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Difference between revisions of "Kentville Freight Shed"

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Image:KentvilleStationc.jpg|The station and expanded shed with gothic window circa 1914-1918.
 
Image:KentvilleStationc.jpg|The station and expanded shed with gothic window circa 1914-1918.
 
File:Kalkman42.jpg|[[Kentville Freight Shed]] with train crew and station staff, circa 1920s.
 
File:Kalkman42.jpg|[[Kentville Freight Shed]] with train crew and station staff, circa 1920s.
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File:Kalkman44.jpg|Panoramic view of [[Kentville]] with the [[Kentville Railyard]], the [[Kentville Repair Shop|Freight Shed]], the [[British Canadian Fruit Association Kentville warehouse|BCFA apple warehouse]], the [[Niagara Dust Company]], the [[Kentville Freight Shed|Freight Shed]] and the [[Kentville Station]], 1922.
 
File:Kalkman25.jpg|[[Kentville Freight Shed]] with DAR express trucks, drivers and staff, 1939.
 
File:Kalkman25.jpg|[[Kentville Freight Shed]] with DAR express trucks, drivers and staff, 1939.
 
File:KentvilleRailyard_-_1958July.png|Kentville Railyard, July 1958, showing  the new 1954 freight shed in the distance at the centre right.
 
File:KentvilleRailyard_-_1958July.png|Kentville Railyard, July 1958, showing  the new 1954 freight shed in the distance at the centre right.

Revision as of 07:54, 17 June 2023

Kentville Freight Shed

The freight shed in Kentville began a small board and batten neoclassical shed built by the Windsor and Annapolis Railway in 1869 facing the Kentville Station. A team track and freight siding served the shed on the western side. The shed was expanded with eastward expansions several times, including a major 1890 rebuild as freight and express traffic boomed.[1] A further expansion just before or during the First World War added a gothic window. The entire freight shed was moved westward several hundred feet in the 1920s to make room for gardens facing the station. The wooden shed was demolished and replaced on August 7, 1954 with a large aluminium sided freight shed directly across from the station with large truck ramps for CP piggyback and Smith Transport service.[2] This shed served until nearly the end of rail operations in Kentville and was demolished in the fall of 1990.[3]

Gallery

References and Footnotes

  1. Kentville New Star newspaper, May 6 and Oct. 21, 1890
  2. Charles Thompson Smith, "The Dominion Atlantic and Nova Scotia" MA Thesis Acadia University August 1965, page 181.
  3. Louis Comeau, Facebook Post, July 9, 2020