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==Dominion Atlantic Railway Business Car, "Nova Scotia", 1912 - Present==
 
==Dominion Atlantic Railway Business Car, "Nova Scotia", 1912 - Present==
  
''Sanspareil'' was converted from a parlour car to a business car for the D.A.R. General Manager in 1912 and renamed "Nova Scotia".(2)
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''Sanspareil'' was converted from a parlour car to a business car for the D.A.R. General Manager in 1912 and renamed "Nova Scotia".(2) It was described in the CPR MP Report in 1941 as a wooden business car was built in 1896 and was 67'9-1/2" in length (after 1944 reported as 60' 8" but still built in 1896) on 6 wheel trucks. (3)
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"Nova Scotia" played a significant role in history in 1917. It was parked at the North Street Station in Halifax on the morning of Dec. 6, 1917 when the Halifax Explosion took place. The DAR's General Manager and his family were eating breakfast in "Nova Scotia" but the car sheltered them from the blast and rain of debris which killed many people in the station. The General Manager quickly made his way to Rockingham, the nearest surviving telegraph station and ordered a relief train from Kentville. It brought doctor's, nurses, supplies and rescue equipment to Halifax the afternoon of the explosion and was one of the first relief trains to arrive in Halifax.(4)
  
 
The car survives today as part of a railway themed restaurant in Orillia, Ontario. According to the Ossawippi Express restaurant site, it operated as DAR's official Car "Nova Scotia" until 1958. This car houses our offices, restrooms and reception area. (5)
 
The car survives today as part of a railway themed restaurant in Orillia, Ontario. According to the Ossawippi Express restaurant site, it operated as DAR's official Car "Nova Scotia" until 1958. This car houses our offices, restrooms and reception area. (5)
 
Listed in the C.P.R. M.P. 1941 in the D.A.R. section on page 39, this wooden car was built in 1896 and was 67'9-1/2" in length (after 1944 reported as 60' 8" but still built in 1896) on 6 wheel trucks. (3)
 
 
"Nova Scotia" played a significant role in history in 1917. It was parked at the North Street Station in Halifax on the morning of Dec. 6, 1917 when the Halifax Explosion took place. The DAR's General Manager and his family were eating breakfast in "Nova Scotia" but the car sheltered them from the blast and rain of debris which killed many people in the station. The General Manager quickly made his way to Rockingham, the nearest surviving telegraph station and ordered a relief train from Kentville. It brought doctor's, nurses, supplies and rescue equipment to Halifax the afternoon of the explosion and was one of the first relief trains to arrive in Halifax.(4)
 
  
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==

Revision as of 17:03, 20 September 2011

Dominion Atlantic Railway Pullman Parlour Car, "Sans Pareil", 1896 - 1912

The "Sans Pareil" (a French term meaning incomparible or without equal) was built in 1896 for the Dominion Atlantic Railway as a Pullman Parlour Car (at a cost, according to D.A.R. records, of $11,972).

Gallery



Dominion Atlantic Railway Business Car, "Nova Scotia", 1912 - Present

Sanspareil was converted from a parlour car to a business car for the D.A.R. General Manager in 1912 and renamed "Nova Scotia".(2) It was described in the CPR MP Report in 1941 as a wooden business car was built in 1896 and was 67'9-1/2" in length (after 1944 reported as 60' 8" but still built in 1896) on 6 wheel trucks. (3)

"Nova Scotia" played a significant role in history in 1917. It was parked at the North Street Station in Halifax on the morning of Dec. 6, 1917 when the Halifax Explosion took place. The DAR's General Manager and his family were eating breakfast in "Nova Scotia" but the car sheltered them from the blast and rain of debris which killed many people in the station. The General Manager quickly made his way to Rockingham, the nearest surviving telegraph station and ordered a relief train from Kentville. It brought doctor's, nurses, supplies and rescue equipment to Halifax the afternoon of the explosion and was one of the first relief trains to arrive in Halifax.(4)

The car survives today as part of a railway themed restaurant in Orillia, Ontario. According to the Ossawippi Express restaurant site, it operated as DAR's official Car "Nova Scotia" until 1958. This car houses our offices, restrooms and reception area. (5)

Gallery

References and Footnotes

External Links

(5) * http://www.ossawippi.com/