14.11.2014 Views

Download PDF - Whatsupmuskoka.com

Download PDF - Whatsupmuskoka.com

Download PDF - Whatsupmuskoka.com

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

By Ken Veitch<br />

The Old Station Restaurant, celebrating<br />

its 25th anniversary in 2010, can lay<br />

claim to being located on one of the most<br />

historic sites in all of Bracebridge.<br />

It is located at the top of “Queens<br />

Hill,” so named because across the street<br />

and down the hill was, for many years,<br />

the Queens Hotel, later the Patterson<br />

Hotel. It is now being restored.<br />

The property occupied by The Old<br />

Station Restaurant, the adjoining property<br />

of the Bracebridge Public Library and<br />

the V shaped property south of the<br />

Dominion and Manitoba Street intersection,<br />

in the earliest days was a town park.<br />

It was in this park where the original<br />

Bracebridge bandstand was located,<br />

moved shortly after 1900 to a new park<br />

named, as it remains today, Memorial<br />

Park. The most memorable events that<br />

took place on this property were circuses.<br />

In Reminiscences, Redmond Thomas<br />

wrote about riding a steam-powered<br />

merry-go-round, watching minstrel<br />

shows by the light of coal oil flares and<br />

listening to spielers rave on and on about<br />

their secret oil. All that took place on the<br />

property occupied by The Old Station<br />

Restaurant and surrounding area.<br />

We think the Queens Hill is steep now,<br />

but when Bracebridge was a pioneer settlement,<br />

it was much steeper. During<br />

excavation for municipal services cut tree<br />

stumps have been found over 10 feet<br />

below the surface at the bottom of the<br />

hill. In fact, it was so steep that people<br />

rarely attempted to walk up the west side<br />

of Manitoba Street.<br />

In early records, a wooden structure is<br />

said to have been located west of the<br />

Manitoba and Dominion Street intersection<br />

that housed the manufacturing<br />

operation of the Rogers Pump Works,<br />

which made long-handled manual<br />

pumps for pulling water from the dug<br />

wells of the <strong>com</strong>munity. A number of<br />

Advertising Feature<br />

The Old Station Restaurant has a rich history<br />

In the early 1930’s this station was at the Old Station Restaurant site.<br />

these pumps were located on Woodchester<br />

Avenue prior to the installation of<br />

the municipal water supply. This may<br />

not have been on the same lot as that of<br />

The Old Station Restaurant, but it had to<br />

be very close.<br />

In 1928 J. Hudson Burton bought the<br />

property of a Mr. Nelson and added 14<br />

feet to it which he purchased from the<br />

town (part of the Public Library property),<br />

for the purpose of building a service<br />

Photograph: Courtesy of Dorothy (Smith) Leavens<br />

station. The structure was built by Ed<br />

Hunt and the business was operated by<br />

Burton’s son Douglas. This was the first<br />

evidence of a substantial building being<br />

on property now occupied by The Old<br />

Station Restaurant.<br />

In 1975, a Town centennial program<br />

identifying long-time businesses recorded<br />

there had been a service station continuously<br />

on this property since 1929.<br />

The Uptown Service Station, came<br />

under the ownership of Earl Rosewarne<br />

and then Ernie and Fenton Patterson. At<br />

one time they sold Studebaker automobiles<br />

there. These business entrepreneurs<br />

were successful, involved, and an integral<br />

part of Bracebridge economic affairs.<br />

After many years, the business was<br />

taken over by Ted Smith, a long-time and<br />

trusted employee of the Patterson brothers.<br />

An entire generation can remember<br />

wheeling their first car in between the<br />

concrete pillars and the front of the<br />

building where the old fashioned gas<br />

pumps were located and having Ted<br />

Smith there to serve them fuel.<br />

In 1980 the business closed and the<br />

building was converted to the Garden<br />

Café restaurant. In 1985 it was sold to<br />

Mike Warr, who has successfully operated<br />

since that time, now celebrating the<br />

restaurant’s 25th anniversary.<br />

The Norwood Theatre<br />

★ ★ ★ ★ ★<br />

Congratulations to<br />

Since 1949<br />

THE OLD STATION RESTAURANT<br />

on your 25th Anniversary!<br />

Wishing you continued success<br />

106 Manitoba Street Bracebridge, ON<br />

boxoffice@norwoodtheatre.<strong>com</strong> ★ www.norwoodtheatre.<strong>com</strong><br />

admin: 705.645.1707 ★ 24-HOUR INFO: 705.645.2333<br />

In 1968, this gas station operated where the restaurant is today.<br />

Photograph: Courtesy of the Old Station Restaurant<br />

Congratulations to<br />

The Old Station Restaurant<br />

on 25 years of success!<br />

phone: (416) 746-3663 • toll free: 1-888-383-3663<br />

www.macgregors.<strong>com</strong><br />

Flanagan Foodservice is a proud supplier to<br />

The Old Station and congratulate Mike and<br />

staff on their 25th anniversary.<br />

2125 16th Ave East,<br />

Owen Sound, ON<br />

800.265.9690<br />

16 May 2010 www.whatsupmuskoka.<strong>com</strong>

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!