Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative - Wiki
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E. E. Armstrong Apple Warehouse
Edward E. Armstrong Apple Warehouse Falmouth
(Later incorporated into the Falmouth Fruit Company Warehouse
- Brick Construction
- Capacity (1927): 7,500 Apple Barrels
- Track Location:North Side of Tracks on spur, westward faing switch
History
Edward E. Armstrong was from a long-established family of farmers in the Falmouth area. He was an early investor in expanding the apple industry. He built a brick fruit warehouse at Falmouth in 1906, across from the Falmouth Station. At one point, he even owned his own insulated apple boxcars. His warehouse was later lengthened with a third loading door. His warehouse was later bought by the Falmouth Fruit Company who added to it and joined it together with an even larger new brick tile warehouse. The original Edwards brick warehouse survives today, as part of a large warehouse for the Avon Valley Floral Company, a prominent surviving railway landmark easily spotted from the Highway 101 at Falmouth.
Gallery
Falmouth Station with Windsor in background and new E.E Armstrong Apple Warehouse, 1906.
E.E Armstrong Apple Warehouse in Falmouth, circa 1910.
Locomotive No. 8133 hauling Train No. 11, passing ruins of Falmouth Station and the E.E. Arsmstrong Apple Warehouse, now joined to and made part of the Falmouth Fruit Company Warehouse, July 1959.
Loading doors of the old E.E. Armstrong Apple Warehouse, later the Falmouth Fruit Company Warehouse in Falmouth, June 19, 2011.
References and Footnotes