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==Hantsport Station==
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=[[Hantsport]] Station=
  
==Wood Station 1869 - ????==
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==Earlier Stations circa 1870 and 1893==
The first Hantsport station was a standard Windsor and Annapolis passenger and freight station.
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[[Hantsport]] did not have a station when the [[Windsor and Annapolis Railway]] first began operations through the town in 1869<ref>Hattie Chittick, ''Hantsport on Avon'', Hantsport Women's Institute, 1968, page 27.</ref> However a small station was built around 1870 and was described in 1873<ref>[https://archive.org/stream/cihm_25953#page/n25 Windsor and Annapolis Railway, Report of Alexander MacNab, C. E., November 1, 1873, p. 21.]</ref> as:<br>
 
*Station Building, 40' x 22'
 
*Station Building, 40' x 22'
 
*Station Platform, 200' x 14'
 
*Station Platform, 200' x 14'
*Tank (pump), 15' x 14'
 
  
==Wood Station ???? - Present==
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It was replaced by a standard Windsor and Annapolis passenger and freight station built circa 1893 which served until it was destroyed in a fire in 1943.<ref>[https://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=7816 "Hantsport Railway Station", ''Canadian Historic Places database'']</ref>
It was replaced by a Tudor revival station, similar to the [[Bridgetown Station]], based on the standard CPR Station Design No. 16.<ref>[http://www.cptracks.ca/data/Structures/H-15-66.pdf Plans for CPR Station No. 16 at Canadian Pacific Historical Association]</ref>
 
  
 
===Gallery===
 
===Gallery===
<gallery>
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<Gallery perrow=5>
Image:Hantsport Station 1961.jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] in August 1961.
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File:201580134.jpg|[[Hantsport]] Station with crowds gathered for a VIP train showing the [[Hantsport Water Tower]] and the Hantsport Fruit Basket Company, possibly during the 1901 [[:Category:Royal Trains|royal visit]].
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File:201580008.jpg|[[Hantsport]] viewed looking east from boxcar on the Hantsport team track with the [[Hantsport Station]], the [[G.H. Yeaton Warehouse]] and the [[Laurie Sanford Apple Warehouse|Sandford apple warehouse]], circa 1895.
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File:HantsportHeckman.JPG|The second [[Hantsport Station]], photographed by CPR photographer [[:Category:Joseph Heckman Photo|Joseph Heckman]], circa October 1910.
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File:85th Battalion WHHS.jpg|Recruits of the 85th Battalion at the [[Hantsport Station]] with the [[Laurie Sanford Apple Warehouse|Sandford apple warehouse]] in background, circa 1915-16.
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File:Yeaton-Candy-Factory.jpg|Rear of the [[Hantsport Station]] with the [[G.H. Yeaton Warehouse|Yeaton's Candy Factory buildings]] on Station Street in [[Hantsport]], 1932.
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</Gallery>
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==Brick Station 1944 - Present==
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Planning for a new station in Hantsport had begun in 1937. When the old station burned in 1943, a fine new brick station was quickly constructed. The new station was a Tudor revival station, similar to the [[Bridgetown Station]], based on the standard CPR Station Design No. 16<ref>[http://www.cptracks.ca/data/Structures/H-15-66.pdf Plans for CPR Station No. 16 at Canadian Pacific Historical Association]</ref> but customized for Hantsport. The new station was completed and opened on May 9, 1944<ref>[https://www.facebook.com/HantsportAreaHistoricalSociety/posts/2195416210608038 Facebook Post, "On This Day in 1944", Hantsport & Area Historical Society, May 9, 2022]</ref> making it one of the last stations built by the DAR. It is protected by both federal and provincial heritage laws, designated a historic railway station by the federal government in 1992<ref>[https://www.pc.gc.ca/en/culture/clmhc-hsmbc/pat-her/gar-sta/ne-ns "The Directory of Designated Railway Stations in Nova Scotia", ''Canadian Heritage'']</ref>, which means it cannot be demolished or altered without federal alteration<ref>[[Daily News - 1993-01-23 - Hantsport Station Heritage Designation|"Railway Station Designated" ''Daily News'', January 23, 1993.]]</ref> and was further designated as a provincial heritage building in 1995.<ref>[https://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=7816 "Hantsport Railway Station", ''Canadian Historic Places database'']</ref>
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===Gallery===
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<Gallery perrow=5>
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File:NewStationHantsport.jpg|The new [[Hantsport Station]] under construction, photographed by Charles Whitmore of [[Hantsport]], 1944.
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File:9058 extra.jpg|Extra 9058, the promotion tour for [[DAR9058|RDC No. 9058]] at the [[Hantsport Station]], August 1956.
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File:DAR - Hantsport Station East End - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - July 1959.JPG|[[Hantsport Station]] east end, with the [[Laurie Sanford Apple Warehouse|Sandford apple warehouse]], July 1959.
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File:DAR - Hantsport Station Yard - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - July 1959.JPG|[[Hantsport Station]] and the [[Hantsport Railyard]] with the [[Laurie Sanford Apple Warehouse|Sandford apple warehouse]] and the [[:Category:United Fruit Companies|United Fruit Companies]] Warehouse, July 1959.
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File:DAR - Hantsport Station Front - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - July 1959.JPG|[[Hantsport Station]], trackside, July 1959.
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Image:Hantsport Station 1961.jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] with the [[Laurie Sanford Apple Warehouse|Sandford apple warehouse]] and United Fruit Companies warehouse, August 1961.
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File:DAR - Hantsport Station - CPR Boxcar 52477 - Unknown Photographer Date - August1986.JPG|[[Hantsport Station]] and CPR Boxcar 52477, circa late 1960s.
 
Image:Hantsport NS depot 7-18-1975 151.jpg|[[Hantsport Station|Hantsport depot]] July 18, 1975.
 
Image:Hantsport NS depot 7-18-1975 151.jpg|[[Hantsport Station|Hantsport depot]] July 18, 1975.
Image:Hantsport Station 2009 a.jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] on July 15th, 2009.
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File:Hantsport Station.jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] rear, 1979.
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File:VIA6136 6143 6108 Hantsport 1105 21July1984.jpg|RDCs [[VIA6136|VIA 6136]], [[VIA6143|VIA 6143]] and [[VIA6108|VIA 6108]] at the [[Hantsport Station]] with Annapolis Valley Canners warehouse behind, July 21, 1984.
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File:Hantsport 9FE99.jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] with MOW equipment and the Annapolis Valley Canners/Hantsport Fruit Company warehouse in background, Feb. 9, 1999.
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Image:Hantsport Station 2009 a.jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] with the [[G.H. Yeaton Warehouse]] behind, July 15th, 2009.
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File:Hantsport Station aug8c.jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] unknown date.
 
File:Hantsport 1 (1280x853).jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] on August 30, 2011.  
 
File:Hantsport 1 (1280x853).jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] on August 30, 2011.  
 
File:Hantsport 2 (1280x853).jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] with the yard to the right on August 30, 2011.
 
File:Hantsport 2 (1280x853).jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] with the yard to the right on August 30, 2011.
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File:Hantsport W&H Station.jpg|[[Hantsport Station]] with W&H locomotives.
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
  
 
==References and Footnotes==
 
==References and Footnotes==
*Windsor and Annapolis Railway, Report of Alexander MacNab, C. E., November 1, 1873.
 
 
*[[1969-MemoOfGenInfo|1969 Memorandum of General Information]]
 
*[[1969-MemoOfGenInfo|1969 Memorandum of General Information]]
 
<References />
 
<References />
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==External Links==
 
==External Links==
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[https://www.cptracks.ca/data/RSR/RSR-097_Hantsport_NS.pdf Harry Jost and Barry Moody, "Canadian Pacific Railway Station Hantsport, Nova Scotia", Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada Railway Station Report, RSR-097, 1991, Canadian Pacific Historical Association Documents Library]
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[https://mcdadeheritagecentre.ca/2020/08/09/my-memories-of-the-dar-by-john-harvie/ "My Memories of the DAR by John Harvie", ''Hantsport & Area Historical Society'' a glimpse into the station operations, trains and boyhood adventures from Hantsport]
  
 
[[Category:Stations]]
 
[[Category:Stations]]

Latest revision as of 23:24, 12 November 2022


Hantsport Station

Earlier Stations circa 1870 and 1893

Hantsport did not have a station when the Windsor and Annapolis Railway first began operations through the town in 1869[1] However a small station was built around 1870 and was described in 1873[2] as:

  • Station Building, 40' x 22'
  • Station Platform, 200' x 14'

It was replaced by a standard Windsor and Annapolis passenger and freight station built circa 1893 which served until it was destroyed in a fire in 1943.[3]

Gallery

Brick Station 1944 - Present

Planning for a new station in Hantsport had begun in 1937. When the old station burned in 1943, a fine new brick station was quickly constructed. The new station was a Tudor revival station, similar to the Bridgetown Station, based on the standard CPR Station Design No. 16[4] but customized for Hantsport. The new station was completed and opened on May 9, 1944[5] making it one of the last stations built by the DAR. It is protected by both federal and provincial heritage laws, designated a historic railway station by the federal government in 1992[6], which means it cannot be demolished or altered without federal alteration[7] and was further designated as a provincial heritage building in 1995.[8]

Gallery

References and Footnotes

External Links

Harry Jost and Barry Moody, "Canadian Pacific Railway Station Hantsport, Nova Scotia", Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada Railway Station Report, RSR-097, 1991, Canadian Pacific Historical Association Documents Library

"My Memories of the DAR by John Harvie", Hantsport & Area Historical Society a glimpse into the station operations, trains and boyhood adventures from Hantsport