Thank you for visiting Welland, Ontario travel guide online
Welland is an ideal destination for any type of traveler. Located in Ontario, it has something for everyone! Our travel guide has the best information about Welland regarding places to visit, things to see and do, accommodations, dining, and much more! When visiting Ontario, you will find that the shopping, night life, and beautiful scenery has some of the top standards in the country, and will definitely leave you wanting to come visit this city again. Take a look at our Canadian listings and find all the information you need about Welland, and all its surrounding cities and travel spots. So don't waste another minute, and starting planning your vacation to Welland!
The City of Welland is situated nearly in the middle between Lakes Erie and Ontario, on the Welland Ship Canal. The city is conveniently located in the very centre of the Niagara Region and it takes about 75 minutes to get to Toronto and 30 minutes to Buffalo, New York, by excellent highways. The city is also served by multiple railroads – Norfolk and Western; Toronto, Hamilton & Buffalo; Canadian National and Consolidated Rail Corporation Railroads. Besides, the city has a perfect dockage facility of the Welland Canal. Considering the city’s transportation facilities and the availability of electrical power, it’s no surprise that it became a remarkable manufacturing centre, housing large textile, rubber, electrical equipment, iron and steel industries.
Welland also offers lots of benefits to its visitors, with parks, fine business section, miles of paved streets, and well-established education services, which include Niagara College of Applied Arts & Technology. The City of Welland comes from a settlement established around the 1788, when many farms scattered between today’s South Pelham Street and Quaker Road, along the Welland River, appeared. Near the city’s eastern border, on Lyons Creek Road, there’s a plain and unpretentious cairn, marking the very interesting episode in the continent’s history. The cairn marks the place where over 150 years ago the forces of the US and Canada met each other in armed conflict for the last time.
It was the Battle of Cooks Mills, which closed an era of enmity and suspicion, but started another era – of peace, goodwill and understanding. Loyalists named the Cook Brothers came from Pennsylvania to establish their flour mills on Lyons Creek at the period of the first settlements in the region, the last year of the war 1814. That year the aggressors had burned down the ancient capital Niagara and Fort Erie opposite Buffalo. In the middle of October, a tiny army came from the fort to take all the grain and flour from Cooks Mills, but it was met by the Canadian forces under the Marquis of Tweedale. The fight took 2 days but didn’t bring any decisive results. The next day the Americans retreated back to the fort to cross the Niagara to Buffalo, thus ending the war.
