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Difference between revisions of "Howard Bligh & Sons Coldbrook Warehouse"

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File:MailmanHCHMarch281990medres.jpg|Chronicle Herald photo of the abandonment of the [[:Category:Subdivision Kentville|Kentville]] and [[:Category:Subdivision Yarmouth|Yamouth Subdivision]]s with crews lifting track at [[Coldbrook]], [[Howard Bligh & Sons Coldbrook Warehouse|Bligh Warehouse]] in background, March 28, 1990.
 
File:Coldbrook2002.jpg|[[Howard Bligh & Sons Coldbrook Warehouse]], October 12, 2002.
 
File:Coldbrook2002.jpg|[[Howard Bligh & Sons Coldbrook Warehouse]], October 12, 2002.
 
File:Coldbrookwarehouse.JPG|[[Howard Bligh & Sons Coldbrook Warehouse]], June 15, 2012.
 
File:Coldbrookwarehouse.JPG|[[Howard Bligh & Sons Coldbrook Warehouse]], June 15, 2012.

Revision as of 19:30, 15 December 2017

Howard Bligh & Sons Warehouse Coldbrook

Mile 2.4 on the Kentville Subdivision at Coldbrook

The apple warehouse in Coldbrook was one of several in the Annapolis Valley built and owned by Howard Bligh, a pioneer of apple warehouse construction. It was built in June 1908. The warehouse was later bought by the British Canadian Fruit Company chain. It was closed for apple packing in the early 1930s as British Canadian consolidated some of its warehouses. The Coldbrook warehouse was used for carrots in the 1940s. It was purchased by Atlantic Wholesalers for grocery distribution in the 1960s. The used clothing store Guy Frenchy's purchased the warehouse in the 1990s and it is now a large and popular outlet in the Frenchy's chain. The warehouse was clad in metal and lost its original square wooden ventilators about 2010 but still retains its original trackside loading doors with blacksmith-made hinges and natural wood knee braces in the interior.

Gallery

References and Footnotes

  • Marie Bishop, Memories of Coldbrook, Kings Historical Society, p. 74-75.

External Links