Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative - Wiki

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*Nick Mika, ''An Illustrated History of Canadian Railways'', Belleville: Mika Books, 1972, page 137, (as DAR 31 at Canning).
 
*Nick Mika, ''An Illustrated History of Canadian Railways'', Belleville: Mika Books, 1972, page 137, (as DAR 31 at Canning).
* Stephens Collection, Canada Science and Technology Museum, N-18242 (same shot as in Mika book, at Canning)
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* Ingenium Archives, Science and Technology Railway Collection, STR18242, http://collection.ingeniumcanada.org/en/id/STR18242/<ref>Permalink: https://files.ingeniumcanada.org/items/arch/234/STR-18242_0a7d1c3834389e2ec0de3399b2f70448c3989622.jpeg</ref> (same shot as in Mika book, at Canning)
 
* [[:Category:West Hants Historical Society|West Hants Historical Society]] Photo#65 (as Midland 1)
 
* [[:Category:West Hants Historical Society|West Hants Historical Society]] Photo#65 (as Midland 1)
  

Latest revision as of 14:57, 18 October 2024

Dominion Atlantic Railway Steam Locomotive No. 31, "Truro"

Wheel Arrangement: 4-4-0

Built by the Rhode Island Locomotive Works in September 1874.

  • Builder No. 654
  • 17 x 24" cylinders
  • 68" drivers.

It was built for the Grand Trunk Railway as No. 301 and was renumbered GTR No. 421 in 1896. It was acquired from the Grand Trunk along with its identical sister GTR No. 420 by the Midland Railway which ran from Windsor to Truro and became Midland Railway No. 1 "Truro". The DAR acquired this locomotive along with Midland No. 2, Midland No. 3, and Midland No. 4 when the Midland Line was purchased in 1905. This locomotive became DAR No. 31 but kept its Midland name as "Truro". It was scrapped sometime before 1920.

Name Origins: Truro, eastern terminus of the Midland Railway.

Gallery

Known Photographs:

References and Footnotes

External Links