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Difference between revisions of "Berwick Evaporator"

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==[[Berwick]] Evaporator<ref>Dan Conlin, "Evaporating Apple History", [[Kings County Register August 3, 2006|''Kings County Register'', August 3, 2006, p.7]]</ref>==
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==[[Berwick]] Fruit==
[[File:Evaporator1919.png|thumb|400px|[[Berwick Evaporator]] and spur line, circa 1919]]
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[[File:BerwickFruit1935.jpg|thumb|500 px|Berwick Fruit co-operative apple warehouse, largest apple warehouse in the Maritimes, 1935]]
[[Berwick]]’s evaporator was one of the biggest on the DAR. Evaporators produced dried apple slices, often used as supplies for isolated lumber and construction camps. Evaporator plants provided an important market for small or damaged apples that were unsuitable for the fresh export market and the plants were the forerunner of later fruit processing plants. The Berwick evaporator was built about 1919 by Robert J. Graham, an ambitious businessman from Belleville, Ontario. He bought out and built evaporators from Bridgetown to Windsor.  In Berwick he built a large factory, complete with its own adjacent fruit warehouse and railway spur line. 
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Berwick Fruit Limited was an important apple co-operative created by a group of farmers around [[Berwick]] in 1907 to avoid exploitation by apple brokers, shippers and agents who took much of the export profit from famers. It was the first farming co-op in Nova Scotia and enjoyed success in getting better prices and more control over grower's apples, which quickly led to the creation of other apple co-ops across the Annapolis Valley. Berwick Fruit first leased a warehouse owned by A.S Magee on the south side of the DAR. This warehouse burned on February 12, 1923. It was quickly replaced by a much larger brick tile warehouse, 3 stories high, 60 feet wide and 262 feet long the largest fruit warehouse in the Maritimes. Cold storage was added in 1933 and membership grew to 50 farmers. The co-op expanded, buying up surrounding buildings. The Hutchinson Mill was acquired as a cooperage and storage building and a worker's boarding house was converted from an old vinegar plant. A large extension was added to the east of the warehouse in 1968 creating a large brick complex facing the Berwick Station. The Berwick Fruit co-op lasted until 1981 whne it was forced to close due to high interest rates, rising wages and declining sales. The building was later used by Stirlings. An HO scale model of the Berwick Fruit warehouse made by model-maker [[Jim Taylor]] depicts the warehouse as it appeared in 1931 and can be seen at [[:Category:Apple Capital Museum|Berwick Apple Capital Museum]].
 
 
The evaporator was large two-story building, later expanded to three and a half stories, surrounded by a large loading bay to receive apples and load the finished product onto boxcars.  A thousand foot spur from the mainline to held up to 17 boxcars. Inside the building, apples were pared and sliced by machinery powered by a coal fired boiler and its 80 foot iron smokestack. Roaring fires in six furnaces dried sliced apples in special tin-lined kilns, sending the water steaming out through the evaporator's characteristic roof vents. The evaporator was a seasonal operation which started with the apple crop in September and ran 11 hours a day, six days a week, until spring when the apples supply ran out. It employed a large, mostly female workforce.
 
 
 
Graham overextended himself in the valley and soon ran into trouble. According to a "History of Berwick Apple Warehouses" an article written by Robert Chute, the Berwick evaporator stood idle for long periods as Graham was forced to sell off his valley plants. In 1933, the Simms Company of Saint John, New Brunswick bought the Graham properties.  The Simms ran most seasons, but would suspend operations if the supply of culled apples was small or the price was high. The evaporator assumed an even more important role in World War Two.  Wartime shipping restrictions cut off the Valley from Britain, its biggest market. Evaporators, along with juice factories were one of the few remaining customers for the bulk of the valley crop as they produced large volumes of apple by-products as wartime rations. 
 
 
 
During the war, Simms sold the evaporator to R.A. Parker and Sons. In 1945, the United Fruit Companies briefly owned the evaporator plant before selling it to Roy Joudrey of Hantsport. The valley's apple industry never regained its former glory after the wartime loss of the British market and the Joudreys switched the plant to canning pears. 
 
 
 
Eventually the pear operation was closed down and the old evaporator stood silent for a number of years until it purchased by John Palmer of Morristown. He demolished the building sometime in the 1980s and the site is now used for parking and building materials by the Berwick Home Hardware. The evaporator was recreated on a railway diorama made by volunteers at the [[:Category:Apple Capital Museum|Berwick Apple Capital Museum]] in 2007, represented by an HO model made by Dan Conlin.
 
  
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==
 
<Gallery>
 
<Gallery>
File:Evaporator1919.png|[[Berwick Evaporator]] with boxcars soon after construction in 1919.
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File:FarmersMagazineJanDec1915.jpg|The first [[Berwick]] co-operative apple warehouse, featured in ''Farmer's Magazine'', January-December 1915.
File:Evapcalendar.jpg|[[Berwick Evaporator]] calendar for 1920 with photo of the evaporator soon after construction in 1919.
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File:Berwickwarehouses1919.jpg|"[[Berwick]], showing [[Berwick Fruit]]; S. B. Chute Front St,, Hutchinson Mill, [[Berwick Station]], H.C Mosher, and the S.B. Chute Mill St. warehouses, 1919.
Image:Berwick Railyard.JPG|[[Berwick]] railyard, evaporator, warehouse and [[Berwick Station|station]], May 1931.
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File:201216035.jpg|[[Berwick]] railyard looking west with Berwick Fruit on the left across from the [[Berwick Station]], 1931.
File:Berwick1931.jpg|Berwick looking south, 1931, showing east end of Berwick Evaporator.
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File:BerwickFruit1935.jpg|The [[Berwick Fruit]] warehouse, 1935.
Image:1938 Berwick insurance map.JPG|Berwick Fire Insurance Map, showing evaporator, 1938.
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Image:1938 Berwick insurance map.JPG|Berwick Fire Insurance Map, showing the Berwick Fruit buildings, 1938.
Image:Evap model medres.JPG|Model of Berwick Evaporator at the [[:Category:Apple Capital Museum|Apple Capital Museum]] by Dan Conlin, 2008.
 
Image:Evp Detail medres.JPG|Detail of evaporator model at the [[:Category:Apple Capital Museum|Apple Capital Museum]] showing loading dock, 2008.
 
File:Kings County Register August 3, 2006 .jpg|Article about the Berwick Evaporator, 2006.
 
 
 
 
</Gallery>
 
</Gallery>
  
 
==References and Footnotes==
 
==References and Footnotes==
*''[[Some Economic Aspects of the Apple Industry in Nova Scotia]]'' by Willard Longley
 
 
*''Valley Gold'' by Ann Hutton
 
*''Valley Gold'' by Ann Hutton
 
<references />
 
<references />

Revision as of 21:00, 27 May 2019


Berwick Fruit

Berwick Fruit co-operative apple warehouse, largest apple warehouse in the Maritimes, 1935

Berwick Fruit Limited was an important apple co-operative created by a group of farmers around Berwick in 1907 to avoid exploitation by apple brokers, shippers and agents who took much of the export profit from famers. It was the first farming co-op in Nova Scotia and enjoyed success in getting better prices and more control over grower's apples, which quickly led to the creation of other apple co-ops across the Annapolis Valley. Berwick Fruit first leased a warehouse owned by A.S Magee on the south side of the DAR. This warehouse burned on February 12, 1923. It was quickly replaced by a much larger brick tile warehouse, 3 stories high, 60 feet wide and 262 feet long the largest fruit warehouse in the Maritimes. Cold storage was added in 1933 and membership grew to 50 farmers. The co-op expanded, buying up surrounding buildings. The Hutchinson Mill was acquired as a cooperage and storage building and a worker's boarding house was converted from an old vinegar plant. A large extension was added to the east of the warehouse in 1968 creating a large brick complex facing the Berwick Station. The Berwick Fruit co-op lasted until 1981 whne it was forced to close due to high interest rates, rising wages and declining sales. The building was later used by Stirlings. An HO scale model of the Berwick Fruit warehouse made by model-maker Jim Taylor depicts the warehouse as it appeared in 1931 and can be seen at Berwick Apple Capital Museum.

Gallery

References and Footnotes

  • Valley Gold by Ann Hutton


External Links

Apple Capital Museum, Berwick