Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative - Wiki

Use of this site is subject to our Terms & Conditions.

Difference between revisions of "Claremont's"

From DARwiki
(→‎Gallery: image)
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 14: Line 14:
 
* Siding, for nearby Lakelands settlement, circa 1900
 
* Siding, for nearby Lakelands settlement, circa 1900
 
* Proposed Station, never built, 1910
 
* Proposed Station, never built, 1910
 +
* Siding for ballast steam shovel, Mile 18
  
 
<!-- Please create sub-pages for the following faculties & features if they exist and add the appropriate category tags to the sub page so that the structures list in the appropriate structures index. This is especially important for stations. We do not list sidings as a sub page. Just put them in as a feature line:
 
<!-- Please create sub-pages for the following faculties & features if they exist and add the appropriate category tags to the sub page so that the structures list in the appropriate structures index. This is especially important for stations. We do not list sidings as a sub page. Just put them in as a feature line:
Line 38: Line 39:
  
 
==Description & History==
 
==Description & History==
Claremont's is located a few miles south of the village of Lakelands. It is believed to have been named after Colonel Clairmont, a prominent family head in Lakeside active in lumbering. In 1910 architect Charles McClare attempted to develop a landscaped suburban community at Lakelands in a real estate scheme called the "Lakelands Development Company". A critical feature was a suburban train station to connect the wealthy new residents to Halifax. McClare drew plans for a finely-constructed stone station for Claremont's which he promised "will be certainly the most interesting station on the entire line between Halifax and Yarmouth." The development failed to attract enough investors and collapsed. None of the fine homes or the station were ever built.<ref>Sadie Siroy, ''Doorsteps and Crossroads: Stories from Mount Uniacke, Lakelands, Hillsvale and South Rawdon'' (1993). p. 10-14, 45.</ref>
+
Claremont's is located a few miles south of the village of Lakelands. It is believed to have been named after Colonel Clairmont, a prominent family head in Lakeside active in lumbering. In 1910 architect Charles McClare attempted to develop a landscaped suburban community at Lakelands in a real estate scheme called the "Lakelands Development Company". A critical feature was a suburban train station to connect the wealthy new residents to Halifax. McClare drew plans for a finely-constructed stone station for Claremont's which he promised "will be certainly the most interesting station on the entire line between Halifax and Yarmouth." The development failed to attract enough investors and collapsed. None of the fine homes or the station were ever built.<ref>Sadie Siroy, ''Doorsteps and Crossroads: Stories from Mount Uniacke, Lakelands, Hillsvale and South Rawdon'' (1993). p. 10-14, 45.</ref> Just west of Claremont's, a cutting through a bank of glacial till provided a small ballast pit known as Steam Shovel Siding.
  
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==

Latest revision as of 21:01, 5 January 2023


Claremont's, Nova Scotia (Also known as "Clairmont's Siding")

Subdivision Halifax, Mile 16.47, Elevation 460'

Next Station West: Stillwater Lake

Next Station East: Mount Uniacke

Facilities & Features

  • Siding, for nearby Lakelands settlement, circa 1900
  • Proposed Station, never built, 1910
  • Siding for ballast steam shovel, Mile 18

Commerce & Industry

Once contained a siding, likely used by the Clairmont Family in nearby Lakelands.

Description & History

Claremont's is located a few miles south of the village of Lakelands. It is believed to have been named after Colonel Clairmont, a prominent family head in Lakeside active in lumbering. In 1910 architect Charles McClare attempted to develop a landscaped suburban community at Lakelands in a real estate scheme called the "Lakelands Development Company". A critical feature was a suburban train station to connect the wealthy new residents to Halifax. McClare drew plans for a finely-constructed stone station for Claremont's which he promised "will be certainly the most interesting station on the entire line between Halifax and Yarmouth." The development failed to attract enough investors and collapsed. None of the fine homes or the station were ever built.[1] Just west of Claremont's, a cutting through a bank of glacial till provided a small ballast pit known as Steam Shovel Siding.

Gallery


References & Footnotes

  1. Sadie Siroy, Doorsteps and Crossroads: Stories from Mount Uniacke, Lakelands, Hillsvale and South Rawdon (1993). p. 10-14, 45.

Reference Tag

External Links

C. Bruce Fergusson, "Lakelands", Place-Names and Places of Nova Scotia Nova Scotia Archives (1967), p. 339.