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Port Williams Fruit Company

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Revision as of 15:34, 26 December 2019 by Dan conlin (talk | contribs) (→‎History)

Port Williams Fruit Company Limited, Port Williams

Mile 51.5 on the Halifax Subdivision

History

Built circa 1900 by Henry Welton as a wooden apple warehouse, it was purchased in 1910 by the Port Williams Fruit Company, a co-operative formed by several farmers in the Port Williams area who banded together to jointly ship and market their apples and potatoes. The company joined other fruit co-ops to form the United Fruit Company organization in 1912. The warehouse had multiple expansions as the co-op grew and offered more services including fertilizer and gasoline. It was extended to the east in 1922 and to the north in 1924. A dust factory for insecticide spray was also added in 1924 and a coal shed was built in 1926. By 1927, the warehouse had a capacity of 19,000 barrels of apples[1] and was 271 feet long and 60 feet wide. A large cooperage was located just to the north.[2] Part of the warehouse was converted to cold storage in 1932. The company was taken over by Scotian Gold in 1965 and continued as a fruit and vegetable warehouse.[3] It was destroyed by a large fire in the early 2000s.

Gallery

References and Footnotes

  1. "Chart of Apple Produce Warehouses", Dominion Atlantic Railway, Feb. 23, 1927, Leon Barron Collection
  2. Greenwich Fire Insurance Plan August 1944, Nova Scotia Archives
  3. Edythe Quinn, A History of Greenwich, The Women's Association of Greenwich United Church (1968) p. 39

External Links