Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative - Wiki
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Category:Apple Warehouses

Apple Warehouses
Apple warehouses were the most common trackside structures along the Dominion Atlantic. Over 150 of them were located along the line serving the Apple Trains that were one of the mainstays of DAR operations. Warehouses began to be built in the 1880s and continued as important rail traffic sources until the 1950s. Like grain elevators in Western Canada, they were all built in a similar way but also had numerous variations in size and style depending on where and when they were built. Although the DAR is now gone and Nova Scotia's apple industry is a shadow of its past size, a surprising number of apple warehouses have found alternative use for storage, retail, workshop, chicken and vegetable use.
Typical Structure
The first apple warehouses were 40' x 80', in the era of 36' long boxcars but soon 40' x 100' feet became the most common size as this length could load three 40' boxcars at once. As apple companies and co-ops grew and merged, they resulted in a few apple warehouses that stretched up to 300' along the track. A small heated room on one end provided the office for the warehouse manager. "Frostproof" insulated walls kept apples from overheating or freezing and distinctive roof-vents and small, hinged side-vents avoided moisture and mold build-up. Most warehouses were built of wood but a few in the 20th century were built from hollow bricks called "tile".
Operation
See main article: Apple Trains
The warehouses were usually located close to a station and several warehouses often shared the same spur or siding. Horse and oxen, and later trucks brought loosely filled barrels to be graded, packed and store from three insulated loading doors on the road-side. The south wall usually featured four to six windows providing light to the packing room where a team of workers graded the apples and tightly packed them in shipping barrels. Three loading doors on the track-side allowed three boxcars to be spotted and loaded at once.
Halifax Subdivision Warehouses
Kentville Subdivision Warehouses
Kingsport Subdivision Warehouses
There were a number of warehouses on the DAR’s Centreville to Kingsport line (formerly Cornwallis Valley Railway) and Centreville to Weston line (formerly North Mountain Railway). These were mostly constructed with a similar design and dimensions such that they are easily recognizable to this day, even with extensive modifications. Most were of one-and-a-half story timber construction with a cedar shingle exterior, metal roofing, a main floor at loading level which was free of support columns, a second floor under the roof and a frost-free cellar, with thick walls, underneath. The foundation walls were of brick and mortared stone, or poured concrete.
Yarmouth Subdivision Warehouses
External Links
Pages in category "Apple Warehouses"
The following 24 pages are in this category, out of 24 total.
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Media in category "Apple Warehouses"
The following 63 files are in this category, out of 63 total.
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