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Avondale, Newfoundland and Labrador

Avondale, Newfoundland and Labrador

FieldValue
official_nameAvondale
native_name
settlement_typeTown
image_skylineNLA Avondale tango7174.jpg
image_captionRiver flow toward Conception Bay
image_shieldCoat of arms of Avondale, Newfoundland and Labrador.svg
pushpin_mapNewfoundland
pushpin_label_positionleft
pushpin_map_captionLocation of Avondale in Newfoundland
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1
subdivision_type3Census division
subdivision_name31
established_title
established_title2
established_title3
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameOwen Mahoney
leader_name1Owen Mahoney
leader_title2
area_footnotes
area_land_km229.98
population_as_of2021
population_footnotes
population_total584
population_density_km221.4
timezoneNewfoundland Time
utc_offset-3:30
timezone_DSTNewfoundland Daylight
utc_offset_DST-2:30
coordinates
elevation_footnotes
postal_code_type
postal_code
area_code709
blank_nameHighways
blank_info

Avondale is a town located on Newfoundland's Avalon Peninsula in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada, which was incorporated in 1974. The community is situated at the southwestern head of Conception Bay in Division 1. It is located 59 km southwest of St. John's and 72 km northeast of Placentia.

Up to 1897, the community was known as Salmon Cove, but was renamed to avoid confusion with two other nearby communities of the same name in the Port de Grave and Brigus Districts. The name Avondale was suggested by the parish priest Rev John Roe because of the resemblance to his native area in Ireland, taking the name from Thomas Moore's poem, "The Meeting of the Waters". Earliest record of settlement per Fishing Room Grants is for John Mahaney in 1773, a census of 1812 reports 12 inhabitants. Settlers to the area were primarily Irish Roman Catholic with a smaller number of Jersey French and English. Avondale incorporated the communities of Salmon Cove, Gasters, Northern Arm, and Southern Arm.

In addition to the railway station, it the town hosted a post office, a money order office, and one church. It functioned as a lumbering, fishing and farming settlement in what was known as the Harbour Main District. The population dwindled in the early 1900s as men began migrating to the eastern US (Boston and New York) to find work.

Its first postmaster was Edward Kennedy who came to the area in 1889 after the railway was built.

Avondale Railway Station Registered Heritage Structure

Circa 1865, the Anglo American Telegraph Company set up a repeater station in Avondale.

In 1881, the Newfoundland Railway conducted a survey of the land and planning preparations were started for constructing a railway out to Harbour Grace, in which Salmon Cove was seen as a convenient place for a station. The extant building, a two-storey Second Empire style building with an attached warehouse,. was likely constructed in this period.

Upon completion of the main railway line in 1898, the Reid Newfoundland Company took over the existing railway. It was used as a passenger and freight station.

A photo of a run-down looking railway station building, with windows boarded over
Avondale Railway Station prior to restoration, circa 1988.

In 1923 the Newfoundland Government took over the railway with the 1923 Railway Settlement Act, where the Government acquired the railway, coastal bats, and dry dock from the Reid Newfoundland Company for $2 million. The Avondale Railway Station then became a part of the Newfoundland Railway once again. In 1931 it was finalized for the post offices and telegraph stations to be managed by Newfoundland Railway agents; the Avondale office was taken over on December 15.

The Canadian National Railway took over from the Newfoundland Railway in 1949 when Newfoundland joined the Canadian Confederation. The Avondale Railway Station was managed by CN until 1984. The last train to run in Newfoundland was on September 20, 1988 and less than a month later CN started tearing up the tracks, finishing in 1990 (see: Terra Transport). The rails were sold for scrap and the rolling stock was retired, scrapped, or sold.

Concerned about the potential loss of railway history, the Avondale Heritage Foundation applied to keep a section of their track. They had not received any sort of reply to their application until workers came to tear up the tracks. The people of the community decided they would protest the removal of the tracks, by sitting on them as trucks and bulldozers moved around them. Determination won in the end and the Avondale Railway Station came to an agreement to officially keep a small part of the tracks.

The Avondale railway station was designated a Registered Heritage Structure by the Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador in 1988. It was subsequently restored, and received the Manning Award for the “Public Presentation of Historic Places in Newfoundland and Labrador.” As of 2025, it was preserved along with a small display of retired railway cars and a locomotive.

Demographics

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Avondale had a population of living in of its total private dwellings, a change of from its 2016 population of . With a land area of 29.69 km2, it had a population density of in 2021. Avondale has lost approximately one third of its population since 1976 when it numbered 937 residents.

Land Area29.98 km²
South: Subdivision 1O

References

References

  1. (8 February 2017). "Census Profile, 2016 Census: Avondale, Town [Census subdivision], Newfoundland and Labrador". Statistics Canada.
  2. (1981). "Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and Labrador". Newfoundland Book Publishers (1967) Ltd..
  3. Tuck, Emlyn. (July 2023). "Avondale Railway Station". Heritage NL Fieldnotes Series.
  4. The Evening Telegram. (February 17, 1881). "The Governor's Speech". The Evening Telegram.
  5. Tuck, Emlyn. (August 2023). "Avondale Railway Station Research". Heritage Update.
  6. Cuff, Robert. (2001). "The Reid Newfoundland Company".
  7. Historic Places Canada. (October 1, 2005). "Avondale Railway Station".
  8. Cuff, Robert. (2001). "The Railway Settlement Act & the Newfoundland Government Railway (1920-49)".
  9. (December 26, 1931). "Railway takes over Post Tel. Offices". The Newfoundland Weekly.
  10. Heritage NL. (June 29, 2023). "Avondale Railway Station Registered Heritage Structure".
  11. Collier, Keith. (2010). "Roads for Rails: The Closure of the Newfoundland Railway".
  12. Mullaly, Kris. (February 2000). "Up the Line: Remembering the Newfie Bullet in Avondale". Downhome.
  13. (February 9, 2022). "Population and dwelling counts: Canada, provinces and territories, census divisions and census subdivisions (municipalities), Newfoundland and Labrador". [[Statistics Canada]].
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