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Horton Landing

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Revision as of 19:39, 9 July 2024 by Dan Conlin (talk | contribs) (→‎Description & History: railway role in setting up memorial cross)

Horton Landing, Nova Scotia

Mile 45.93 from Windsor Junction on the Halifax Subdivision (Mile 61.15 from Halifax)

Facilities & Features

Description & History

Horton Landing was an important ford across the Gaspereaux River and a shipping point where schooners could tied up at the river bank to land freight and passengers from the Acadian era onwards. It was a a major site for the Acadian deportation in 1755. A large town plot was laid out for the settlement of the New England Planters in 1760, but merchants preferred the sheltered harbour at Wolfville for shipping so Horton Landing remained a farming community. The landing was an important site for unloading equipment and rolling stock during the construction of the Windsor & Annapolis Railway and the site of a large construction camp to build the difficult Gaspereaux River Bridge which proved to be the last link to complete the line in December 1869. The railway brought a small station and later an large apple warehouse run by the Grand Pre Fruit Company.[1] A memorial cross marking the believed location of the loading point for the Acadian Explusion was installed beside the tracks on a plot of land givne to the Acadians by the DAR in August 1923.[2] Passenger trains ceased stopping in June 1980.[3] The cross was moved in 2005 from its track-side location closer to the river and the actual site of the deportation.[4]

Gallery

References & Footnotes

Reference Tag

External Links