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Difference between revisions of "H. B. Jefferson"

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File:DAR-Engine10andTrainB-Windsor-HBJeffersonPhoto.JPG|[[DAR0012|Windsor & Annapolis No. 10, later DAR No. 12]] & Train B at the [[Windsor Station]], circa 1891.
 
File:DAR-Engine10andTrainB-Windsor-HBJeffersonPhoto.JPG|[[DAR0012|Windsor & Annapolis No. 10, later DAR No. 12]] & Train B at the [[Windsor Station]], circa 1891.
File:Chronicle-Herald 1958-09 - Windsor Train.jpg|[[H. B. Jefferson|J. B. King (H. B. Jefferson)]], [[Chronicle-Herald 1958-09 - Rare Old Photo|"Rare Old Photo" ''The Halifax Chronicle-Herald'', September 1958]]
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File:Chronicle-Herald 1958-09 - Windsor Train.jpg|[[H. B. Jefferson|J. B. King (H. B. Jefferson)]], [[Chronicle-Herald 1958-09 - Rare Old Photo|"Rare Old Photo" ''The Halifax Chronicle-Herald'', September 1958]].
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File:Chronicle-Herald 1958-05-17 - DAR Emerges & Old Landmark Gone.jpg|[[H. B. Jefferson|J. B. King]], "Dominion Atlantic Emerges From London Deal", ''The Halifax Chronicle-Herald'', May 17, 1958, about the creation of the DAR, start of the [[Flying Bluenose]], train wreck at [[Mount Denson]] and the car [[DARHALIGONIAN|"Haligonian"]].
 
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Revision as of 21:31, 28 November 2019

H. B. Jefferson's Obituary in the Maritime Express June 1970

Henry Bruce Jefferson (1893-1970) was a reporter, editor, civil servant and author who often wrote about Nova Scotia railways under the pen name J. B. King. He worked at various newspapers in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. In World War II, he served as the chief news censor for the Atlantic region. In 1949, he joined the Nova Scotia Information Service, a job that took him on travels across Nova Scotia where he gathered stories and contacts on the province's railway history. In 1950 he became editor of the Nova Scotia Hansard. He researched and wrote numerous articles on the history of Nova Scotia railways which appeared in The Chronicle-Herald from 1957 to 1961 under the name J.B. King. In 1957 he wrote a radio play for the Halifax station CJCH about the history of the DAR called "The Last Train Through Paradise".[1] Jefferson was also active in the Scotian Railroad Society, where he served as Vice President and compiled extensive research files and correspondence which is now preserved in the Scotian Railraod Society Collection at the Nova Scotia Archives, along with his own extensive collection of papers and photography, the H. B. Jefferson Collection.

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