Liverpool & Milton
Railway
(1897 - 1923)
By Robert Chant,
with help from Colin Churcher
The Liverpool and Milton Tramway Company was incorporated in 1896 under
the statutes of Nova Scotia, chapter 88 to:
"build along the streets of Liverpool and Milton and the highway between those
towns and along the Mersey River to the Milton Pulp Company's mill, provided the Nova
Scotia Southern Railway Company has not commenced operations by May 15, 1896."
The line opened for business on February 1, 1897 and was constructed from
tidewater at Liverpool through Milton, to the pulp mill of the Milton Pulp company.
The lines only steam locomotive was a 0-4-2 tank engine with and
overall passenger cab named "Mersey". This steam locomotive, built by the Porter
Company (serial #1712) of Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, went new to the line in December 1896.
Mersey hauled an average of 40 tons of freight (lumber, pulpwood and pulp) and 150
passengers on its four daily trips over the five mile route.
The name was changed to the Liverpool and Milton Railway in 1900 by the
statutes of Nova Scotia, chapter 176, which also authorized the company to sell the
railway to any other company.
The Liverpool and Milton Railway was purchased by the Halifax and South
Western Railway Company in 1907. (After this take-over, "Mersey" became H&SW
#1, in October of 1914 the locomotive went to the Sable Lumber Company and was eventually
scrapped.) Freight continued to move over the line for another 20 years, although
passenger service was eliminated. In 1923 the line became part of the new Canadian
National Railways system.
In 1929, when the Mersey Paper Mill was built in Brooklyn to replaced the
on-line pulp mills that provided most of its traffic, the rails of the former Liverpool
and Milton Railway were removed.
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©1998 Robert A. Chant, all rights
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