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Difference between revisions of "Port Williams"
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==Commerce & Industry== | ==Commerce & Industry== | ||
The village of Port Williams was actually on the other side of the Cornwallis River but connected by a bridge to the [[Port Williams Station]] and several large businesses served by the DAR. Before WW II, they included five [[:Category:Apple Warehouses|Apple Warehouses]] including some of the first first apple warehouses built on the DAR.<ref>Willard Longley Map, [[Some Economic Aspects of the Apple Industry in Nova Scotia]]</ref>. After WW II, Port Williams hosted two large poultry producers, C&M Ells and Archibald Farms Limited as well as Canada Packers flour, feed and poultry plant and the Canadian Petrofina, later West Nova bulk fuel plant. | The village of Port Williams was actually on the other side of the Cornwallis River but connected by a bridge to the [[Port Williams Station]] and several large businesses served by the DAR. Before WW II, they included five [[:Category:Apple Warehouses|Apple Warehouses]] including some of the first first apple warehouses built on the DAR.<ref>Willard Longley Map, [[Some Economic Aspects of the Apple Industry in Nova Scotia]]</ref>. After WW II, Port Williams hosted two large poultry producers, C&M Ells and Archibald Farms Limited as well as Canada Packers flour, feed and poultry plant and the Canadian Petrofina, later West Nova bulk fuel plant. | ||
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Revision as of 14:31, 27 December 2013
Port Williams, Nova Scotia
Mile 51.4 from Windsor Junction on the Halifax Subdivision (Mile 67.15 from Halifax)
Facilities & Features
Commerce & Industry
The village of Port Williams was actually on the other side of the Cornwallis River but connected by a bridge to the Port Williams Station and several large businesses served by the DAR. Before WW II, they included five Apple Warehouses including some of the first first apple warehouses built on the DAR.[1]. After WW II, Port Williams hosted two large poultry producers, C&M Ells and Archibald Farms Limited as well as Canada Packers flour, feed and poultry plant and the Canadian Petrofina, later West Nova bulk fuel plant.
Port Williams looking east on August 30, 2011.
Description & History
Operations & Orders
Gallery
References & Footnotes
- Alexander MacNab, Windsor and Annapolis Railway, Report of Alexander MacNab Nov 1, 1873
- 1969 Memorandum of General Information
- ↑ Willard Longley Map, Some Economic Aspects of the Apple Industry in Nova Scotia