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Difference between revisions of "Horton Landing"

From DARwiki
(→‎Description & History: railway role in setting up memorial cross)
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==Facilities & Features==
 
==Facilities & Features==
*[[Horton Landing Station]]H
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*[[Horton Landing Station]]
 
*Apple Warehouse, 10,000 barrels, the [[Grand Pre Fruit Company Warehouse|Grand Pre Fruit Company]]
 
*Apple Warehouse, 10,000 barrels, the [[Grand Pre Fruit Company Warehouse|Grand Pre Fruit Company]]
 
*1472 feet long Passing track in 1969
 
*1472 feet long Passing track in 1969
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==Description & History==
 
==Description & History==
Horton Landing was an important ford across the Gaspereaux River and a shipping point where schooners could tied up at the river bank to land freight and passengers from the Acadian era onwards. It was a a major site for the Acadian deportation in 1755. A large town plot was laid out for the settlement of the New England Planters in 1760, but merchants preferred the sheltered harbour at Wolfville for shipping so Horton Landing remained a farming community. The landing was an important site for unloading equipment and rolling stock during the construction of the [[Windsor & Annapolis Railway]] and the site of a large construction camp to build the difficult [[Gaspereaux River Bridge]] which proved to be the last link to complete the line in December 1869. The railway brought a small station and later an large apple warehouse run by the [[Grand Pre Fruit Company Warehouse|Grand Pre Fruit Company]].<ref>Dominion Atlantic Railway, ''[[1927-DAR CHART of Apple and Produce Warehouses|DAR Chart of Apple and Produce Warehouses, February 23, 1927]]''</ref> A memorial cross marking the believed location of the loading point for the Acadian Explusion was installed beside the tracks on a plot of land givne to the Acadians by the DAR in August 1923.<ref>''The Acadian'', July 1923, shared in [[https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10160613543509102&set=a.471129654101|Facebook Pot by Chris Gertridge, July July 8, 2024]</ref> Passenger trains ceased stopping in June 1980.<ref>''[[Scotian Railroad Society 1980-04 News|News April 1980]]''</ref> The cross was moved in 2005 from its track-side location closer to the river and the actual site of the deportation.<ref>[http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nsgrdpre/documents/dossiers/Sally/The-Cross.pdf "The Deportation Cross", ''Grand-Pre.com'']</ref>
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Horton Landing was an important ford across the Gaspereaux River and a shipping point where schooners could tied up at the river bank to land freight and passengers from the Acadian era onwards. It was a a major site for the Acadian deportation in 1755. A large town plot was laid out next to the landing for the settlement of the New England Planters in 1760, but merchants preferred to set up beside the more sheltered harbour at [[Wolfville]] for shipping, so Horton Landing remained a farming community. The landing was an important site for unloading equipment and rolling stock during the construction of the [[Windsor & Annapolis Railway]] and the site of a large construction camp to build the difficult [[Gaspereaux River Bridge]] which proved to be the last link to complete the line in December 1869. The railway brought a small station and later an large apple warehouse run by the [[Grand Pre Fruit Company Warehouse|Grand Pre Fruit Company]].<ref>Dominion Atlantic Railway, ''[[1927-DAR CHART of Apple and Produce Warehouses|DAR Chart of Apple and Produce Warehouses, February 23, 1927]]''</ref> A memorial cross marking the believed location of the loading point for the Acadian Explusion was installed beside the tracks on a plot of land givne to the Acadians by the DAR in August 1923.<ref>''The Acadian'', July 1923, shared in [[https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=10160613543509102&set=a.471129654101|Facebook Pot by Chris Gertridge, July July 8, 2024]</ref> Passenger trains ceased stopping in June 1980.<ref>''[[Scotian Railroad Society 1980-04 News|News April 1980]]''</ref> The cross was moved in 2005 from its track-side location closer to the river and the actual site of the deportation.<ref>[http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nsgrdpre/documents/dossiers/Sally/The-Cross.pdf "The Deportation Cross", ''Grand-Pre.com'']</ref>
  
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==

Revision as of 19:44, 9 July 2024

Horton Landing, Nova Scotia

Mile 45.93 from Windsor Junction on the Halifax Subdivision (Mile 61.15 from Halifax)

Facilities & Features

Description & History

Horton Landing was an important ford across the Gaspereaux River and a shipping point where schooners could tied up at the river bank to land freight and passengers from the Acadian era onwards. It was a a major site for the Acadian deportation in 1755. A large town plot was laid out next to the landing for the settlement of the New England Planters in 1760, but merchants preferred to set up beside the more sheltered harbour at Wolfville for shipping, so Horton Landing remained a farming community. The landing was an important site for unloading equipment and rolling stock during the construction of the Windsor & Annapolis Railway and the site of a large construction camp to build the difficult Gaspereaux River Bridge which proved to be the last link to complete the line in December 1869. The railway brought a small station and later an large apple warehouse run by the Grand Pre Fruit Company.[1] A memorial cross marking the believed location of the loading point for the Acadian Explusion was installed beside the tracks on a plot of land givne to the Acadians by the DAR in August 1923.[2] Passenger trains ceased stopping in June 1980.[3] The cross was moved in 2005 from its track-side location closer to the river and the actual site of the deportation.[4]

Gallery

References & Footnotes

Reference Tag

External Links