Channel-Port aux Basques (also Port aux Basques) is a town at the extreme southwestern tip of the island of Newfoundland fronting on the eastern end of the Cabot Strait. A Marine Atlantic ferry terminal is located in the town which is the primary entry point onto the island of Newfoundland and the western terminus of the Trans-Canada Highway in the province. The town was incorporated in 1945 and the current population (2001) is about 4,637.
Port aux Basques is the oldest of the collection of villages that make up the present-day town, which consists of Port aux Basques, Channel, Grand Bay, and Mouse Island. Amalgamation took place in the 1970s.
In 1893 it was decided to extend the western terminus of the Newfoundland Railway, then under construction west from the Avalon Peninsula by Robert G. Reid, from St. Georges to Port aux Basques harbour. By 1897 the tracks reached Port aux Basques, although the harbour facilities had not been built at that time to handle the steamer Bruce which had been built in Scotland and had arrived in Newfoundland several months earlier. Instead, while Port aux Basques harbour was having docks built, the Bruce operated from October, 1897 until June, 1898 between Little Placentia to North Sydney, Nova Scotia.
Under CNR, Port aux Basques was expanded in the 1950s with the construction of new dock facilities and the arrival of newer and larger ships such as the William Carson. Extensive blasting of rock created large railyards with extensive dual-gauge trackage. This rock was then used as fill to create the required docks. By the mid-1960s, new railcar-capable ferries such as the Frederick Carter permitted the exchange of railcars requiring further expansion at the Port aux Basques terminal facilities.
The mid-1960s also saw the completion of the Trans-Canada Highway across Newfoundland, an event that forecast the death of the railway which would be abandoned by 1988, but which made Port aux Basques into an even more important gateway to the island of Newfoundland for increased number of tourists visiting the province, and the rising amount of truck traffic. New Ro-Pax (roll-on, roll-off, vehicle/passenger) capable vessels were commissioned and/or chartered during the 1960s-1980s to meet the growing demand, such as the Marine Nautica, Marine Atlantica, Marine Evangeline, Ambrose Shea, and John Hamilton Gray.
With the abandonment of the railway, extensive rebuilding of Port aux Basques terminal resulted in expansive marshalling areas for waiting motor vehicle traffic. A plant disease inspection station is located near a modern rebuilt railway station which is now used as a passenger terminal for the ferry service operated by Marine Atlantic, which was renamed from CN Marine in 1986. Port aux Basques harbour hosts the arrival of the two largest icebreaking ferries in the world, the Caribou and Joseph and Clara Smallwood, as well as other passenger and cargo vessels.
Coastal towns in Canada | Communities in Newfoundland and Labrador
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