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[[Image:470a.jpg|thumb|500px|right|[[Kingsport Station]] and warehouses with [[DAR0470|locomotive No. 470]], c. 1942]]
 
[[Image:470a.jpg|thumb|500px|right|[[Kingsport Station]] and warehouses with [[DAR0470|locomotive No. 470]], c. 1942]]
==Kingsport, Nova Scotia==
+
=Kingsport, Nova Scotia=
  
 
*[[:Category:Subdivision Kingsport|Subdivision Kingsport]], Mile 13.6
 
*[[:Category:Subdivision Kingsport|Subdivision Kingsport]], Mile 13.6
 +
 +
*Elevation: 47 feet above sea level at station<ref>[https://geoscan.nrcan.gc.ca/starweb/geoscan/servlet.starweb?path=geoscan/fulle.web&search1=R=108011 Map 13 A "PROVINCE OF NOVA SCOTIA, Kings and Hants Counties, Kingsport Sheet No. 84"; Hugh Fletcher, L. N. Richard, Geological Survey of Canada, Dept. of Mines, Canada, Multicoloured Geological Map 1037, 1911]</ref> 4 feet above sea level at [[Kingsport Wharf|wharf]]
  
 
Previous Station: [[Pereau]]
 
Previous Station: [[Pereau]]
 
----
 
----
  
Kingsport was the eastern terminus of the [[:Category:Subdivision Kingsport|Cornwallis Valley Railway]] branchline of the Dominion Atlantic. The village served as a busy shipping point and interchange between rail and ocean transport from 1890 until 1961.
+
Kingsport was the eastern terminus of the [[:Category:Subdivision Kingsport|Cornwallis Valley Railway]] branchline of the Dominion Atlantic. The village served as an important shipping point and interchange between rail and ocean transport from 1890 until 1961.
 +
 
 +
==Facilities==
 +
 
 +
[[Kingsport Station]], north side of main line
 +
Siding for two apple warehouses opposite station, south side of main line:
 +
*[[Mayflower Fruit Company warehouse]]
 +
*[[Kingsport Fruit Company warehouse]]
 +
 
 +
* Section House at east switch of wye
 +
 
 +
Wye and [[Kingsport Enginehouse]]
 +
 
 +
Spur line to [[Kingsport Wharf]]
 +
*Double track siding at wharf, 2nd track taken up by 1911
 +
Waiting room/freight shed and lighthouse at end of wharf
  
 
==History==
 
==History==
Previously inhabited by Mi'kmaw and Acadians, Kingsport was settled by New England Planters in the 1760s. A first known as Indian Point and Oak Point, it became Kingsport in the 19th century as ship yards and a shipping pier made it the leading port in Kings County. Major wooden shipyards built a series of large square-rigged sailing ships from the 1850s to the 1890s. As wooden shipbuilding declined in the face of iron steamships, investors in the area pooled money to bring the railway to Kingsport, the Cornwallis Valley Railway (CVR) which connected to the Dominion Atlantic at [[Kentville]]. The railway arrived in 1889, going into full service in 1890, triggering a major increase in [[Apple Trains|the apple industry]]. Apple warehouses were built at almost every crossing along the CVR, one every three miles including two inside the wye facing the station at Kingsport.<ref>[https://novascotia.ca/archives/places/page.asp?ID=332 "Place Names of Nova Scotia", ''Nova Scotia Archives and Records Management'', p. 332]</ref>
+
Previously inhabited by Mi'kmaw and Acadians, Kingsport was settled by New England Planters in the 1760s. A first known as Indian Point and Oak Point, it became Kingsport in the 19th century as ship yards and a shipping pier made it the leading port in Kings County. Major wooden shipyards built a series of large square-rigged sailing ships from the 1850s to the 1890s. As wooden shipbuilding declined in the face of iron steamships, investors in the area pooled money to bring the railway to Kingsport, the Cornwallis Valley Railway (CVR) which connected to the Dominion Atlantic at [[Kentville]]. Railway construction began in 1889 and the line went into full service in 1890, triggering a major increase in [[Apple Trains|the apple industry]]. Apple warehouses were built at almost every crossing along the CVR, one every three miles including two inside the wye facing the station at Kingsport.<ref>[https://novascotia.ca/archives/places/page.asp?ID=332 "Place Names of Nova Scotia", ''Nova Scotia Archives and Records Management'', p. 332]</ref>
 
[[File:1911a.jpg|thumb|left|350px|[[Kingsport Wharf]] with ferry [[SS Prince Albert]], summer 1911.]]
 
[[File:1911a.jpg|thumb|left|350px|[[Kingsport Wharf]] with ferry [[SS Prince Albert]], summer 1911.]]
  
Line 19: Line 38:
 
The railway operations at Kingsport centred on a large wye with a [[Kingsport Enginehouse|single stall enginehouse]] where the branch line locomotive received light servicing and stayed overnight. Because of the short distance to [[Kentville]], there were no water or coaling facilities.  Kingsport was home to many of the regular train crews on the branchline and also a summer home to some DAR employees who owned cottages there.
 
The railway operations at Kingsport centred on a large wye with a [[Kingsport Enginehouse|single stall enginehouse]] where the branch line locomotive received light servicing and stayed overnight. Because of the short distance to [[Kentville]], there were no water or coaling facilities.  Kingsport was home to many of the regular train crews on the branchline and also a summer home to some DAR employees who owned cottages there.
  
[[Image:Kingsport Air photo 1945.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Kingsport Air Photo 1945]]
+
[[Image:Kingsport Air photo 1945.jpg|thumb|250px|right|Kingsport Air Photo, July 27, 1945]]
  
Kingsport generated brisk passengers service in its first years, reaching the height in 1914 of six trains a day (eight on Saturdays!) several with express service for shoppers and commuters.<ref>[http://contrarian.ca/2016/07/06/when-eight-trains-and-two-steamships-served-tiny-kingsport-ns/ "When eight trains and two steamships served tiny Kingsport, NS" Parker Donham, ''The Contrarian'' July 6, 2016]</ref> A lasting service were morning and afternoon "school trains" which took generations of older children from Kingsport to the high school in Kentville.<ref>[http://contrarian.ca/2016/07/10/kentville-townies-v-medford-farm-girls/ Parker Donham, "Kentville townies v. Medford farm girls" ''The Contrarian'' July 10, 2016]</ref> The growth of automobile traffic eroded passenger service but Kingsport maintained four mixed-trains a day until rail service was abandoned in 1961, although the priority shifted to freight. The slow speed and extensive shunting of the Kingsport mixed trains in their two final decades earned them the commonplace nickname of [[Blueberry Express|"blueberry specials."]]  The Dominion Atlantic tried a bus service in DAR livery from Kingsport to Kentville between 1947 and 1949 but reverted to mixed trains for the duration of rail service.<ref>[http://www.kingscountynews.ca/Opinion/Columnists/2013-04-17/article-3221053/ED-COLEMAN-HISTORY%3A-Gone,-almost-forgotten%3A-the-CVR-bus/1 Ed Coleman, "Gone and Almost Forgotten the CVR Bus", ''Kings County Advertiser Register'', 17 April 2013]</ref> Apple traffic remained the mainstay of the line but the loss of the British export market after World War II and the public expansion of highways diminished the remaining freight on the line leading to abandonment in 1961. Kingsport's population declined in the 1940s and plunged after World War II, falling to 224 people by 1956.<ref>[https://novascotia.ca/archives/places/page.asp?ID=332 "Place Names of Nova Scotia", ''Nova Scotia Archives and Records Management'', p. 333]</ref>
+
Kingsport generated brisk passengers service in its first years, reaching the height in 1914 of six trains a day (eight on Saturdays!) several with express service for shoppers and commuters.<ref>[http://contrarian.ca/2016/07/06/when-eight-trains-and-two-steamships-served-tiny-kingsport-ns/ "When eight trains and two steamships served tiny Kingsport, NS" Parker Donham, ''The Contrarian'' July 6, 2016]</ref> A lasting service were morning and afternoon "school trains" which took generations of older children from Kingsport to the high school in Kentville.<ref>[http://contrarian.ca/2016/07/10/kentville-townies-v-medford-farm-girls/ Parker Donham, "Kentville townies v. Medford farm girls" ''The Contrarian'' July 10, 2016]</ref> The growth of automobile traffic eroded passenger service but Kingsport maintained four mixed-trains a day until rail service was abandoned in 1961, although the priority shifted to freight. The slow speed and extensive shunting of the Kingsport mixed trains in their two final decades earned them the commonplace nickname of [[Blueberry Express|"blueberry specials."]]  Canadian Pacific tried a bus service from Kingsport to Kentville from April 1947 until May 1949.<ref>[http://www.trainweb.org/elso/cpt.htm William E. Miller, "Canadian Pacific Transport Company", ''Electric Lines in Southern Ontario'', October 20, 2009, trainweb.org]</ref>, in addition to its mixed train passenger service, but reverted to trains only for the duration of rail service.<ref>[https://edwingcoleman.com/2013/04/08/gone-almost-forgotten-the-cvr-bus-april-813/ Ed Coleman, "Gone and Almost Forgotten the CVR Bus", [[:Category:Advertiser|''Kings County Advertiser Register'']], 17 April 2013]</ref> Apple traffic remained the mainstay of the line but the loss of the British export market after World War II and the public expansion of highways diminished the remaining freight on the line leading to abandonment in 1961. Kingsport's population declined in the 1940s and plunged after World War II, falling to 224 people by 1956.<ref>[https://novascotia.ca/archives/places/page.asp?ID=332 "Place Names of Nova Scotia", ''Nova Scotia Archives and Records Management'', p. 333]</ref>
  
 
[[Image:Wharfsign.JPG|thumb|left|Interpretive sign at [[Kingsport Wharf]], 2015]]
 
[[Image:Wharfsign.JPG|thumb|left|Interpretive sign at [[Kingsport Wharf]], 2015]]
Line 28: Line 47:
 
Framed by the tracks of the wye and the spur to the railway wharf, the daily arrivals, departures and shunting of the railway defined memories of life in Kingsport for generations. Images of trains meeting ships on the wharf became an icons for the history of the community. Physically, only a few visible traces remain of the railway in Kingsport today as the station and warehouses were destroyed in fires after abandonment and the roadbed was sold to adjacent landowners and mostly graded over. Portions of the engine house foundation now serve as a automobile garage foundation. A section of the overgrown, sunken roadbed that led to the wharf remains as does a stub of the railway wharf, now a parking lot, boat ramp and look-off with interpretive signs that discuss the railway era. The compact geography of railway features in Kingsport has led two railway modelers to create Kingsport in HO scale: [[:Category:Paul Bushnell Model Railway|Paul Bushnell]] and [[:Category:Dan Conlin Model Railway|Dan Conlin]].
 
Framed by the tracks of the wye and the spur to the railway wharf, the daily arrivals, departures and shunting of the railway defined memories of life in Kingsport for generations. Images of trains meeting ships on the wharf became an icons for the history of the community. Physically, only a few visible traces remain of the railway in Kingsport today as the station and warehouses were destroyed in fires after abandonment and the roadbed was sold to adjacent landowners and mostly graded over. Portions of the engine house foundation now serve as a automobile garage foundation. A section of the overgrown, sunken roadbed that led to the wharf remains as does a stub of the railway wharf, now a parking lot, boat ramp and look-off with interpretive signs that discuss the railway era. The compact geography of railway features in Kingsport has led two railway modelers to create Kingsport in HO scale: [[:Category:Paul Bushnell Model Railway|Paul Bushnell]] and [[:Category:Dan Conlin Model Railway|Dan Conlin]].
  
==Facilities==
+
==Operations & Orders==
 
+
1931 - Engines are not to switch within 150 feet of the end of outer end of the track on the wharf.<ref>[[19310621-DARETT|"Time Table No. 77 For Employees June 21, 1931", ''Dominion Atlantic Railway'', p. 3]]</ref>
[[Kingsport Station]], north side of main line
 
 
 
Siding for two apple warehouses opposite station, south side of main line:
 
*[[Mayflower Fruit Company warehouse]]
 
*[[Kingsport Fruit Company warehouse]]
 
 
 
* Section House at east switch of wye
 
 
 
Wye
 
 
[[Kingsport Enginehouse]]
 
 
 
Spur line to [[Kingsport Wharf]]
 
*Siding at wharf, abandoned by 1911
 
 
 
Waiting room/freight shed and lighthouse at end of wharf
 
  
==Features==
+
1936 - Switching restriction on wharf not longer applies. [[Train No. 14|Train No. 14]] will not leave Kingsport until [[Train No. 11|Train No. 11]] has arrived. [[Train No. 18|Train No. 18]] will not leave Kingsport until [[Train No. 13|Train No. 13]] has arrived.<ref>[[19360628-DARETT|"Time Table No. 90 For Employees June 28, 1936", ''Dominion Atlantic Railway'', p. 3]]</ref>
[[Kingsport Wharf]]
 
  
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==
 
<Gallery>
 
<Gallery>
 
Image:1903-LANDOFEVANGELINE-P16.jpg|[[Kingsport]] circa 1890s with [[Kingsport Wharf|wharf]] and shipyard.
 
Image:1903-LANDOFEVANGELINE-P16.jpg|[[Kingsport]] circa 1890s with [[Kingsport Wharf|wharf]] and shipyard.
 +
File:Spicer Kingsport-wharf Barques b.jpg|[[Kingsport Wharf]] at the launch of the barquentine ''Skoda'' with three DAR flatcars on the wharf siding, June 1, 1893.
 
Image:1903-LANDOFEVANGELINE-P17.jpg|[[Kingsport Wharf]], high and low tide views, with flatcars and gondola on wharf siding, circa 1900.
 
Image:1903-LANDOFEVANGELINE-P17.jpg|[[Kingsport Wharf]], high and low tide views, with flatcars and gondola on wharf siding, circa 1900.
 +
File:CVR geomap 1911.jpg|Map of the [[:Category:Subdivision Kingsport|Cornwallis Valley Railway/Kingsport Subdivision]], detail from "Kingsport" Sheet No. 84", Geological Survey of Canada Map, 1911.
 
File:1911a.jpg|[[Kingsport Wharf]] with [[DAR0012|Locomotive No. 12]]; [[DAR000024|Combine No. 24]] (behind engine) and [[DAR000031|Combine No. 31]] meeting the DAR ferry [[SS Prince Albert]], summer 1911.
 
File:1911a.jpg|[[Kingsport Wharf]] with [[DAR0012|Locomotive No. 12]]; [[DAR000024|Combine No. 24]] (behind engine) and [[DAR000031|Combine No. 31]] meeting the DAR ferry [[SS Prince Albert]], summer 1911.
 
File:CSTM-STR03977a 001 aa cs.jpg|[[DAR000024|Combine No. 24]] (behind engine) and [[DAR000031|No. 31]] with [[DAR0012|Locomotive No. 12]] in a detail of a [[Kingsport Wharf]] photo, c. 1911
 
File:CSTM-STR03977a 001 aa cs.jpg|[[DAR000024|Combine No. 24]] (behind engine) and [[DAR000031|No. 31]] with [[DAR0012|Locomotive No. 12]] in a detail of a [[Kingsport Wharf]] photo, c. 1911
 
File:DAR - Engine 13 Gabriel - Kingsport - Possibly Lee Boles Photo - Unknown Date.JPG|[[DAR0013|Locomotive No. 13 "Gabriel"]] at the [[Kingsport Station]], circa 1895-1911.
 
File:DAR - Engine 13 Gabriel - Kingsport - Possibly Lee Boles Photo - Unknown Date.JPG|[[DAR0013|Locomotive No. 13 "Gabriel"]] at the [[Kingsport Station]], circa 1895-1911.
 +
File:Kalkman38.jpg|[[Kingsport]] in winter with cars at the [[Kingsport Fruit Company warehouse]] and the [[Mayflower Fruit Company warehouse]] along with [[DAR000031|combine No. 31]] at end of train and [[Kingsport Station]] on right circa 1920.
 
File:Kingsport21.jpg|Ephraim Hiltz inside the [[Kingsport Enginehouse]] with locomotive [[DAR0021|No. 21]], circa 1915.
 
File:Kingsport21.jpg|Ephraim Hiltz inside the [[Kingsport Enginehouse]] with locomotive [[DAR0021|No. 21]], circa 1915.
File:DAR6.JPG|DAR [[:Category:Inspection Cars|Inspection Car]] on the Kingsport Wharf, circa 1914-18
+
File:DAR6.JPG|DAR [[:Category:Inspection Cars|Inspection Car]] on the Kingsport Wharf, circa 1914-18.
 +
File:Kalkman39.jpg|DAR [[DAR0021|locomotive No. 21]] with southbound train at the [[Kingsport Station]] with crew and locals, circa 1920.
 +
File:Cudmore Kingsport006b.jpg|[[Kingsport Wharf]], from the east, with a DAR locomotive and the combine car [[DAR000031|No. 32 "Daphne"]], circa 1920.
 +
File:Kingsport Level Crossing.jpg|Postcard of level crossing in [[Kingsport]], looking south along Main Street, 1920s
 +
File:DAR 33 - van 435786 - Kingsport Beach - Harold Jenkins - Unknown Date - Summer.JPG|[[DAR0033|Locomotive No. 33]] and [[DAR435786|caboose 435786]] at [[Kingsport]] Beach, at the head of the [[Kingsport Wharf]], circa 1920s.
 +
File:A4368.42 Kingsport detail.jpg|[[:Category:Air Photo|Air photo]] showing [[Kingsport]] on the DAR's [[:Category:Subdivision Kingsport|CVR branchline]], Sept. 30, 1931.
 +
File:Kalkman105.jpg|[[Kingsport Wharf]] with a DAR locomotive, boxcar and passenger cars, with the DAR ferry [[MV Kipawo]] arriving, circa 1930s.
 
Image:Kingsportfloatplane.jpg|The [[Kingsport Wharf]] with refrigerator car and visiting float plane beside the DAR freight shed and schooner ''F.B.G.'', circa July 1936.
 
Image:Kingsportfloatplane.jpg|The [[Kingsport Wharf]] with refrigerator car and visiting float plane beside the DAR freight shed and schooner ''F.B.G.'', circa July 1936.
 
Image:KipatKing.jpg|[[Kingsport Wharf]] with [[MV Kipawo]] meeting a 4-4-0 locomotive pulling a passenger coach, [[DAR000031|Combine No. 31]] and two boxcars, August 1936.
 
Image:KipatKing.jpg|[[Kingsport Wharf]] with [[MV Kipawo]] meeting a 4-4-0 locomotive pulling a passenger coach, [[DAR000031|Combine No. 31]] and two boxcars, August 1936.
 
Image:Kipawo ticket - front.jpg|Automobile claim ticket for Parrsboro to [[Kingsport]] voyage aboard [[MV Kipawo]] August 15, 1938.
 
Image:Kipawo ticket - front.jpg|Automobile claim ticket for Parrsboro to [[Kingsport]] voyage aboard [[MV Kipawo]] August 15, 1938.
 
File:KingsportSheppard.jpg|[[Kingsport Wharf]] and freight shed, Summer 1940.
 
File:KingsportSheppard.jpg|[[Kingsport Wharf]] and freight shed, Summer 1940.
 +
File:LeonPlan.jpg|Plan of the [[Kingsport Wharf]] after reconstruction, June 12, 1942.
 
File:DAR - Train Crew - Kingsport - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - August1943.JPG|[[DAR0470|Locomotive No. 470]] with crew at [[Kingsport Station]], June 1943.
 
File:DAR - Train Crew - Kingsport - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - August1943.JPG|[[DAR0470|Locomotive No. 470]] with crew at [[Kingsport Station]], June 1943.
 
File:DAR - Train Crew - Kingsport - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - June1943 Medres.JPG|[[DAR0470|Locomotive No. 470]] with crew at [[Kingsport]], August 1943.
 
File:DAR - Train Crew - Kingsport - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - June1943 Medres.JPG|[[DAR0470|Locomotive No. 470]] with crew at [[Kingsport]], August 1943.
File:DAR - Train Crew - Kingsport - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - Summer 1946.JPG|Crew of the [[Kingsport]] train at the [[Kingsport Station]], summer 1946.
+
Image:Kingsport Air photo 1945.jpg|Air photo of [[Kingsport]], the [[Kingsport Wharf]], apple warehouses and train parked at the [[Kingsport Station]], July 27, 1945.
 +
File:DAR - Train Crew - Kingsport - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - Summer 1946.JPG|[[Kingsport Station]] agent and crew of the [[Kingsport]] train at the [[Kingsport Station]], summer 1946.
 
File:470a.jpg|[[DAR0470|DAR locomotive No. 470]] with Train No. 11 at the [[Kingsport Station]], circa 1942.
 
File:470a.jpg|[[DAR0470|DAR locomotive No. 470]] with Train No. 11 at the [[Kingsport Station]], circa 1942.
 +
File:DAR - Engine 470 - Kingsport - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unkwn Date - 1946.jpg|[[DAR0470|Locomotive 470]] at the [[Kingsport Station]] with the [[Mayflower Fruit Company warehouse]] and the Kingsport Section House, 1946.
 +
File:Kingsport Bus.jpg|Starr Williams, driver, at [[Kentville Station]] with the short-lived [[Kingsport]] bus, circa April, 1947.
 +
File:DAR - Kingsport Station - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - 1959.JPG|[[Kingsport Station]], 1959.
 
File:Wolfville_21_H1_West.jpg|Topographic map from Kentville to Hortons Landing circa 1956.
 
File:Wolfville_21_H1_West.jpg|Topographic map from Kentville to Hortons Landing circa 1956.
 
Image:Kingsportwharfa.jpg|The [[Kingsport Wharf]], the final terminus of the CVR, showing the second DAR freight shed on the wharf in the last days of the subdivision, circa 1960.
 
Image:Kingsportwharfa.jpg|The [[Kingsport Wharf]], the final terminus of the CVR, showing the second DAR freight shed on the wharf in the last days of the subdivision, circa 1960.
 
File:STR20505a 001 aa cs.jpg | Kingsport Engine House May 1958.
 
File:STR20505a 001 aa cs.jpg | Kingsport Engine House May 1958.
Image:Wharfsign.JPG|Interpretive sign at [[Kingsport Wharf]], 2015
+
File:DAR - Kingsport Roundhouse C - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - 1958.JPG|[[Kingsport Enginehouse]] from the north east showing surrounding landscape, 1958.
 +
File:DAR - Kingsport Roundhouse D - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - 1958.JPG|[[Kingsport Enginehouse]] north end facing the engine doors from the wye track, 1958.
 +
Image:Wharfsign.JPG|Interpretive sign at [[Kingsport Wharf]], 2015.
 
</Gallery>
 
</Gallery>
  
Line 81: Line 99:
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==
*[http://www.kingsport.ca/history/history.htm Cora Atkinson, ''A History of Kingsport, Nova Scotia'']]
+
*[http://kingsport.ca/about-kingsport/history/ Cora Atkinson, ''A History of Kingsport, Nova Scotia'']]
 
*[http://www.kingsport.ca/ Kinsport History along with community information.]
 
*[http://www.kingsport.ca/ Kinsport History along with community information.]
 
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingsport,_Nova_Scotia Kingsport at Wikipedia]
 
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingsport,_Nova_Scotia Kingsport at Wikipedia]

Latest revision as of 18:31, 5 June 2024


Kingsport Station and warehouses with locomotive No. 470, c. 1942

Kingsport, Nova Scotia

  • Elevation: 47 feet above sea level at station[1] 4 feet above sea level at wharf

Previous Station: Pereau


Kingsport was the eastern terminus of the Cornwallis Valley Railway branchline of the Dominion Atlantic. The village served as an important shipping point and interchange between rail and ocean transport from 1890 until 1961.

Facilities

Kingsport Station, north side of main line Siding for two apple warehouses opposite station, south side of main line:

  • Section House at east switch of wye

Wye and Kingsport Enginehouse

Spur line to Kingsport Wharf

  • Double track siding at wharf, 2nd track taken up by 1911

Waiting room/freight shed and lighthouse at end of wharf

History

Previously inhabited by Mi'kmaw and Acadians, Kingsport was settled by New England Planters in the 1760s. A first known as Indian Point and Oak Point, it became Kingsport in the 19th century as ship yards and a shipping pier made it the leading port in Kings County. Major wooden shipyards built a series of large square-rigged sailing ships from the 1850s to the 1890s. As wooden shipbuilding declined in the face of iron steamships, investors in the area pooled money to bring the railway to Kingsport, the Cornwallis Valley Railway (CVR) which connected to the Dominion Atlantic at Kentville. Railway construction began in 1889 and the line went into full service in 1890, triggering a major increase in the apple industry. Apple warehouses were built at almost every crossing along the CVR, one every three miles including two inside the wye facing the station at Kingsport.[2]

Kingsport Wharf with ferry SS Prince Albert, summer 1911.

The Kingsport Wharf, originally built to serve the shipyard and extended for coast shipping was extended to service ocean steamships with a railway spur along its entire length. Apples, potatoes and lumber were exported while coal, fertilizer, general freight and even Sable Island horses were imported. Kingsport was also part of the Minas Basin ferry route for passengers, freight and vehicles carried out by a series of steamships, the SS Evangeline, SS Prince Albert and later the MV Kipawo which connected Kingsport to Parrsboro and Wolfville from 1890 until 1940.

A number of industries operated in Kingsport following the railway's arrival including a saw mill, moulding mill, two boat builders and in the first few years of the railway, a ship repair operation in the old shipyard. Kingsport's population peaked in this era at over 700 people. While the mills eventually declined, rail-related tourism grew as several hotels such as the Sunnyside Inn and the Longspell Inn were built for summer tourists and a colony of summer cottages grew around the village and beach.

The railway operations at Kingsport centred on a large wye with a single stall enginehouse where the branch line locomotive received light servicing and stayed overnight. Because of the short distance to Kentville, there were no water or coaling facilities. Kingsport was home to many of the regular train crews on the branchline and also a summer home to some DAR employees who owned cottages there.

Kingsport Air Photo, July 27, 1945

Kingsport generated brisk passengers service in its first years, reaching the height in 1914 of six trains a day (eight on Saturdays!) several with express service for shoppers and commuters.[3] A lasting service were morning and afternoon "school trains" which took generations of older children from Kingsport to the high school in Kentville.[4] The growth of automobile traffic eroded passenger service but Kingsport maintained four mixed-trains a day until rail service was abandoned in 1961, although the priority shifted to freight. The slow speed and extensive shunting of the Kingsport mixed trains in their two final decades earned them the commonplace nickname of "blueberry specials." Canadian Pacific tried a bus service from Kingsport to Kentville from April 1947 until May 1949.[5], in addition to its mixed train passenger service, but reverted to trains only for the duration of rail service.[6] Apple traffic remained the mainstay of the line but the loss of the British export market after World War II and the public expansion of highways diminished the remaining freight on the line leading to abandonment in 1961. Kingsport's population declined in the 1940s and plunged after World War II, falling to 224 people by 1956.[7]

Interpretive sign at Kingsport Wharf, 2015

The Kingsport community rallied in the 1990s becoming a bedroom community for the Wolfville-Kentville area. Investments were made in a revitalized park around the old railway wharf; a community centre and CAPS site built in an old general store; and an annual community fair and parade called "Kingsport Gala Days".

Framed by the tracks of the wye and the spur to the railway wharf, the daily arrivals, departures and shunting of the railway defined memories of life in Kingsport for generations. Images of trains meeting ships on the wharf became an icons for the history of the community. Physically, only a few visible traces remain of the railway in Kingsport today as the station and warehouses were destroyed in fires after abandonment and the roadbed was sold to adjacent landowners and mostly graded over. Portions of the engine house foundation now serve as a automobile garage foundation. A section of the overgrown, sunken roadbed that led to the wharf remains as does a stub of the railway wharf, now a parking lot, boat ramp and look-off with interpretive signs that discuss the railway era. The compact geography of railway features in Kingsport has led two railway modelers to create Kingsport in HO scale: Paul Bushnell and Dan Conlin.

Operations & Orders

1931 - Engines are not to switch within 150 feet of the end of outer end of the track on the wharf.[8]

1936 - Switching restriction on wharf not longer applies. Train No. 14 will not leave Kingsport until Train No. 11 has arrived. Train No. 18 will not leave Kingsport until Train No. 13 has arrived.[9]

Gallery

References and Footnotes

  • Dominion Atlantic Railway Employee Time Table September 25, 1949, Library and Archives Canada, pmp -HE.2804 DC

External Links