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Difference between revisions of "Windsor Station"

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Image:CPR9057f at Windsor 1967.jpg|[[:Category:RDC|Dayliner]] [[CPR9057|No. 9057]] en route from Halifax to Kentville at [[Windsor Station]] on [[:Category:John A. MacIntosh Photo 1967|July 19, 1967]].
 
Image:CPR9057f at Windsor 1967.jpg|[[:Category:RDC|Dayliner]] [[CPR9057|No. 9057]] en route from Halifax to Kentville at [[Windsor Station]] on [[:Category:John A. MacIntosh Photo 1967|July 19, 1967]].
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File:Windsor Station 1967 a.jpg|[[Windsor Station]] at sunset at [[Windsor]] on July 19, 1967.
  
 
Image:Windsor Station Brick.jpg|[[Windsor Station]] at sunset at [[Windsor]] on July 19, 1967.
 
Image:Windsor Station Brick.jpg|[[Windsor Station]] at sunset at [[Windsor]] on July 19, 1967.
 
File:Windsor Station 1967 a.jpg|[[Windsor Station]] at sunset at [[Windsor]] on July 19, 1967.
 
  
 
File:Windsor Brick Station BW.jpg|[[Windsor Station]] at sunset at [[Windsor]] on July 19, 1967.
 
File:Windsor Brick Station BW.jpg|[[Windsor Station]] at sunset at [[Windsor]] on July 19, 1967.

Revision as of 19:52, 29 December 2014

Windsor Station

As one of the first railway terminus in all of Nova Scotia, Windsor has been the home to a variety of stations.

Wood Covered Station 1858 - c. 1881

The first Windsor station was built by the Nova Scotia Railway. Typical of many early stations in the Maritimes, in the era of small locomotives, it had a covered platform. The Windsor platform was expanded in 1871 to cover three tracks: one for the Nova Scotia Railway (now run by the Intercolonial Railway), one for the new Windsor and Annapolis Railway and one for interchange.(1) It included a built in water tank for locomotives fed by rainwater collected from the large roof.(2)

Wood Station 1881 - 195?

The second Windsor Station was built to Intercolonial Railway plans during the period when the Intercolonial was still operating the Windsor Branch.

It was painted a CPR tucsan red between 1949 and 1956.

Brick Station 190?-19??

It was built by Rhodes Curry and almost identical to the Antigonish station built in 1905 by Rhodes Curry which still survives today.(1)

Metal Station 1973-Present

References

(1) Peter M. Latta, Old Railway Stations of the Maritimes (St. Agnes Press, 1998), page 11 and 22.

(2) W.W. Clarke, Clarke's History of the Earliest Railways of Nova Scotia, page 37.