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Difference between revisions of "Auburn"

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==Description & History==
 
==Description & History==
Settled after the American Revolution, Auburn was named after a village in Westmeath, England. It became a farming community along the DAR, marked by its major landmark, the 1790s St. Mary's Anglican church, located just across the street from the train station.<ref>https://novascotia.ca/archives/places/page.asp?ID=23 C. Bruce Fergusson, "Auburn", ''Place-Names and Places of Nova Scotia'' Nova Scotia Archives (1967), p. 23.</ref>
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Settled after the American Revolution, Auburn was named after a village in Westmeath, England. It became a farming community along the DAR, marked by its major landmark, the 1790s St. Mary's Anglican church, located just across the street from the train station.<ref>]https://archives.novascotia.ca/places/page/?ID=23 C. Bruce Fergusson, "Auburn", ''Place-Names and Places of Nova Scotia'' Nova Scotia Archives (1967), page 23.]</ref>
  
 
==Operations & Orders==
 
==Operations & Orders==

Revision as of 18:52, 19 July 2021

Auburn, Nova Scotia

Subdivision Kentville, Mile 19.1

Facilities & Features

Commerce & Industry

Two Apple Warehouses:[1]

  • Aylesford Fruit and Produce Shipping Company warehouse, (1927) 20,000 barrel capy.
  • Herbert Oyler apple warehouse, (1927) 10,000 barrel capy.

Description & History

Settled after the American Revolution, Auburn was named after a village in Westmeath, England. It became a farming community along the DAR, marked by its major landmark, the 1790s St. Mary's Anglican church, located just across the street from the train station.[2]

Operations & Orders

Gallery

References & Footnotes

  1. Dominion Atlantic Railway, DAR Chart of Apple and Produce Warehouses, February 23, 1927
  2. ]https://archives.novascotia.ca/places/page/?ID=23 C. Bruce Fergusson, "Auburn", Place-Names and Places of Nova Scotia Nova Scotia Archives (1967), page 23.]

External Links