Where Gumbo Was #342
Gumbo was found at McAdam Station in New Brunswick, Canada Congratuations, in order of correct guesses received, goes to PortMoresby and George G!
The Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) began construction of this station/hotel in 1900 from local granite in the Chateau style. There was an addition put on in 1910. It was a train station with a 20 room hotel, dining room ,huge lunch counter, customs, dormitories and a CPR jail.
It was commissioned by the President of the CPR, Sir William Van Horne, as a way to cater to wealthy passengers that were changing trains for the resort town of St Andrews. They often were going tot CPR’s hotel, The Algonquin. Van Horne also had an estate in St Andrews at Minister’s Island.
During the early 20th Century,McAdam was the principal junction for trains traveling east and west between Montreal and the Maritimes and north and south from St Stephen to Edmundston. It also moved people in and out the US’s Eastern Seaborn States. Lots of troops going to war went through McAdam.
16 passenger trains went through and up to 2000 people a day ate at the lunch counter at the stations peak. And because of the steam engines, all trains stopped at McAdam to be serviced with the stations man made pond. And being the first stop into Canada from the US, people went through customs too.
The station slowly lost its passenger trains when trains became diesel and the last passenger train ran in the 1990’s. Now you only get freight trains running through.
McAdam is an architectural gem but what makes the station incredible is the history and the stories of what happened there and the surrounding area.