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Three Mile Plains
Three Mile Plains, Nova Scotia
Mile 28.05 from Windsor Junction on the Halifax Subdivision (Mile 43.86 from Halifax)
Elevation: 79 feet above sea level
- Next Station East: Newport
- Next Station West: Pembertons
Facilities & Features
- Passenger Shelter
- Siding (at one time)
Commerce & Industry
A number of gypsum quarries operated around Three Mile Plains which, long with small scale farming, formed the main industry in the community, with many residents also working in nearby Windsor.
Description & History
The community received its named because it is three miles from Windsor and surrounded by views of open fields, as opposed the the forested hills from Newport to Halifax. It became a historic African Nova Scotian community after the War of 1812 when it was settled by refugees from slavery in the United States. [1]
Gallery
Gypsum quarry spurs in the Windsor, Three Mile Plains, Dimock's and Newport areas, from Canadian geological map, 1909.
The Three Mile Plains Station, unknown date.
References & Footnotes
- ↑ C. Bruce Fergusson, "Three Mile Plains", Place-Names and Places of Nova Scotia Nova Scotia Archives (1967), p. 673.