Indigenous people have inhabited the Lake Huron north shore and Manitoulin area for millennia, and historically used the nearby
Spanish (
Skiminitigan in
Ojibwe) and
Vermilion rivers as transportation and economic corridors which connected
Lake Huron's
North Channel with the interior to the north (through the Spanish) and through the river system around
Lake Wanapitei, ultimately to the Ottawa River (through the Vermilion). The non-indigenous communities in the township were a result of the
Canadian Pacific Railway's development of its Algoma extension from Sudbury to Sault Ste. Marie in the 1880s. The first two buildings in the town were its CPR station and
section house, which housed CPR employees. During this time, the railway station was known as Nelson, and the nearby town known as Nelsonville to local people. The unofficial community around the station grew rapidly, and by the 1890s had got its first general store at the intersection of Hall and Front streets, which was built out of logs. After a few years, however, early attempts were made to create an official township under the name Nairn, which was chosen after a railway engineer's hometown of
Nairn,
Scotland. In 1896, the township was officially chartered as a municipality formed from the geographic townships of Nairn, Lorne, and Hyman, and a
reeve and municipal councillors were elected. In lieu of a town hall, the municipal council initially met at the town's
Foresters hall until 1905, then a local hotel (which was owned by the first town clerk) until 1909, and afterward at the town jail; the Foresters hall was destroyed by a fire around 1916. Today, the town hall and community centre building is located on MacIntyre Street, on the site of the former town jail. 18 or 19 enlisted in the
Second World War, with two killed:
L/Cpl Lloyd Martin (
Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders of Canada), who was killed in the
Netherlands in 1945 and is buried in the
Groesbeek Canadian War Cemetery, and
Flying Officer James Smith (
Royal Canadian Air Force), who was killed in 1944 and is buried in the
Harrogate (Stonefall) Commonwealth War Graves Commission Cemetery,
Harrogate,
Yorkshire,
England. With its strong base as a
railway town, Nairn developed a significant logging industry which employed many people, and the population grew quickly. Multiple logging companies had operations in the town, with warehouses next to the town's CPR siding, where companies would distribute supplies to logging camps throughout the area; the logs themselves were moved using the Spanish and Vermilion rivers. The town's growth, however, began to slow during the 1920s, as by 1923 most of the pine in the area had been logged out. Logging operations shifted elsewhere, putting up to 1000 men out of work, and causing the town's population to steeply decline. During the
Great Depression, a
relief office was opened, and many residents survived on government relief payments. Several public works projects were undertaken to create temporary employment, such as replacement of the town's original wooden sidewalks with cement, as well as road improvements. This road work improved access to the town, and was eventually followed by the construction of the current Highway 17 around 1947. passenger service was reduced to a single train per direction per day by 1970, and
Greyhound bus service grew in popularity during the 1950s. The focus of development in the town in recent decades has increasingly been on improving infrastructure and local services in the hopes of attracting new residents, and functioning largely as a residential community with significant industrial activity throughout the township relative to its population, with some remaining commercial activity remaining in the form of the truck stop. == Demographics ==