Early history and naming Smiths Falls was incorporated first as a village in 1854, and then as a town in 1882. It is named after Thomas Smyth, an Irish born
United Empire Loyalist (abt. 1758-1832) who in 1786 was granted in what is present-day Smiths Falls. He served as. Lieutenant in
Sir John Johnson’s
King's Royal Regiment of New York and later as Major in the
Leeds Militia. The
Heritage House Museum (c. 1862), also known as the Ward House, was designated under the
Ontario Heritage Act in 1977. In about 1920, the town council voted to change the name from Smith's Falls to Smiths Falls, and this spelling entered general use, but in 1967 the
Ontario Municipal Board stated that it was not official and the town's legal documents must use the spelling Smith's Falls found in the 1882
order-in-council of incorporation. The town then applied to the provincial government for an official change to Smiths Falls, and in 1968 the legislature granted the change by private bill.
Building of the Rideau Canal in Smiths Falls At the time of construction of the Rideau Canal a small settlement had been established around a mill operated by Abel Russell Ward, who had bought Smyth's land.
Colonel By ordered the removal of Ward's mill to make way for the canal. He settled with Ward for £1,500, one of the largest claims made by mill owners on the canal. The disruption of industry caused by the building of the canal was only temporary, and Smiths Falls grew rapidly following construction. An article in ''Smith's Gazetteer'' in 1846 described the town as a "flourishing little village pleasantly situated on the Rideau River and on the Canal, from
Perth. It contains about 700 inhabitants. There are fifty dwellings, two grist mills (one with four run of stones), two sawmills, one carding and fulling mill, seven stores, six groceries, one axe factory, six blacksmiths, two wheelwrights, one cabinet maker, one chair-maker, three carpenters, one gunsmith, eleven shoemakers, seven tailors, one tinsmith and two taverns." A drop in less than posed an obstacle to navigation at Smiths Falls. A natural depression to the south of the river was used to create a flight of three locks, known as Combined Lockstation today. The natural course of the river was dammed to create a basin upstream of the locks. At the upper end of the basin a fourth (detached) lock was constructed. below the Combined Lockstation is a flight of two locks called the Old Slys Lockstation. This station is named for the original settler at this location, William Sly. A dam and waste
weir control water levels upstream of the locks. Defensible lockmasters' houses were built at all three stations in Smiths Falls. The house at Old Slys was built in 1838 and the houses at Combined and Detached around 1842. Only the house at Combined has a second storey, which was added late in the 19th century. The defensible lockmaster's house at Detached Lockstation was torn down in 1894.
Entry of the railways , a
Canadian National Historic Site In the 1850s the major railway companies were looking to build main trunk lines linking
Toronto,
Kingston and
Montreal. The two major companies at the time, the
Canadian Pacific Railway and the
Grand Trunk Railway, were competing for the easiest routes to lay track. At one point a fledgling third national railway, the
Canadian Northern Railway (CNoR), was also trying to squeeze itself into the busy
Montréal-Ottawa-
Toronto corridor. For a number of geographical reasons, and also due to the proximity of the Rideau Canal, the town of Smiths Falls became a major focal point for both the CPR and the CNoR. Each used a mix of existing regional rail lines and new construction to build their networks. CP purchased the 1859-era
Brockville and Ottawa Railway, a line from
Brockville-Smiths Falls-
Sand Point/Arnprior with a branch Smiths Falls-
Perth (the latter joining CP's
Ontario and Quebec Railway line to
Toronto). CNoR built a 1914-era main line from
Ottawa-Smiths Falls-
Sydenham (to join an existing
Bay of Quinte Railway line extending westward via Napanee-Deseronto). By 1887, the CPR had extended its Toronto-Smiths Falls mainline to reach
Montréal; in 1924, 1600 CPR workers were employed in Smiths Falls. This gave the town direct rail lines in half a dozen directions (towards Toronto, Ottawa, Montréal, Brockville, Napanee and Arnprior) on two different rail companies. During World War II,
Axis prisoners of war (POWs) were transported to Canadian POW camps via the railway. It was near Smiths Falls that German soldier
Oberleutnant Franz von Werra jumped from a POW train and escaped to the United States, eventually reaching his homeland. Von Werra was, reputedly, the only escaped Axis POW to successfully return home during the war and his story was told in the book and film entitled
The One That Got Away. The North American première of the film occurred on Thursday, 6 March 1958 at the Soper Theatre in Smiths Falls. Both the
Canadian Pacific and the
Canadian Northern (later part of
Canadian National) had established stations in the town, however, with the creation of
Via Rail, the CN station was abandoned and all passenger traffic routed through the CPR station until a new
Smiths Falls railway station opened in 2010. The CN station has been renovated and is now home to the
Railway Museum of Eastern Ontario. The railway station, along with the nearby railway
bascule bridge, comprise the town's two
National Historic Sites of Canada. The
Cataraqui Trail now follows the former CN railbed southwest from Smiths Falls, starting from a parking lot at the end of Ferrara Drive. ==Demographics==