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Difference between revisions of "Kentville Car Shop"

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File:KentvilleCarShopEmployees.jpg|Employees inside the [[Kentville Car Shop]], date unknown.
 
File:KentvilleCarShopEmployees.jpg|Employees inside the [[Kentville Car Shop]], date unknown.
  
Image:CPR8131-8132.jpg|[[CPR8131|No. 8131]] and [[CPR8132|No. 8132]] with loco shops and [[Kentville Roundhouse|turntable]] on right, and [[Kentville Car Shop|car shops]] and [[Kentville Boiler Plant|power plant]] on left in August 1959.
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Image:CPR8131-8132.jpg|[[CPR8131|No. 8131]] and [[CPR8132|No. 8132]] with loco shops and [[Kentville Turntable|turntable]] on right, and [[Kentville Car Shop|car shops]] and [[Kentville Boiler Plant|power plant]] on left in August 1959.
  
 
Image:Kentville Railyard 1961.jpg|View of the [[Kentville Railyard]] looking east from the roundhouse in 1961.
 
Image:Kentville Railyard 1961.jpg|View of the [[Kentville Railyard]] looking east from the roundhouse in 1961.

Revision as of 19:19, 6 July 2022

Kentville Car Shop

First Car Shop 1869 to 1937

Built by the Windsor and Annapolis Railway in 1869, the car shop in Kentville not only repaired cars but also built many W&A and DAR freight and passengers cars such as DAR passsenger cars No.1, No. 4, No. 5, No. 6 and baggage cars Nos. 52, 53, 55 and 56. It was destroyed by a massive fire of unknown cause on October 20, 1937 which also destroyed a passenger coach, caboose and flanger which were inside the shop.[1]

Gallery

Second Car Shop 1937 to 199x

Built by DAR Bridge & Building Department after original W & A wooden car shop burned in 1937. Construction began November 1937, finished December 1937:[2]

  • 46 feet by 217 feet
  • Concrete base, brick tile walls
  • Two through tracks
  • Attached office

The Car Shop was converted to Car and Locomotive Shop after Roundhouse closed in the 1960s.

The shop closed in October 1993 when the DAR abandoned its tracks in Kentville. Servicing for cars and the three remaining DAR locomotives was moved to outdoor facilities in Hantsport.[3]

Demolished 200x

Gallery

References and Footnotes

  1. "$45,000 LOSS IN EARLY MORNING FIRE HERE, Car Shop of D. A. R. Completely Razed, Cause of Blaze Unknown", The Advertiser, October 21, 1937, page 1
  2. George Bishop, "Railway Notes", The Advertiser, Nov. 11, 1937 and "Railway Notes", The Advertiser, Jan. 27, 1938
  3. David Othen, Dominion Atlantic Railway The Final 25 Years, page 79.

External Links