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Difference between revisions of "Hantsport Station"

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==Brick Station 1944 - Present==
 
==Brick Station 1944 - Present==
It was replaced by a Tudor revival station, similar to the [[Bridgetown Station]], based on the standard CPR Station Design No. 16.<ref>[http://www.cptracks.ca/data/Structures/H-15-66.pdf Plans for CPR Station No. 16 at Canadian Pacific Historical Association]</ref> The new station was completed in 1944 making it one of the last stations built by the DAR. It is protected by both federal and provincial heritage laws, designated a historic railway station by the federal government in 1992<ref>[https://www.pc.gc.ca/en/culture/clmhc-hsmbc/pat-her/gar-sta/ne-ns "The Directory of Designated Railway Stations in Nova Scotia", ''Canadian Heritage'']</ref>, which means it cannot be demolished or altered without federal alteration<ref>[[Daily News - 1993-01-23 - Hantsport Station Heritage Designation|"Railway Station Designated" ''Daily News'', January 23, 1993.]]</ref> and was further designated as a provincial heritage building in 1995.<ref>[https://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=7816 "Hantsport Railway Station", ''Canadian Historic Places database'']</ref>
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Planning for a new station in Hantsport had begun in 1937. When the old station burned in 1943, a fine new brick station was quickly constructed. The new station was a Tudor revival station, similar to the [[Bridgetown Station]], based on the standard CPR Station Design No. 16<ref>[http://www.cptracks.ca/data/Structures/H-15-66.pdf Plans for CPR Station No. 16 at Canadian Pacific Historical Association]</ref> but with custom features for Hantsport. The new station was completed in 1944 making it one of the last stations built by the DAR. It is protected by both federal and provincial heritage laws, designated a historic railway station by the federal government in 1992<ref>[https://www.pc.gc.ca/en/culture/clmhc-hsmbc/pat-her/gar-sta/ne-ns "The Directory of Designated Railway Stations in Nova Scotia", ''Canadian Heritage'']</ref>, which means it cannot be demolished or altered without federal alteration<ref>[[Daily News - 1993-01-23 - Hantsport Station Heritage Designation|"Railway Station Designated" ''Daily News'', January 23, 1993.]]</ref> and was further designated as a provincial heritage building in 1995.<ref>[https://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=7816 "Hantsport Railway Station", ''Canadian Historic Places database'']</ref>
  
 
===Gallery===
 
===Gallery===

Revision as of 20:06, 16 May 2022


Hantsport Station

Wood Station c. 1870 - 1943

Hantsport did not have a station when the Windsor and Annapolis Railway first began operations through the town in 1869[1] The first Hantsport station was a standard Windsor and Annapolis passenger and freight station built circa 1870.

Description:[2]

  • Station Building, 40' x 22'
  • Station Platform, 200' x 14'
  • Water Tank (pump), 15' x 14'

The first station was destroyed in a fire in 1943.[3]

Gallery

Brick Station 1944 - Present

Planning for a new station in Hantsport had begun in 1937. When the old station burned in 1943, a fine new brick station was quickly constructed. The new station was a Tudor revival station, similar to the Bridgetown Station, based on the standard CPR Station Design No. 16[4] but with custom features for Hantsport. The new station was completed in 1944 making it one of the last stations built by the DAR. It is protected by both federal and provincial heritage laws, designated a historic railway station by the federal government in 1992[5], which means it cannot be demolished or altered without federal alteration[6] and was further designated as a provincial heritage building in 1995.[7]

Gallery

References and Footnotes

External Links

Harry Jost and Barry Moody, "Canadian Pacific Railway Station Hantsport, Nova Scotia", Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada Railway Station Report, RSR-097, 1991, Canadian Pacific Historical Association Documents Library

"My Memories of the DAR by John Harvie", Hantsport & Area Historical Society a glimpse into the station operations, trains and boyhood adventures from Hantsport