Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative - Wiki
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Difference between revisions of "Halifax"
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File:2209 8138.jpg|Locomotives [[DAR2209|No. 2209]] with passenger train and [[CPR8138|No. 8138]] with mixed train at [[Halifax]] May 1959. | File:2209 8138.jpg|Locomotives [[DAR2209|No. 2209]] with passenger train and [[CPR8138|No. 8138]] with mixed train at [[Halifax]] May 1959. | ||
File:2209.jpg|Locomotive [[DAR2209|No. 2209]] with a passenger train, [[Halifax]], December 17, 1958. | File:2209.jpg|Locomotive [[DAR2209|No. 2209]] with a passenger train, [[Halifax]], December 17, 1958. | ||
+ | File:DAR - RDC 9059 - Halifax Terminal - Gray Hadfield Collection.jpg |[[DAR9059|No. 9059]] at the [[Halifax]] Terminal, May 1974. | ||
Image:Halifax Passenger Terminal & Freight Yard 1975 a.jpg|Halifax passenger terminal and freight yard on July 21, 1975. | Image:Halifax Passenger Terminal & Freight Yard 1975 a.jpg|Halifax passenger terminal and freight yard on July 21, 1975. | ||
File:35-020a CP 8139 8140 8236 at Prince's Lodge, NS 790512.jpg|A westbound "extra" passing Prince's Lodge in Halifax. May 12, 1979. | File:35-020a CP 8139 8140 8236 at Prince's Lodge, NS 790512.jpg|A westbound "extra" passing Prince's Lodge in Halifax. May 12, 1979. |
Revision as of 20:12, 14 January 2017
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Halifax Subdivision Mile 0 on Canadian National's Bedford Subdivision
- Next station west: Armdale
Facilities & Features
- D.A.R. Freight Shed. The DAR maintained its own freight and express shed in Halifax for many years.
- Lord Nelson Hotel. The DAR was also a part owner of the Lord Nelson Hotel which functioned as the DAR's railway hotel in Halifax.
Commerce & Industry
Description & History
The DAR gained access to Halifax through running rights over 15 miles of the Bedford Subdivision of the Canadian National. This access was inherited from rights granted to the Windsor and Annapolis Railway from the Intercolonial Railway. This gave the DAR to access the large terminal station and the shipping piers of Halifax.
Operations & Orders
DAR trains used the Intercolonial's North Street Station until 1919 when Canadian National shifted passenger trains to the South End where a large station was completed in 1927.
Gallery
The westbound Flying Bluenose inside the North Street Station at Halifax, circa 1912.
The DAR's Lord Nelson Hotel in Halifax as depicted in the DAR's 1936 Time Table.
No. 2511 at Halifax in August 1949 after arriving with Train No. 96.
No. 2511 at Halifax in August 1949 after arriving with Train No. 96.
Train No. 99 at Halifax on July 7, 1954 ready to go to Yarmouth.