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Nairn and Hyman is a township in the Canadian province of Ontario. The township, located in the Sudbury District, borders on the southwestern city limits of Greater Sudbury. The township had a population of 342 in the Canada 2016 Census.

The township contains the communities of Nairn Centre and Prospect Hill.

History
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 Georgian Bay 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.

With its strong base as a railway town, the area developed a significant logging industry which employed many local 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, was quickly as by 1923 most of the pine in the area had been logged out, and logging operations shifted elsewhere, putting up to 1000 men out of work, and causing the town's population to steeply decline.

The town's fortunes changed by the late 1940s, as lumber industrialist Benjamin F. Merwin under his Pineland Timber Company moved into the area, building a modern sawmill and landing lucrative contracts for mining timbers with companies such as Inco. The mill was quickly upgraded and expanded throughout the late 1940s and early 1950s, and Merwin appointed his son, Bud, as superintendent of Nairn operations. In 1962, the Pineland company was sold to KVP and Inco.

Another raft of changes occurred in the 1960s under KVP management. Previously, the mill had been operated seasonally in the summer, but transitioned to year-round operations. The mill's waste operations, which involved simply burning mill waste at a dump site near the town, caused significant air pollution and environmental degradation to the area, and to alleviate these issues, a modern burner was installed north of the mill. In 1962, the mill's workforce was unionized under Lumber and Sawmill Worker's Union (LSWU) Local 2537, and standardized pay grades were established. All of these changes created a stronger sense of permanence for the mill, and economic stability for the town.

Things would continue to change at the mill throughout the next few decades. In 1969, KVP was purchased by Brown Forest Industry, which sold off its Espanola and area operations to the E.B. Eddy Company, and E.B. Eddy once again modernized and upgraded the mill, increasing output from 90,000,000 FBM in 1980 to 135,000,000 in 1984. By 1995, the mill had a workforce of 317 and produced 190,000,000 FBM of lumber. Today the mill still operates and is owned by EACOM Timber Corporation.

Economy
Nairn's primary economic activity has always been logging and milling, and the lumber mill there is today owned and operated by EACOM Timber Corporation. There was some minor agricultural activity in the township in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, but this has since declined. The Nairn Falls Dam and Generating Plant, built in 1915, was once a source of employment for some people in the town, but has since become almost entirely automated.

The town is home to two local businesses involved in construction and transportation, OCL Trucking and Excavating and T. Bell Transport, which both operate gravel pits in the area.

Nairn's historic commercial area, centred around the railway station and the intersection of Front and Hall Streets, once featured three hotels, a general store, and a post office. It began to decline after the first half of the 20th century, and the former commercial buildings have mostly been converted into private homes. The last surviving business establishment in this area is the post office.

As the old commercial area declined, a new southern commercial area began to develop starting in the late 1940s, after the new Highway 17 route was constructed around 1947. This began with the relocation of an existing business, Al's Inn, from the junction of MacIntyre and Minto Streets to a new location where Front Street intersected with the new Highway 17. This business changed names and owners a number of times, as Bob's BA Service Station from 1952-79, the Rainbow Diner from 1979, then the Rainbow Truck Stop, and now Jeremy's Truck Stop. As well, the site of the former town park, also adjacent to the new Highway 17, was redeveloped into a Texaco gas station. The site was later redeveloped again as the Busy Bee, a large roadhouse-style restaurant which opened in 1994. After a fire and financial problems, this restaurant closed and is currently abandoned. A new general store, Laurier's Convenience Store, was constructed on Smith Street south of the highway, but was only open briefly and is now closed.

Today, the primary commercial area in the township is centred around Highway 17 and lies to the southwest of the residential area, and includes Jeremy's Truck Stop (and adjacent Esso station), OCL Trucking and Excavating, and T. Bell Transport.

Transportation
Ontario Highway 17 bypasses most of residential Nairn to the south, though there are a number of highway-based businesses that serve travellers. The old Highway 17 route has largely been converted into municipal roads and runs directly through the town.

The Huron Central Railway (HCRY) operates an active freight line that passes through the old downtown area of Nairn, which is now largely residential. This line is also known as the CPR Webbwood Subdivision, as the HCRY operates along the line on a lease from the CPR. Remnants of the now-abandoned Algoma Eastern Railway are visible in the area, as it passed to the north of Nairn near Vale's Nairn Falls Dam and Generating Plant, then dipped to the south to cross over the CPR line to the west of the town.

Greyhound Canada once operated intercity bus service to Nairn starting in at least the 1960s, but this service was permanently cancelled in 2018.

In 2018, Ontario Northland announced a major expansion of its motor coach services west of Sudbury, which included a flag stop at Nairn Centre. Passengers may board buses headed toward Sault Ste. Marie, Manitoulin Island, or Sudbury.

Utilities
The community has a piped water system, which was installed in 1995.

Healthcare
There is a medical clinic and pharmacy in Nairn Centre. The nearest hospital is in Espanola.

Reading Camp
Nairn is historically notable as the place where Alfred Fitzpatrick, then the local Presbyterian minister, created a Reading Camp in 1899 in order to teach literacy to local lumber workers. This would grow into the Labourer-Teacher movement, where ordinary workers living and working in remote lumber camps and communities would teach literacy to their fellow workers in a peer fashion. This revolutionary educational movement ran counter to many contemporary ideas around education, but was wildly successful and later grew into Frontier College, a decentralized literacy organization which is now based in Toronto. Fitzpatrick's Reading Camp is today commemorated with a sign placed at the entrance to Nairn Centre along Highway 17.

Public school
A small log schoolhouse was constructed on Front Street by the early settlers in 1895. This schoolhouse was the site of the first town meeting in 1896. By 1925, the school had sixty students, and the decision was made to hire a second teacher and split the school into two classes, which were initially separated only by a curtain. By 1926, the existing school had been renovated and expanded into a new two-room school, which incorporated parts of the original structure. This new school featured two entirely separate classrooms, as well as a large basement containing the teachers' room and boys' and girls' play rooms for the students, along with the furnace and coal room. By this time it was known as the Nairn Public School.

By 1965, the school had once again become too small for the student population, so the facilities were again renovated with the addition of a third classroom in the basement, taking the place of the old boys' play area. This would soon change, however, as a new school was constructed and would open in 1966. With its attached gymnasium, the new school was also able to function as a community space.

Soon, however, the school was affected by a wave of school closures and school board amalgamations that began to take place across Northeastern Ontario in the 1960s. In 1966, the school at Beaver Lake closed, and students there were bused to Nairn Public School, rather than to the R.H. Murray Public School in Whitefish. This caused overcrowding issues, and the gymnasium had to double as a classroom. The student population grew again in 1969 as the school's catchment area grew to include the village of High Falls, so an expansion to the new building took place. This expansion was completed in 1970, and included two new classrooms, lunch and storage rooms, a principal's office, and a library. However, the lunch room was quickly converted into a kindergarten space, and the storage room became a special education room.

In 1983-84, the school population reached its historic height of over 180 students, but enrollment was beginning to decline. Still, the school was expanded for the final time, to include a new library and principal's office, purpose-built special education room, and a staff room. By its 100th anniversary in 1995, the school population had decreased dramatically, with some areas of the building left in disuse, and by 1999 the school had closed. The school building is currently abandoned, and students are bused to Espanola.