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Difference between revisions of "Frank Rand Maple Leaf Fruit Warehouse"

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===History===
 
===History===
This [[:Category:Apple Warehouses|Apple Warehouse]] was built soon after the Cornwallis Railway arrived in Canning about 1890 by British Apple Broker Frank Rand of London, England. It was an unusual design, whcih differed from most [[:Category:Apple Warehouses|Apple Warehouses]] in Nova Scotia as it was only one story, instead of a story and a half and had a low pitched roof with metal plate siding. By 1927, it had become part of the Maple Leaf Fruit Co-op. It still existed in 1940 as shown on the Canning Fire Insurance Plan of 1940 but was gone by the mid 1950s, probably being demolished after the collapse of the apple export industry just after the Second World War.
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This [[:Category:Apple Warehouses|Apple Warehouse]] was built about 1890, soon after the Cornwallis Valley Railway arrived in Canning, by British Apple Broker Frank Rand of London, England. It had an unusual design, which differed from most [[:Category:Apple Warehouses|Apple Warehouses]] in Nova Scotia as it was only one storey, instead of a storey and a half and had a low-pitched roof with metal plate siding. By 1927, it had become part of the Maple Leaf Fruit Co-op. It still existed in 1940 as shown on the Canning Fire Insurance Plan of that year but was gone by the mid 1950s, probably being demolished after the collapse of the apple export industry just after the Second World War.
  
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==

Revision as of 09:50, 29 January 2025

Frank Rand/Maple Leaf Fruit Warehouse Canning

Mile 10.8 on the Kingsport Subdivision at Canning

  • Served by east facing spur, south of the mainline, shared with the vinegar plant, coal shed and freight dock
  • Unusual configuration: one story, low pitched roof with skylights
  • 8,500 barrel capacity
  • Wooden construction with metal plate siding

History

This Apple Warehouse was built about 1890, soon after the Cornwallis Valley Railway arrived in Canning, by British Apple Broker Frank Rand of London, England. It had an unusual design, which differed from most Apple Warehouses in Nova Scotia as it was only one storey, instead of a storey and a half and had a low-pitched roof with metal plate siding. By 1927, it had become part of the Maple Leaf Fruit Co-op. It still existed in 1940 as shown on the Canning Fire Insurance Plan of that year but was gone by the mid 1950s, probably being demolished after the collapse of the apple export industry just after the Second World War.

Gallery

References and Footnotes