Dominion Atlantic Railway Digital Preservation Initiative - Wiki
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Difference between revisions of "Apple Trains"
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Image:Sheffield Mills.jpg|Typical DAR scene, circa 1930: small country station with giant apple warehouses. | Image:Sheffield Mills.jpg|Typical DAR scene, circa 1930: small country station with giant apple warehouses. | ||
Image:CDCDA Apple Warehouse Thumb.jpg|[[Centreville]] Station surrounded by apple warehouses. | Image:CDCDA Apple Warehouse Thumb.jpg|[[Centreville]] Station surrounded by apple warehouses. | ||
− | Image:CDCDA Tracks.jpg|Apple barrels piled by the station at Centreville. | + | Image:CDCDA Tracks.jpg|Apple barrels piled by the station at [[Centreville]]. |
Image:CDCDA train2 thumb2.jpg|A double header apple train in [[Centreville]]. | Image:CDCDA train2 thumb2.jpg|A double header apple train in [[Centreville]]. | ||
Image:Apple warehouses.jpg|Map by Willard Longley showing apple warehouse locations in 1931. | Image:Apple warehouses.jpg|Map by Willard Longley showing apple warehouse locations in 1931. |
Revision as of 21:28, 19 December 2010
Apple Trains
Apple freight was the DAR's most important cargo. Apple traffic helped build the DAR and the DAR built the Valley's apple industry from a small side-crop to a major international export. Apple traffic averaged between 1 and 2 million barrels a year with the record crop in 1933 hitting 3,673,678 barrels.(3) Britain was the world's largest importer of apples and in the 1930s, one out of every ten apples sold in Britain came from from Annapolis Valley farms via the DAR.(2) The loss of the British export market during World War Two crippled the apple industry and greatly reduced DAR freight traffic from the 1940s onward.
Operations
From September to April, apples were loaded at 150 apple warehouses along the DAR. Local trains brought them to Kentville to be marshalled into freights bound for steamships in Halifax. In peak seasons, this produced massive double-header 50 boxcar freight specials, as many as six special trains per weekend, requiring an extra switcher locomotive in Kentville and extra CPR vans from Montreal.(1)
Rolling Stock
The DAR used standard 36 and 40 foot boxcars in summer and early fall. During the winter when freezing temperatures arrived, a large fleet of specially adapted insulated boxcars were used for apple service, the 69900 series, as well as refrigerated boxcars with charcoal heaters.
Apple train in Halifax in 1925.
- CDCDA Apple Warehouse Thumb.jpg
Centreville Station surrounded by apple warehouses.
Apple barrels piled by the station at Centreville.
A double header apple train in Centreville.
References and Footnotes
(1) Kentville Advertiser, Mar. 25, Sept. 9 and Sept. 16, 1937 (2) Some Economic Aspects of the Apple Industry in Nova Scotia by Willard Longley (3) Valley Gold by Ann Hutton