Espanola, Ontario
This article relies largely or entirely upon a single source. (December 2008) |
Espanola | |
---|---|
Town | |
Spanish River and Domtar mill in Espanola | |
|
|
Coordinates: 46°15′N 81°46′W / 46.250°N 81.767°WCoordinates: 46°15′N 81°46′W / 46.250°N 81.767°W | |
Country | Canada |
Province | Ontario |
District | Sudbury |
Settled | 1900s |
Incorporated | 1958 |
Government | |
• Type | Town |
• Mayor | Mike Lehoux |
• MP | Carol Hughes (NDP) |
• MPP | Michael Mantha (NDP) |
Area[1] | |
• Land | 82.44 km2 (31.83 sq mi) |
Population (2011)[1] | |
• Total | 5,364 |
• Density | 65.1/km2 (169/sq mi) |
Time zone | EST (UTC-5) |
• Summer (DST) | EDT (UTC-4) |
Postal code span | P5E |
Area code(s) | 705 |
Website | www.espanola.ca/ |
Espanola (2011 census population 5,364) is a town in Northern Ontario, Canada, and is the seat of Sudbury District. It is situated on the Spanish River, approximately 70 kilometres west of downtown Sudbury, and just south of the junction of Highway 6 and Highway 17.
Contents
History[edit]
The name "Espanola" has been attributed to a story which dates back to the mid 18th century. The story goes that a First Nations Ojibwa tribe of the area sent a raiding party a long distance to the south and brought back with them a white woman who spoke Spanish. The woman married a local Annishnabeg (First Nations) of a family living near the mouth of the river and taught her children to speak Spanish. Later, when the French Voyageurs and Coureur des bois came upon the settlement and heard fragments of Spanish spoken by the local natives, they remarked "Espagnole", which had been later anglicized to "Espanola", and the river was named the Spanish River.
Espanola was founded in the early 1900s as a company town for the employees of the Spanish River Pulp and Paper company, which opened a pulp and paper mill there. The town expanded quickly becoming a bustling company town with a hotel, school and theatre. On January 21, 1910, a Canadian Pacific Railway passenger train derailed off a trestle 10 km. east of Espanola. Forty-three people died from the railcar's 27-foot plunge into the icy water of the Spanish River. It was one of the CPR's worst railway accidents.
In 1930, the mill was closed due to the Great Depression, and Espanola became a ghost town until the Second World War, when the mill site became a camp for German prisoners of war. In 1946, the paper mill was reopened by the now defunct "Kalamazoo Vegetable Parchment Company" (KVP), producing specialty kraft paper.
Espanola was officially incorporated as a town on March 1, 1958.
In 1966 KVP was bought by Brown Forest Industries, a division of Charles Bluhdorn's industrial conglomerate Gulf and Western Industries. The Brown Forest Industries operation was later sold to E.B. Eddy, who operated the mill until June 1998. Now owned by Domtar, it continues to be the town's largest employer.
The 1969 CBC Television series Adventures in Rainbow Country was filmed near Espanola, near the small First Nations community of Birch Island and at Whitefish Falls. The series starred Lois Maxwell, the actress who played "Miss Moneypenny" in Bond films such as Dr. No and Goldfinger. Canadian-born, she was a long-time resident of the town.
Espanola got some negative press in the early 1980s when the mill accidentally discharged toxic effluent into the Spanish River, killing fish by the thousands. The spill acted like a flush, and when the fish came back a few years later, they were reportedly untainted and thriving, although the toxic smell still remained. Now the mill is said to be one of the most stringent "zero-emissions" pulp bleaching processes in the world, and the area below the Spanish River Dam is a designated fish sanctuary.
In 2001, a group of volunteers staged a fundraiser for the local hospital by attempting to set a world record for the world's longest ice hockey game. They were successful, playing for over three days straight. The record was broken in April 2004 in nearby Sudbury, where the teams played for six hours longer. Currently, the record holders are team Hope and team Cure from Sherwood Park near Edmonton, Alberta.[2] who have played for 10 days straight.
Demographics[edit]
Population trend:[3]
- Population in 2011: 5364 (2006 to 2011 population change: 0.9%)
- Population in 2006: 5314
- Population in 2001: 5449
- Population in 1996: 5454
- Population in 1991: 5527
Public services[edit]
Espanola's three primary schools, A.B. Ellis Public School, Sacred Heart School (Roman Catholic), and École St. Joseph (French Roman Catholic), and two secondary schools, Espanola High School and École secondaire catholique Franco-Ouest, service the local students, as well as those from surrounding communities such as Massey, Webbwood, McKerrow, Nairn Centre, Willisville, Whitefish Falls, Walford and Birch Island.
In 1999 a modern recreation complex was constructed, replacing the aging arena and community swimming pool.
Media[edit]
Radio[edit]
- FM 94.1 - CKNR, Moose FM
- FM 94.9 - CBON-7, Première Chaîne
- FM 99.3 - CJJM, Moose FM (new as of fall 2010)
Television[edit]
- Channel 4: CBLFT-TV-7, SRC
- Channel 49: CICO-TV-71, TVOntario
Print[edit]
Espanola is home to the Mid-North Monitor, a weekly community newspaper.
Notable people[edit]
- NHLers/AHLers Art Gauthier, Leo Lamoureux and Al Secord.
- Former Canadian steeplechase record-holder Greg Duhaime was born here.
- Jim Gordon, a longtime mayor of Sudbury, lived in Espanola for a number of years in the 1960s and served on the town council before moving to Sudbury.
- Pte. David Byers, a soldier of the Canadian Forces, who died in Afghanistan on September 18, 2006.
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ a b 2011 Census Profile
- ^ http://www.worldslongestgame.com/Default.aspx?tabid=33
- ^ Statistics Canada: 1996, 2001, 2006, 2011 census
- Espanola on the Spanish, by George R. Morrison (1989)
External links[edit]
|
Baldwin | Nairn and Hyman | ||
Sables-Spanish Rivers | Unorganized Sudbury District | |||
|
||||
Unorganized Sudbury District |
|