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Auburn
Auburn, Nova Scotia
(Also known as Morden Road)
Subdivision Kentville, Mile 19.1
Elevation: 94.9 feet[1]
Facilities & Features
Commerce & Industry
Two Apple Warehouses:[2]
- 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.[3] The village was a centre for both apple and cranberry production. Kentville businessman Herbert Oyler operated a large cranberry bog and packing plant at Auburn as well as an apple warehouse in Auburn.[4]
Operations & Orders
Gallery
Track chart of Auburn, showing the Auburn Station and platform and apple warehouses, 1918.
Auburn station sign, July 1, 1961.
References & Footnotes
- Alexander MacNab, Windsor and Annapolis Railway, Report of Alexander MacNab Nov 1, 1873
- 1969 Memorandum of General Information
- ↑ Louis Comeau, Dominion Atlantic Station List by Name, page 1
- ↑ Dominion Atlantic Railway, DAR Chart of Apple and Produce Warehouses, February 23, 1927
- ↑ C. Bruce Fergusson, "Auburn", Place-Names and Places of Nova Scotia Nova Scotia Archives (1967), page 23.
- ↑ John and Twila DeCoste, A History of Aylesford and District, Lancelot Press, 1986, p. 204.