Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative - Wiki

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Difference between revisions of "Avon River Bridge"

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File:Windsor Ice 03.jpg|April 9 1935 - Ice buildup in the Avon River with the train bridge in the background.
 
File:Windsor Ice 03.jpg|April 9 1935 - Ice buildup in the Avon River with the train bridge in the background.
  
File:Avon River Bridges.jpg|[[Windsor]] and the [[Avon River Bridge]] - date unknown, probably late 1940s, 1950s.
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File:Avon River Bridges.jpg|DAR [[DAR1015|engine No. 1015]] leads a freight train across the [[Avon River Bridge]] at [[Windsor]], late 1940s, early 1950s.
  
 
Image:Avon River bridge curve.jpg|Eastern approach tracks to the [[Avon River Bridge]] from downtown [[Windsor]], in 1918, sharpest curve on the DAR.
 
Image:Avon River bridge curve.jpg|Eastern approach tracks to the [[Avon River Bridge]] from downtown [[Windsor]], in 1918, sharpest curve on the DAR.

Revision as of 18:58, 5 March 2025

Mile 32.25 on the Halifax Subdivision.

Length: 1146 feet long.[1] Second longest bridge on the DAR (after the Bear River Bridge.)

The wide tidal estuary of the Avon River at Windsor was the first big engineering challenge when the DAR's predecessor, the Windsor & Annapolis Railway began construction and the only one identified as a major engineering investment by the line's early investors.[2]

Two railway bridges and a causeway have spanned the Avon River at Windsor. In 1970 the Avon River Causeway replaced the railway and road bridges over the Avon River. The railway bridge was subsequently removed in January 1971[3] as was the car bridge in 19??.

Howe Truss "Basket Bridge" 1869-1915

Other Known Images

The Basket Bridge in 1906 - Canada Science and Technology Museum Image STR04092a.

Steel Truss Bridge 1915 - 1971-01-20

References

  1. Memorandum of General Information on the Dominion Atlantic Railway, Feb. 17, 1969, page 4, Dominion Atlantic Railway, Library and Archives Canada HE2810 D7 D7 fol.
  2. Prospectus, WINDSOR AND ANNAPOLIS RAILWAY NOVA SCOTIA, London: J. Haddon & Co. Printers (1867), Copy No. 24 Comeau Family Collection, p. 7
  3. Leo J. Deveau, The Chronicle Herald - 2021-01-18 Page C3 "This week in Nova Scotia history: Jan 18-24"