Midland Railway (Canada)
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| Overview | |
|---|---|
| Headquarters | Truro, Nova Scotia |
| Reporting mark | MRC |
| Locale | Nova Scotia, Canada |
| Dates of operation | 1898–1983 |
| Successor | Dominion Atlantic Railway 1905-1983 |
| Technical | |
| Track gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
| Length | 57.84 mi (93.08 km) |
Midland Railway was a Nova Scotian railway company formed in 1896 to build a railway through Hants County, Nova Scotia, connecting Truro to Windsor. Completed in 1901, it operated independently until 1905 when it became part of the Dominion Atlantic Railway and later the Canadian Pacific Railway, until the line closed in 1983.
The railway's route ran 93.08 kilometres (57.84 mi) following a series of gently curving river valleys, beginning with the St. Croix River near Windsor then following the Kennetcook River and Five Mile River to the Shubenacadie River and across to Black Rock, Clifton and following the lower reaches of the Salmon River to Truro.[1] Beginning in Truro, the railway went through the communities of Clifton, Princeport, South Maitland, Kennetcook, Clarksville Stanley, Mosherville, and Scotch Village, Brooklyn, Mantua and ended in Windsor. A number of private gypsum spurs connected to the Midland near Windsor and Mantua.

