Middleton Railway Museum prepares for reopening with new acquisitions - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Middleton Railway Museum prepares for reopening with new acquisitions

The Middleton Railway Museum, which has been closed for two years, has been undergoing renovations and adding new equipment and displays ahead of its planned reopening in late spring.

New equipment includes 2 industry engines and a tender

Three volunteers pose on front of a terracotta coloured small locomotive sitting on tracks. There is snow on the ground.
Volunteers John MacDonald, Allison Bell and Rick Jacques stand in front of the newly placed Plymouth shunting engine at the Middleton Railway Museum. (Lawrence Powell/Middleton Railway Museum)

The tracks at the Middleton Railway Museum may seem tolead nowhere.

But for railway aficionados, they lead to memories of a time when trains were the economic lifeblood ofNova Scotia.

The museum has been closed for the past two years due to the pandemic,but a team of volunteers has been busy withrenovations and acquisitions ahead of aplanned reopening in the spring, according to volunteer Lawrence Powell.

On Dec. 29, the Middleton-based museum added new equipmentto its collection, including a tender and two shunting engines, known as industry engines, from the Museum of Industry in Stellarton.

John MacDonald, a volunteer who worked to getthe new acquisitions, said it was the first of three truckloads of equipmentdonated by the Stellarton museum and the province.

MacDonald's favourite of thepieces is the tender,a car that goes behind a steam locomotive and provides coal and water.

"Acorrugated kind of hose there would hook up to the steam locomotive and ... allowed the water to go to the locomotive to produce steam when the locomotivewas hot-fired from the coal," he said

"We don't know for sure, but we believe it could be the only slant-back tender left in North America. And here it is on our lawn today."

Three people, two in safety jackets, stand in front of a black railway tender car. There is snow on the ground.
MacDonald, Bell and Jacques are members of the Middleton Railway Museum acquisitions team that organized the new equipment. (Lawrence Powell/Middleton Railway Museum)

Slant-back tenders, also known as slope-back tenders, allowed the train engineer a better look at the surroundings in the train yard.

Shunting engines

He said one of the shunting engines, called a Plymouth, was used to transport stones from theWallace quarry. Stones from the quarry wereused to build the Nova Scotia legislature.

The other engine, called a Vulcan, worked at theBowater Mersey Pulp Mill in Brooklyn, N.S. It would have moved logs to the mill to be turned into pulp and then taken the finished product back out to the main railway line, according to Powell.

In creating a glimpse into the rail history of Nova Scotia, Powell said it was important that the museumconveyed the full extent of the significance of rail in the province.

"It is the romance and the glamour, the nostalgia," he said. "But it's also about the economy and the local economy and how the railway opened it up and how you could move goods from the valley, for instance, apples."

A small green and black locomotive is lowered by a crane to the snow-covered ground.
The Vulcan shunting engine is pictured being lowered to its new home at the museum on Dec. 28, 2022. (Lawrence Powell/Middleton Railway Museum)

Powell said community involvement has been an important part of the development of the museum and they havebenefited from community suggestions, stories and donations.

Student involvement

Additionally, he said, the museum has involved students and young people in what they do,including volunteer work from Lawrencetown Education Centre and Middleton Regional High School students.

Powell said there are generations of people in the Annapolis Valley who have never even seen a train, and the museum will let them see and touch one.

Volunteers have been hard at work getting the museum ready for reopening later this year, Powell said. The work includesrenovations to the main building that include replacing the shingles.

A small model of a black steam locomotive is placed on a section of model railway track by a hand.
MacDonald has his hand on a locomotive in the unfinished Middleton Railway Station display. (Lawrence Powell/Middleton Railway Museum)

In addition to the new equipment that will be on display when the museum reopens, there will also be a large model railway.

It will depict the railway running through the Annapolis Valley to Windsor,and will include an elaborate display of Grand Pr,Powell said.

3D replica of a multi-lever galvanized iron gypsum processing building including chutes and a railway track in the foreground.
The model railway includes a replica of the gypsum mines near Windsor. (Lawrence Powell/Middleton Railway Museum)

He said the museum has inherited a large number of photographs over the yearsand they are beingdigitized so they can be turned into slide shows and interpretive exhibits.

The response to the reopening efforts has been overwhelming, Powell said.

"People have been eager, almost tripping over themselves,to help us," he said.