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Difference between revisions of "Grand Pre Station"

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Image:Grand_Pre_Station_a.jpg|[[Grand Pre Station]] and apple warehouse, unknown date.
 
Image:Grand_Pre_Station_a.jpg|[[Grand Pre Station]] and apple warehouse, unknown date.
 
File:DAR - Grand Pre Station-Mrs Everett Palmeter Photo-Unknown Date.JPG|[[Grand Pre Station]], with Mrs. Everett Palmeter, apple warehouse in the background, unknown date.
 
File:DAR - Grand Pre Station-Mrs Everett Palmeter Photo-Unknown Date.JPG|[[Grand Pre Station]], with Mrs. Everett Palmeter, apple warehouse in the background, unknown date.
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File:Rail_Cars_Grand_Pre_1922_HH_Reid_cJamieRobertson_Zoom_in.jpg|Detail of circuit camera shot of Evangeline statue with the [[Grand Pre Station|station]] and warehouses. Note that an operator's bay has been added to station, Aug. 16, 1922.
 
Image:Grand Pre Stations.jpg|Both the new (right) and the old [[Grand Pre Station|stations]] circa 1925.
 
Image:Grand Pre Stations.jpg|Both the new (right) and the old [[Grand Pre Station|stations]] circa 1925.
 
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Revision as of 08:33, 26 June 2021

Grand Pre Station

Windsor & Annapolis Railway Wood Station 1869 - 1925

The first station at Grand Pre was a simple 40' x 22' structure built on the south side of the tracks, one of the medium sized stations built by the Windsor and Annapolis Railway in 1869.[1]

The following information was forwarded to the DARDPI by Heather Watts of the Wolfville Historical Society [2]:

The station master here in the 1870s was Andrew Borden, father of Robert L. Borden, later Prime Minister of Canada. In 1915 when the Prime Minister's mother died in Grand Pre he recorded the following: "On March 26, an alarming telegram reached me; and I left immediately by special train for Grand Pre, arriving in twenty-five-and-a-half hours from Ottawa....my brother Hal and I slept on the private car and early in the morning of March 29, we learned that mother had passed away....."[3]

Gallery

Dominion Atlantic Railway Log Station 1925 - Present

The CPR built a log cabin and fieldstone station on the north side of the tracks in 1925.[4] Heather Watt of the Wolfville Historical Society reports that "The Grand Pre station was pulled across the dyke and re-erected on the bluff at Evangeline Beach, where it still stands, as a private cottage."[5]

Gallery

References and Footnotes

  1. Windsor and Annapolis Railway, Report of Alexander MacNab, C. E., November 1, 1873. pages 14, 21
  2. Wolfville Historical Society
  3. Robert Laird Borden: His Memoirs, Vol. I, McClelland & Stewart, 1969)
  4. Marguerite Woodworth, History of the Dominion Atlantic Railway, page 66
  5. Wolfville Historical Society

External Links