M.W Publications, 2000. ISBN 0968274315.
  • Lewis, William H. Aqueduct Merrittsville and Welland : a history of the city of Welland, volume 3 : the 20th century, A.M.W Publications, 2003. ISBN 0968274323.
  • Welland Public Library's Local History Resources
  • History of Industry in Welland



North: Pelham, Thorold
West: Pelham, Wainfleet
Welland East: Niagara Falls
South: Wainfleet, Port Colborne
pl:Welland (Ontario)

pt:Welland