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Category:Refrigerator Cars

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Refrigerator Cars

Refrigerator car No. 2500 custom built to run on the DAR by E. E. Armstrong of Falmouth, NS, circa 1905.

Refrigerator cars, nicknamed reefers, are insulated box cars with cooling (and sometimes heating) devices used to transport perishable foods. They can easily be identified by their small doors and rooftop ice hatches. No evidence has emerged of DAR lettered reefers, but the DAR often hosted CPR reefers, such as CPR 286510, often found exporting fish and dairy products and importing meat and fruit. Refrigerator cars also played an important role in winter to export Nova Scotia's apple crops. The insulated sides helped keep apple barrels from freezing in sub-zero temperatures, assisted in very cold weather with portable stoves or charcoal heaters. While refrigerated cars protected apples and ensured a better quality product, they also has less capacity (due to the thick walls and ice bunkers) and could only carry 200 barrels of apples as opposed to 300 barrels in a standard boxcar.[1] The railway also charged a higher rate for shipping in reefer cars. CP refrigerator cars were used to carry some North American export apple traffic, such shipments from the Annapolis Valley to processors in Upstate New York in the 1950s.[2]

At least one apple exporter also owned his own refrigerator cars. Edward E. Armstrong, a large apple grower in Falmouth had two cars built for his ownership, ARL Nos 2500 and 2501 in 1905[3] They were 37 foot refrigerated cars intended for fruit and dairy service built to Armstrong's order at the Rhodes, Curry & Co. in Amherst. Each had a 60,000 pound capacity and were painted light blue and lettered for the "Armstrong Refrigerator Line" on one end with a diamond shield and "Owned by E.E. Armstrong, Falmouth N.S." lettered on the other.[4] He built two more in 1906 and by 1913, Armstrong had five refrigerator cars. He sold them to the Intercolonial Railway in April 1913.[5]

The DAR built and ran an ice house in Kentville, to provide blocks of ice for refrigerator cars.[6] Built sometime in the 1920s or 30s, it was located just behind the Kentville Station.

Gallery

References

  1. Anne Hutton, Valley Gold, Halifax: Petheric Press (1981) p. 83
  2. Email from George Melvin, Maine, via Bill Linley(31 May 2020) noting that apples were shipped from the Annapolis Valley to processors in upstate NY in reefers of the Rutland Ogdensburg Line in the early 1950s.
  3. "Report of the Chief of the Fruit Division", Canadian Parliament (March 31, 1906) p.99
  4. Amherst Daily News, August 26, 1905, cited in Mike Parker, End of the Line The Dominion Atlantic Railway: A Trip Back in Time, Lawrencetown NS: Pottersfield Press (2019), p. 196
  5. "E. E. Armstrong of Falmouth Sells His Refridgerator Cars", Canadian Railway and Marine World, April 1913
  6. Jim Little "CPR Wood Sheathed Refrigerator Cars", CP Tracks, Summer 1999, page 11.

External Links

Pages in category "Refrigerator Cars"

The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.