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Difference between revisions of "Aylesford"

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==Commerce & Industry==
 
==Commerce & Industry==
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Six Apple Warehouses, east to west:<ref>Dominion Atlantic Railway, ''[[1927-DAR CHART of Apple and Produce Warehouses|DAR Chart of Apple and Produce Warehouses, February 23, 1927]]''</ref><br>
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*Aylesford Fruit and Produce Shipping Company warehouse, 15,000 barrel capy.
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*Aylesford Fruit and Produce Shipping Company warehouse, 1,500 barrel capy.
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*Aylesford Fruit Company/Acadia Fruit Company apple warehouse, 15,000 barrel capy.
 +
*Aylesford Fruit and Produce Shipping Company warehouse, 10,000 barrel capy.
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*L.O. Neilly apple warehouse, 10,0000 barrel capy.
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*L.O. Neilly apple warehouse, 5,000 barrel capy.
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E.G. Whitman Evaporator<br>
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[[:Category:United Fruit Companies|United Fruit Companies]] Canning Factory and Evaporator, Mile 17.89
  
 
==Description & History==
 
==Description & History==
 
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Located at the beginning of the Annapolis River, the area was known to the Mi'kmaq as "Kobetek", or place of the beavers for the lodges in bogs along the river's headwaters, Aylesford was settled by New England Planters beginning in 1764, but the population was greatly increased by Loyalists after the American Revolution in the 1780s. The names Aylesford was bestowed in 1786, likely after the Earl of Aylesford, a prominent advisor to George III. Surrounded by fertile land, the community soon became a focus of farming and emerged as a major centre of the growing apple industry in the early 1900s. Its central location in the valley led the [[United Fruit Companies]] to establish a large evaporator and canning plant at Aylesford, later taken over by [[Scotian Gold]] which ran until 1964 when Scotian Gold shifted production to the modernized factory in [[Coldbrook]]. <ref>[https://archives.novascotia.ca/places/page/?ID=26 C. Bruce Fergusson, "Aylesford", ''Place-Names and Places of Nova Scotia'' Nova Scotia Archives (1967), page 26-27.]</ref>
==Operations & Orders==
 
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==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==
 
<Gallery perrow=5>
 
<Gallery perrow=5>
 
Image:DAR Kingston-Aylesford.jpg|Aylesford to Kingston Aerial.
 
Image:DAR Kingston-Aylesford.jpg|Aylesford to Kingston Aerial.
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KE-17.50 Aylesford.jpg|Track chart of [[Aylesford]], showing the [[Aylesford Station|station]], apple warehouses and [[Aylesford Water Tower|water tower]], 1918.
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File:AtkinsAylesford.jpg|Postcard of the [[Aylesford Station]] and hotel, circa 1920.
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File:KE-17.89 United Fruit Co.jpg|Track Chart, [[United Fruit Companies]] canning factory, [[Aylesford]], 1918.
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File:AylesfordPostcard.jpg|Colourized postcard of a DAR locomotive and westbound freight at [[Aylesford]] in front of the L. 0. Neilly warehouse, circa 1920s.
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File:UFC Aylesford.jpeg|Postcard of the [[United Fruit Companies]] canning factory and evaporator, [[Aylesford]], with a DAR 4-6-0 locomotive, circa 1920s.
 
File:Berwick_21_H2_West.jpg|Topographic map from Auburn to Aylesford circa 1956.
 
File:Berwick_21_H2_West.jpg|Topographic map from Auburn to Aylesford circa 1956.
 
Image:Train No. 95.jpg|Dayliner [[Train No. 95]] en route to [[Yarmouth]] in first week of service at [[Aylesford]] August 27, 1956.
 
Image:Train No. 95.jpg|Dayliner [[Train No. 95]] en route to [[Yarmouth]] in first week of service at [[Aylesford]] August 27, 1956.
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File:DAR - Aylesford Station end view-Harold Jenkins Photo-September 1958.JPG|[[Aylesford Station]] west end, looking along east apple warehouse spur September 1958.
 
Image:DAR8133a.jpg|CPR [[CPR8133|No. 8133]] wayfreight en route to [[Annapolis Royal]] at [[Aylesford]] in August 1959.
 
Image:DAR8133a.jpg|CPR [[CPR8133|No. 8133]] wayfreight en route to [[Annapolis Royal]] at [[Aylesford]] in August 1959.
 
Image:Aylesford Looking East 1975 a.jpg|[[Aylesford]] looking east in 1975.
 
Image:Aylesford Looking East 1975 a.jpg|[[Aylesford]] looking east in 1975.
Image:Aylesford.jpg|[[Aylesford Station]] circa 1959 to 1963.
 
 
File:Aylesford10019.JPG|VIA Rail sand platform at [[Aylesford]]. April, 1986.
 
File:Aylesford10019.JPG|VIA Rail sand platform at [[Aylesford]]. April, 1986.
 
File:Aylesford10020.JPG|VIA Rail sand platform at [[Aylesford]]. April, 1986.
 
File:Aylesford10020.JPG|VIA Rail sand platform at [[Aylesford]]. April, 1986.
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File:A.77302.52.jpg|1977 aerial photo of [[Aylesford]].
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File:A.77302.95.jpg|1977 aerial photo of [[Aylesford]].
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File:A.19986.144.jpg|1967 photo of [[Aylesford]].
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  

Latest revision as of 19:27, 16 February 2022

Aylesford, Nova Scotia

Subdivision Kentville, Mile 17.5

Facilities & Features

Commerce & Industry

Six Apple Warehouses, east to west:[1]

  • Aylesford Fruit and Produce Shipping Company warehouse, 15,000 barrel capy.
  • Aylesford Fruit and Produce Shipping Company warehouse, 1,500 barrel capy.
  • Aylesford Fruit Company/Acadia Fruit Company apple warehouse, 15,000 barrel capy.
  • Aylesford Fruit and Produce Shipping Company warehouse, 10,000 barrel capy.
  • L.O. Neilly apple warehouse, 10,0000 barrel capy.
  • L.O. Neilly apple warehouse, 5,000 barrel capy.

E.G. Whitman Evaporator
United Fruit Companies Canning Factory and Evaporator, Mile 17.89

Description & History

Located at the beginning of the Annapolis River, the area was known to the Mi'kmaq as "Kobetek", or place of the beavers for the lodges in bogs along the river's headwaters, Aylesford was settled by New England Planters beginning in 1764, but the population was greatly increased by Loyalists after the American Revolution in the 1780s. The names Aylesford was bestowed in 1786, likely after the Earl of Aylesford, a prominent advisor to George III. Surrounded by fertile land, the community soon became a focus of farming and emerged as a major centre of the growing apple industry in the early 1900s. Its central location in the valley led the United Fruit Companies to establish a large evaporator and canning plant at Aylesford, later taken over by Scotian Gold which ran until 1964 when Scotian Gold shifted production to the modernized factory in Coldbrook. [2]

Gallery

References & Footnotes

Reference Tag

External Links