Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative - Wiki
Use of this site is subject to our Terms & Conditions.
Difference between revisions of "DAR0033"
Dan conlin (talk | contribs) m (→Gallery) |
Dan conlin (talk | contribs) (link) |
||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
*Class: 10-32-0 | *Class: 10-32-0 | ||
− | No. 33 was the last locomotive built for the Dominion Atlantic. It was built in 1907 by [[:Category:Baldwin Locomotive Works|Baldwin Locomotive Works]] in Philadelphia for the DAR and was identical to her sister [[DAR0032|No. 32]] "Blomidon". No. 33 was damaged in a serious wreck near [[Hantsport]] in 1919.<ref> Photograph and notes in Leon Barron Collection.</ref> After the CPR takeover which brought larger ten wheelers to the DAR, No. 33 and 32 were frequently used on the [[:Category:Subdivision Kingsport|Kentville-Kingsport]] run pulling the [[:Category:Scheduled Trains|School Trains]].<ref>[[Canadian Pacific's Dominion Atlantic Railway]] (Volume 1), [[Gary W. Ness|Gary Ness]] (page 6)</ref> No. 33 was put into storage in 1933 and scrapped in late October 1938<ref>[[Bishop, George|George Bishop]] "Railway Notes", ''Kentville Advertiser'', Oct. 16, 1938.</ref><ref>[[M. Allen Gibson]], ''[[Train Time]]'', Windsor: Lancelot Press (1973) page 10 (in Kentville, newly painted)</ref> | + | No. 33 was the last locomotive built for the Dominion Atlantic. It was built in 1907 by [[:Category:Baldwin Locomotive Works|Baldwin Locomotive Works]] in Philadelphia for the DAR and was identical to her sister [[DAR0032|No. 32]] "Blomidon". No. 33 was damaged in a serious wreck near [[Hantsport]] in 1919.<ref> Photograph and notes in Leon Barron Collection.</ref> After the CPR takeover which brought larger ten wheelers to the DAR, No. 33 and 32 were frequently used on the [[:Category:Subdivision Kingsport|Kentville-Kingsport]] run pulling the [[:Category:Scheduled Trains|School Trains]].<ref>[[Canadian Pacific's Dominion Atlantic Railway]] (Volume 1), [[Gary W. Ness|Gary Ness]] (page 6)</ref> No. 33 was put into storage in 1933 and scrapped in late October 1938<ref>[[Bishop, George|George Bishop]] "Railway Notes", [[:Category:Advertiser|''Kentville Advertiser'']], Oct. 16, 1938.</ref><ref>[[M. Allen Gibson]], ''[[Train Time]]'', Windsor: Lancelot Press (1973) page 10 (in Kentville, newly painted)</ref> |
Name Origin: Heroic spirtual figure of Nova Scotia's Mi'kmaq people | Name Origin: Heroic spirtual figure of Nova Scotia's Mi'kmaq people |
Revision as of 20:01, 4 September 2019
Dominion Atlantic Railway Steam Locomotive No. 33, Glooscap.
Wheel Arrangement: 4-6-0
Built by Baldwin Locomotive Works in November 1907.
- Builder No. 32258
- 19" x 24" cylinders
- 63" drivers[1]
- Class: 10-32-0
No. 33 was the last locomotive built for the Dominion Atlantic. It was built in 1907 by Baldwin Locomotive Works in Philadelphia for the DAR and was identical to her sister No. 32 "Blomidon". No. 33 was damaged in a serious wreck near Hantsport in 1919.[2] After the CPR takeover which brought larger ten wheelers to the DAR, No. 33 and 32 were frequently used on the Kentville-Kingsport run pulling the School Trains.[3] No. 33 was put into storage in 1933 and scrapped in late October 1938[4][5]
Name Origin: Heroic spirtual figure of Nova Scotia's Mi'kmaq people
Gallery
No. 33 at Wolfville Station circa 1907 to 1911.
Crowds gather around the still-steaming wreck of Locomotive No. 33 near Hantsport, April 5, 1919.
Baggage and passenger cars derailed after Locomotive No. 33 went off the track near Hantsport, April 5, 1919.
Locomotive No. 33, baggage, express and passenger coaches derailed near Hantsport, April 5, 1919.
Locomotive No. 33 derailed with baggage and express cars near Hantsport, April 5, 1919.
Wrecking train arrives to clear the tracks after Locomotive No. 33 derails near Hantsport, April 5, 1919.
No. 33 and caboose 435786 at Kingsport Beach, at the head of the Kingsport Wharf, circa 1920s.
Locomotive No. 33, an unknown date and location.
“Glooscap” at Kentville in May 1929.
No. 33 "Glooscap" at an unknown location, probably Kentville.
“Glooscap” in the scrap line at Kentville in July 1938.
No. 33 in Canadian Pacific Steam Locomotives.
No. 33 front number plate in private collection.
No. 33 front number plate in private collection.
Other Known Photographs
- Photo of locomotive on page 44, "A Dominion Atlantic Sojourn." Locomotive Quarterly, Spring 1998., photo collection of Kenneth S. Macdonald.
- McQuinn Collection, Canada Science and Technology Museum, N-4007 (May 1929, Land of Evangeline paint scheme); N-4008 (Glooscap in wreck, 1936) and N-4009 (with Van and crew)
- Stephens Collection, Canada Science and Technology Museum, N-9887.
- George Warden Collection, Musquodoboit Railway Museum, MRM76.1.495
- No.33 at Kentville with five-man crew, Canada Science and Technology Museum Image STR04010a.
References and Footnotes
- ↑ Omer Lavallée lists 60" drivers but the C.P.R., M.P. 14 Motive Power Rosters, 1938 lists 63" drivers.
- ↑ Photograph and notes in Leon Barron Collection.
- ↑ Canadian Pacific's Dominion Atlantic Railway (Volume 1), Gary Ness (page 6)
- ↑ George Bishop "Railway Notes", Kentville Advertiser, Oct. 16, 1938.
- ↑ M. Allen Gibson, Train Time, Windsor: Lancelot Press (1973) page 10 (in Kentville, newly painted)
- Jim O'Donnell "Dominion Atlantic Railway Locomotive Roster"
- Omer Lavallée, Canadian Pacific Steam Locomotives, p. 348, 352.