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Difference between revisions of "Flying Bluenose"

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Image:Avon River Bridge & Flying Bluenose circa 1914.jpg|The [[Flying Bluenose]], [[Train No. 124]] crossing the [[Avon River Bridge]] near [[Windsor]], circa 1914.
 
Image:Avon River Bridge & Flying Bluenose circa 1914.jpg|The [[Flying Bluenose]], [[Train No. 124]] crossing the [[Avon River Bridge]] near [[Windsor]], circa 1914.
 
Image:Bluenosecrew.jpg|Train crew of the [[Flying Bluenose]] at the [[Yarmouth Station]] in 1916.
 
Image:Bluenosecrew.jpg|Train crew of the [[Flying Bluenose]] at the [[Yarmouth Station]] in 1916.
Image:Bluenose hantsport.jpg|Flying Bluenose at [[Hantsport]], 1920.
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Image:Bluenose hantsport.jpg|Flying Bluenose at [[Hantsport]] crossing the [[Halfway River Bridge]], possibly with coach [[DAR000027|No. 27]] and baggage car [[DAR000046|No. 46]] circa 1920.
 
File:BluenoseExpress.jpg|Cover to ''The Bluenose Express'', the children's book inspired by the train by [[Zillah K. Macdonald]], 1928.
 
File:BluenoseExpress.jpg|Cover to ''The Bluenose Express'', the children's book inspired by the train by [[Zillah K. Macdonald]], 1928.
 
Image:DAR No 503 - CPR No 8850.jpg|[[DAR0503|No 503]] leading the [[Flying Bluenose]], [[Train No. 123]] at Kentville circa 1920's.
 
Image:DAR No 503 - CPR No 8850.jpg|[[DAR0503|No 503]] leading the [[Flying Bluenose]], [[Train No. 123]] at Kentville circa 1920's.

Revision as of 10:48, 16 September 2018

This summertime fast luxury train was the premier passenger service on the DAR. It began in 1891 when the "missing gap" between Digby and Annapolis Royal was completed creating an opportunity for a fast luxury service aimed at American tourists, connecting Halifax with passenger steamers at Yarmouth. The name combined two earlier Windsor & Annapolis trains, the "Flying Acadian" and the "Bluenose". The DAR purchased the first Pullman parlor cars in all of Canada, the Haligonian and Mayflower for the run(1), later adding the observation cars Annapolis Royal and Grand Pre. In some years the name was abbreviated on timetables as "Bluenose" but remained known and extensively marketed as the Flying Bluenose. The Flying Bluenose was joined by the New Yorker in the 1920s, a similarly fast and summer only train which connected to the New York steamships at Yarmouth. Famous in its day, the Flying Bluenose even inspired a children's book by Zillah K. Macdonald called The Bluenose Express. The Flying Bluenose train appears to have fallen victim to the decline in tourism during the depression and was cancelled after 1935.

A typical consist of the "Flying Bluenose" in 1893 was made up of the locomotive "Evangeline" (No. 14), a baggage car, a first class and smoking car, the first class cars Jocosa and Fleur de Lys and the parlour car Mayflower.(2)

The Yarmouth to Halifax eastbound Flying Bluenose was Train No. 124.

The Halifax to Yarmouth westbound Flying Bluenose was Train No. 123.

Gallery

References and Footnotes

(1) *Robert Wayner, A Century of Deluxe Passenger Cars in Canada

(2) Charles Thompson Smith, "The Dominion Atlantic and Nova Scotia" MA Thesis Acadia University August 1965, page 78.

External Link