Due to maintenance, the Barton Branch will be closed on Wednesday, January, 7. Please visit Central Library or Kenilworth Branch for your library needs. www.hpl.ca/hours
Photocopying and Scanning is not working at Westdale Branch. We aim to fix it as soon as possible.
Daily print balances for black and white and colour printing change January 2, 2026. The new daily print balance is 40 cents. Members receive four free black and white copies or two free colour copies.
Large format and vinyl printing pricing also change on January 2. Visit https://www.hpl.ca/makerspaces for updates.
Bookmobile is off the road from December 25-27, December 31, and January 1st. Visit www.hpl.ca/bookmobile for our Holiday Schedule.
Due to the setup for the Noon Hour Concert, the Fourth Floor at Central Library will be closed on Friday, January 2. Makerspace and Newcomer Learning Centre will remain open. Floors 1-3 have spaces to work and study.
All HPL Branches close early on Wednesday, December 24 at 1pm. Visit www.hpl.ca/hours for our Holiday Schedule.
All HPL Branches close early on Wednesday, December 31 at 1pm. This includes branches with Extended Access.
All branches close on Thursday, December 25, for Christmas. This includes branches with Extended Access.
All branches close on Sunday, December 28, 2025. This includes branches with Extended Access.
All branches close on Thursday January 1 for New Years Day. This includes branches with Extended Access.
All branches close on Friday, December 26, 2025 for Boxing Day . This includes branches with Extended Access.
Branch Study Halls are paused Friday, December 19, 2025 through Monday, January 5, 2026. Central Library Study Hall hours resume Spring 2026.
www.hpl.ca/study-halls
Bring back your borrowed library items (due Oct 1 or later) within 28 days to avoid a replacement or lost fee. We'll remove the fee when you bring back your overdue items.
Greetings from Hamilton
Tourism in Hamilton
Tourists, as anyone who has ever been one can tell you, are either the life's blood or the bane of any region's existence. That much, at least, has not changed through the years, although I doubt that any Chamber of Commerce would condone such pessimism. One of the only differences one can notice between the tourists of long ago and of today is a lack of Bermuda shorts, Hawaiian shirts and Kodak cameras.
"The intensity of the cold ... has seldom been equalled ..."
Now as anyone who has ever travelled knows, one of the first things to be considered is the climate of the destination. Thomas Rolph, writing in 1841, waxed poetic over the winters, despite their length and severity. Hardly a lure for the people he is trying to persuade to come here.
"On the 19th of November, the country was for the first time this season, covered with snow, a clothing which has continued, as the ancient historians would say, 'even unto this day.' The intensity of the cold for more than four months has seldom been equalled, even in the recollection of the oldest settlers; the thermometer during that period being frequently 30 below zero. The injurious effects which must have been produced by it, have been completely counteracted by the deep snow which fell and was renewed at intervals throughout the winter, until its depth, in many places, was the cause of anticipated alarm of floods, with all their terrors, when the thaw would come."
The weather is not the only hazard noticed by tourists. The Reverend Henry Christmas noted, in 1849, that the streets were dangerous to walk on:
"The sidewalks and some of the streets are planted, as in Toronto , but not being hitherto provided with gas, as that city is, and deep drains moreover being cut on each side of the path in many places, walking about at night is really somewhat dangerous, unless you are provided with a lantern. Gradually, however, there can be no doubt that this crying evil will be mended, and the streets rendered as safe as they are in Toronto ."
He also noted another hazard when he ran into a band of Indians bringing venison to the city to sell.
"The venison, however, did not look well, it was not being "broken" after the approved art of "venerie", but hacked about in a manner that would doubtless have been highly unsatisfactory to Mr. Scrope; the heads, instead of being left on with the noble antlers, being roughly hewn off in a manner that gave some of the carcasses an uncomfortable semblance to that of a decapitated dog."







