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Difference between revisions of "Falmouth Fruit Company Warehouse"

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===History===
 
===History===
E.E. Thompson built a brick fruit warehouse at [[Falmouth]] in 1906, across from the [[Falmouth Station]]. It was later joined together with a large new brick tile warehouse built by the Falmouth Fruit Company and served by a spur at mile 33.19. The manager in its peak years was George Henry Wilson, who later went on to be a prominent Conservative Member of the Legislature.<ref>[http://0-nsleg-edeposit.gov.ns.ca.legcat.gov.ns.ca/deposit/b10537582.pdf  Elliott, Shirley B. ''The Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia, 1758–1983 : a biographical directory'', Public Archives of Nova Scotia, page 235]</ref> After the decline of the apple export industry, the warehouse was used for a variety of commercial and storage uses and remains a prominent surviving railway landmark easily spotted from the Highway 101 at Falmouth.
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E.E. Armstrong built a brick fruit warehouse at [[Falmouth]] in 1906, across from the [[Falmouth Station]]. It was later joined together with a large new brick tile warehouse built by the Falmouth Fruit Company and served by a spur at mile 33.19. The manager in its peak years was George Henry Wilson, who later went on to be a prominent Conservative Member of the Legislature.<ref>[http://0-nsleg-edeposit.gov.ns.ca.legcat.gov.ns.ca/deposit/b10537582.pdf  Elliott, Shirley B. ''The Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia, 1758–1983 : a biographical directory'', Public Archives of Nova Scotia, page 235]</ref> After the decline of the apple export industry, the warehouse was used for a variety of commercial and storage uses and remains a prominent surviving railway landmark easily spotted from the Highway 101 at Falmouth.
  
 
==Gallery==
 
==Gallery==

Revision as of 20:37, 12 July 2019

Falmouth Fruit Company Warehouse

Mile 33.19 from Windsor Junction on the Halifax Subdivision[1]

History

E.E. Armstrong built a brick fruit warehouse at Falmouth in 1906, across from the Falmouth Station. It was later joined together with a large new brick tile warehouse built by the Falmouth Fruit Company and served by a spur at mile 33.19. The manager in its peak years was George Henry Wilson, who later went on to be a prominent Conservative Member of the Legislature.[2] After the decline of the apple export industry, the warehouse was used for a variety of commercial and storage uses and remains a prominent surviving railway landmark easily spotted from the Highway 101 at Falmouth.

Gallery

References and Footnotes

External Links