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Difference between revisions of "L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse"

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[[File:Apple Exporting Co Windsor April 79.jpg|thumb|right|500px|The [[L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse]] in [[Windsor]], April 1979.]]
 
==L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse, [[Windsor]]==
 
==L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse, [[Windsor]]==
 
Mile 31.51 from [[Windsor Junction]] on the [[:Category:Subdivision Halifax|Halifax Subdivision]]
 
Mile 31.51 from [[Windsor Junction]] on the [[:Category:Subdivision Halifax|Halifax Subdivision]]
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Image:Windsor Station 1977 and Train No. 1.jpg|[[Train No. 1]] at [[Windsor Station]] with the [[L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse]] to the left and the [[Avon River Causeway]] to the right, Aug 17, 1977.
 
Image:Windsor Station 1977 and Train No. 1.jpg|[[Train No. 1]] at [[Windsor Station]] with the [[L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse]] to the left and the [[Avon River Causeway]] to the right, Aug 17, 1977.
 
File:Apple Exporting Co Windsor April 79.jpg|The [[L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse]] in [[Windsor]], April 1979.
 
File:Apple Exporting Co Windsor April 79.jpg|The [[L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse]] in [[Windsor]], April 1979.
File:Armstrong mural Windsor NS 30%.jpg|The [[L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse]] in [[Windsor]], photographed by Wayne Simon, March 14, 2017.  
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File:Armstrong mural Windsor NS 30%.jpg|The [[L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse]] with its mural in [[Windsor]], photographed by Wayne Simon, March 14, 2017.  
 
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==References and Footnotes==
 
==References and Footnotes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>
  
 
[[Category:Apple Warehouses]]
 
[[Category:Apple Warehouses]]

Revision as of 08:23, 18 January 2020

L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse, Windsor

Mile 31.51 from Windsor Junction on the Halifax Subdivision

History

The warehouse was built in 1906 by the Lewis Albert Armstrong and Sons Apple Exporting Company. It was a wooden second generation apple warehouse built with wooden knees and iron tensioning rods.[2] In later years the warehouse was a factory outlet shop for the nearby Windsor Wear textile mill. It became something of a Windsor landmark due to its prominent location downtown and a large mural depicting a railway scene which incorporated the warehouse windows into the artwork. The warehouse was acquired by the Windsor and Hantsport Railway who used the spur to park MOW equipment, but following the mothballing of the railway, the warehouse as unused and racked up $95,766 in unpaid taxeses owed by the Windsor and Hantsport. The warehouse was purchased at a forced tax sale by the Town of Windsor with hopes that it would encourage commercial development by the river. The town judged that the warehouse was beyond repair and approved demolition in October 2019.[3] It was demolished on November 19, 2019.[4]

Gallery

References and Footnotes