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Difference between revisions of "Windsor"

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File:Windsor 1941 Sheet2.jpg|Windsor [[:Category:Fire Insurance Maps|Fire Insurance Map]], Sheet 2, with the [[Windsor Station]], [[Windsor Freight Shed|Freight Shed]], [[Windsor Railyard]], the [[L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse|L.A. Armstrong]] and the B. Sexton Warehouses and the [[Windsor Wharves]], July 1941.
 
File:Windsor 1941 Sheet2.jpg|Windsor [[:Category:Fire Insurance Maps|Fire Insurance Map]], Sheet 2, with the [[Windsor Station]], [[Windsor Freight Shed|Freight Shed]], [[Windsor Railyard]], the [[L. A. Armstrong Apple Warehouse|L.A. Armstrong]] and the B. Sexton Warehouses and the [[Windsor Wharves]], July 1941.
  
File:Windsor 1941 Sheet4.jpg|Windsor [[:Category:Fire Insurance Maps|Fire Insurance Map]], Sheet 4, showing spurs for the Windsor Supply Company and the [[Eastern Lime Company]], and road bridge over the Avon River, July 1941.
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File:Windsor 1941 Sheet3.jpg|Windsor [[:Category:Fire Insurance Maps|Fire Insurance Map]], Sheet 3, showing downtown tracks and parts of the [[Windsor Wharves]] on the Avon River, July 1941.
  
File:Windsor 1941 Sheet3.jpg|Windsor [[:Category:Fire Insurance Maps|Fire Insurance Map]], Sheet 3, showing downtown tracks and parts of the [[Windsor Wharves]] on the Avon River, July 1941.
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File:Windsor 1941 Sheet4.jpg|Windsor [[:Category:Fire Insurance Maps|Fire Insurance Map]], Sheet 4, showing spurs for the Windsor Supply Co. Lumberyard and the [[Eastern Lime Company]], and road bridge over Avon River, July 1941.
  
 
Image:Train No. 95 leaving Windsor for Yarmouth 8-49.jpg|[[Train No. 95]] leaving [[Windsor]] for [[Yarmouth]] in August 1949.
 
Image:Train No. 95 leaving Windsor for Yarmouth 8-49.jpg|[[Train No. 95]] leaving [[Windsor]] for [[Yarmouth]] in August 1949.

Revision as of 21:36, 19 May 2024

Windsor and the Avon River Bridge - date unknown, probably late 1940s, 1950s.

Mile 31.60 from Windsor Junction on the Halifax Subdivision (Mile 47.32 from Halifax)

Mile 0 Subdivision Truro

Elevation: 29 feet above sea level[1]

Facilities & Features

Description & History

Windsor was an important transportation junction for Nova Scotia's Mi'kmaq and the site of an important Acadian settlement known as Piziquid. After the founding of Halifax and the Deportation of the Acadians, the name was changed to Windsor and the town remained an important transportation hub for the Minas Basin. The Nova Scotia Railway line from from Halifax arrived in 1857, making the town an important steamship connection for Halifax to Bay of Fundy shipping routes. The railway continued westward as the Windsor & Annapolis Railway in 1870, eventually connecting to Yarmouth as the Dominion Atlantic Railway in 1894. In 1901 the Midland Railway was built across Hants County, connecting Windsor with Truro. The central location of Windsor on the railway fostered the growth of numerous factories such as textile mills, fertilizer plants and furniture factories. Passenger service ended in January 1990. The DAR's successor, the Windsor and Hantsport Railway used Windsor as its headquarters until rail traffic ceased in 2011. The rail yard, station, shops and rolling stock remain mothballed and grown-over.

Commerce & Industry

Gallery

References & Footnotes

  1. Dominion Atlantic Railway, 1969 Memorandum of General Information, page 3

Reference Tag

External Links