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Difference between revisions of "Kentville Water Tower"

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File:Kalkman1.jpg|The first [[Kentville Water Tower]] on the south side of the DAR yard, early  1920s.
 
File:Kentville Fire Map 1921 Sheet 1 annotated.jpg|Annotated detail of Kentville Fire Insurance Map showing the [[Kentville Roundhouse|roundhouse]], [[Kentville Machine Shop|machine shop]], [[Kentville Water Tower|the first water tower]] and [[Kentville Railyard]], Aug. 1921.
 
File:Kentville Fire Map 1921 Sheet 1 annotated.jpg|Annotated detail of Kentville Fire Insurance Map showing the [[Kentville Roundhouse|roundhouse]], [[Kentville Machine Shop|machine shop]], [[Kentville Water Tower|the first water tower]] and [[Kentville Railyard]], Aug. 1921.
File:Kalkman1.jpg|The first [[Kentville Water Tower]] on the south side of the DAR yard, early  1920s.
 
 
 
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Revision as of 11:44, 20 February 2023

Kentville Water Tower

A series of water towers associated with the Kentville Terminal Shops supplied steam locomotives.

The First Water Tower

Early locomotives may have been supplied by an internal water tank in the original Windsor and Annapolis Kentville Roundhouse, but the first documented water tower was located south of the mainline and just east of the W&AR engine house and shops, close to Main Street. It had a square wooden base[1] and an ornamental finial at the top along with a numbered water gauge facing north.

The Second Water Tower

A standard CPR 10,000 gallon[2] semi-enclosed octagonal wooden water tower, it was located by the turntable fit and had two discharge pipes, one by the roundhouse lead and the other on the Kingsport branch line. A numbered water gauge was located on the tank side between the discharge pipes, facing east. A chimney pipe from the tank heater rose from the summit of the tank roof.


The Third Water Tower

A new water tower, also a standard CPR semi-enclosed octagonal design was built closer to the river about 1943. It was fed a water stand pipe located at the turntable lead by the turntable pit. A mast on the roof hoisted a ball up and down to indicate the water level in the tank. This tank served until the end of steam in the early 1960s.

References and Footnotes

External Links