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Difference between revisions of "Annapolis Royal"

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File:AnnapolisRoyalPostcard01A.jpg|Postcard published by the DAR of Fort Anne historic site, 1903.
 
File:AnnapolisRoyalPostcard01A.jpg|Postcard published by the DAR of Fort Anne historic site, 1903.
 
File:Frogmorewithtrain.jpg|Postcard of a westbound passenger train at the [[Annapolis Royal Station]] with the [[Annapolis Royal Bridge]] in background, taken from the [[St. George Street Overpass]] looking west, circa 1910.
 
File:Frogmorewithtrain.jpg|Postcard of a westbound passenger train at the [[Annapolis Royal Station]] with the [[Annapolis Royal Bridge]] in background, taken from the [[St. George Street Overpass]] looking west, circa 1910.
File:PaulYatesPostcard1911.jpg|Postcard of [[Annapolis Royal]] in background and Granville Ferry in foreground with the [[Annapolis Royal Enginehouse]], wye, the Acadia Steamship Co. Wharf and [[Annapolis Royal Whaarf|the Railway Wharf]], 1911.   
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File:PaulYatesPostcard1911.jpg|Postcard of [[Annapolis Royal]] and Granville Ferry with the [[Annapolis Royal Enginehouse]], wye, the Acadia Steamship Co. Wharf and [[Annapolis Royal Wharf|the Railway Wharf]], 1911.   
 
Image:YA-00.00 Annapolis Royal.jpg|Track Schematic for Annapolis Royal, circa 1918.
 
Image:YA-00.00 Annapolis Royal.jpg|Track Schematic for Annapolis Royal, circa 1918.
 
File:R-108 edited.jpg |Transferring passengers and mail from wreck of [[Train No. 95]], at Moschelle, near [[Annapolis Royal]], January 25, 1921.
 
File:R-108 edited.jpg |Transferring passengers and mail from wreck of [[Train No. 95]], at Moschelle, near [[Annapolis Royal]], January 25, 1921.

Revision as of 20:29, 7 June 2021

Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia

Bird's Eye view of Annapolis Royal & Granville Nova Scotia 1878, showing the town in its golden years as railway terminus with the Annapolis Royal Station, wharf, railyard and enginehouse

Facilities & Features

Commerce & Industry

Description & History

Originally known as Port Royal, the port served as the capital of Acadia until captured by the British in 1710 and renamed Annapolis Royal. The capital of Nova Scotia was shifted to Halifax in 1749 leaving Annapolis Royal as a garrison town and shipping point for western Nova Scotia. Wooden shipbuilding grew in the 1850s. The arrival of regional steamships in the 1860s made the town an important steamship connection point and coaling station between Saint John and Boston. The town boomed in 1869 when it became the terminus of the Windsor and Annapolis Railway. The railway built extensive terminal facilities at Annapolis Royal centred around a large railway wharf. The railway stimulated several factories and population grew to over 1,500 in the 1870s. Annapolis Royal incorporated as a town in 1893. However, with the completion of the railway to Digby in 1893, Annapolis Royal ceased to be a terminus as most traffic bypassed the town. The the new Dominion Atlantic Railway shifted shifted most of the steamship commerce to Digby and Yarmouth where larger steel-hulled vessels required deeper waters. Annapolis Royal became a small country town with some lumber and apple exports, although a growing tourism industry in the 20th century drew on the long and colourful colonial history of the town.

Gallery

References & Footnotes

External Links