The township is perhaps best known for being the home of Winnie the Pooh. In August 1914, a trapped Black Bearcub named Winnie was sold to Captain Harry Colebourn in White River, who named it after his hometown, Winnipeg. Over the years, the animal became the basis for the popular literary character.
White River is the western terminus of the Lake Superior passenger train, which travels from Sudbury.
Climate
White River advertises itself as "The Coldest Spot in Canada" with recorded temperatures as low as - 72oF (- 58 °C). However, this is a myth as the coldest temperature in Canada has been recorded in Snag, Yukon, at - 62.8 °C on 3 February1947.1 Even in Ontario, the coldest place is Iroquois Falls at - 58.3 °C (23 January1935), which is the lowest temperature reported in Eastern Canada too.1 White River's reputation for coldest area is probably based on the fact that for many years its reported temperature was deemed "the coldest in the nation today" from the handful of stations reporting daily temperature extremes in newspapers and on radio, climatological stations data being only available monthly to Environment Canada.1
Its official weather station (closed in 1976) was located in a frost hollow but most residential areas have good air drainage and do not see temperatures much below -40o. Gardeners can keep their flowers alive into October and grow non-boreal species such as silver maple.