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Difference between revisions of "Mount Uniacke"
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Revision as of 12:39, 27 February 2020
Mount Uniacke, Nova Scotia
Mile 12.77 from Windsor Junction on the Halifax Subdivision (Mile 28.51 from Halifax)
Elevation: 523 feet above sea level[1]
- Next Station East: South Uniacke
- Next Station West: Stillwater Lake
Facilities & Features
- Mount Uniacke Station
- Mount Uniacke Water Tower
- Passing Track 1738 feet in length
- WYE (removed sometime between 1951 & 1961)
Commerce & Industry
Description & History
Mount Uniacke was named in 1830 after the large country estate of Richard John Uniacke located nearby. Construction of the Nova Scotia Railway ame to the area in 1857. The first train arrived on June 3, 1858.[5] A small depot was built that year to serve as the Mount Uniacke Station. Gold was discovered nearby in 1862, triggering a gold rush which led to stores and hotels clustering around the station. A new station was built in 1884 and served until 1963. The last train passed through on November 2, 2010 when the Windsor and Hantsport Railway, who had taken over the DAR's tracks, ceased operations.[6]
Gallery
Passenger train stopped at Mount Uniacke Water Tower on November 8, 1919.
Track schematic for Mount Uniacke showing the Mount Uniacke Station and a wye, undated.
Dayliner No. 9059 at Mount Uniacke, August 9, 1957.
Wayfreight from Windsor Junction to Kentville passes Mount Uniacke Water Tower on July 31, 1958.
Mount Uniacke Water Tower and westbound tracks, photographed by Harold Jenkins, December 4, 1960.
Mount Uniacke Station, photographed by Harold Jenkins, June 20, 1960.
Mount Uniacke station in 1961.
RDCs in the westbound Dayliner at Mount Uniacke, across Lake Martha from the Uniacke House Museum, September 1983.
References & Footnotes
- 1969 Memorandum of General Information
- C. Bruce Fergusson, "Beaver Bank", Place-Names and Places of Nova Scotia Nova Scotia Archives (1967), p. 47.
- ↑ Dominion Atlantic Railway, 1969 Memorandum of General Information, page 2
- ↑ Historic Map of Gold Mining areas.
- ↑ The British Colonist - Aug 14, 1869.
- ↑ Alpha Gold Mining Company Prospectus.
- ↑ Sadie Siroy, Doorsteps and Crossroads: Stories from Mount Uniacke, Lakelands, Hillsvale and South Rawdon (1993), p.3
- ↑ David Other, "WHRC's B23-7s including the last train to Windsor Junction", Youtube.com