Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative - Wiki

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Difference between revisions of "Aldershot"

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File:Berwick 21 H2 East.jpg|Topographic map from Berwick to Kentville circa 1956.
 
File:Berwick 21 H2 East.jpg|Topographic map from Berwick to Kentville circa 1956.
 
Image:Aldershot station June 1943.jpg|[[Aldershot Station]] in June of 1943.
 
Image:Aldershot station June 1943.jpg|[[Aldershot Station]] in June of 1943.
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File:DAR - Aldershot Station - Harold Jenkins Photo - Unknown Date - August1943.JPG|[[Aldershot Station]], dated August 1943.
 
File:Tupper42.jpg|[[:Category:Subdivision Kingsport|CVR]] tracks at the Brooklyn Street level crossing, Meadowview, near [[Aldershot]], Spring 1985.
 
File:Tupper42.jpg|[[:Category:Subdivision Kingsport|CVR]] tracks at the Brooklyn Street level crossing, Meadowview, near [[Aldershot]], Spring 1985.
 
Image:Aldershot station.jpg|Camp Aldershot telegraph Station, 2008.
 
Image:Aldershot station.jpg|Camp Aldershot telegraph Station, 2008.

Revision as of 17:59, 18 May 2018

Aldershot, Nova Scotia

Mile 1.6 from Kentville on the Kingsport Subdivision, the Cornwallis Valley Railway

Mile 1.6 from Kentville on the Spur Track D Kingsport after 1961

Facilities

  • Spur Irving Oil, Mile .55 (1930s)
  • Aldershot Wye
  • Camp Aldershot Military Station and telegraph office

History

Beginning as a small station stop on the Cornwallis Valley Railway in 1889, Aldershot grew in importance in 1904 when it was chosen as the militia training base for western Nova Scotia which attracted special troop trains. A wye was built to turn troop train locomotives. Additional facilities were added in both World Wars which eventually included several supply warehouses located along the wye and two station buildings. The Aldershot wye was also used by DAR Kentville Roundhouse staff for testing refitted locomotives as they could be given a short run from Kentville and turned at Aldershot withour disrupting mainline traffic.[1]

Gallery

References and Footnotes

  1. Leon Barron, personal communication with Dan Conlin, 2000

External Links

History of Camp Aldershot, Canadian Army Cadets