Students get a close up view of the Flume House

Dartmouth High School students had a chance to visit the Flume House in the Canal Greenway Park in Dartmouth. The students, under the guidance of teacher Maurice (Terry) Sampson, are putting together a time capsule to be installed by them in the Flume House in the Spring of 2017. An installation ceremony will be part of a grand celebration for the official opening of the Canal Greenway Park to help commemorate the “CANADA 150” year long event.   Students displayed great enthusiasm developing ideals for items to be included in the time capsule.   During their visit the students viewed the 600 mm deep opening for the time capsule left in a granite stone wall inside the Flume House. Safety Gear was not required because no contractors were working on site and the students were not allowed inside the Flume house.

-Doug Brownrigg

Did you know that the Dartmouth Inclined Plane was still in operation 150 years ago during  Canada’s Date of Birth (1867).

Bill MacIntyre, SCC Chair  and Sam Austin, Councillor District 5 (far left) with the students.

Bill MacIntyre, SCC Chair  and Sam Austin, Councillor District 5 (far left) with the students.

Three persons on the left are Bernie Hart, SCC Resident Historian, teacher Maurice Sampson and HRM Councillor Sam Austin, District 5.

Three persons on the left are Bernie Hart, SCC Resident Historian, teacher Maurice Sampson and HRM Councillor Sam Austin, District 5.

Stone mason work is still visible today!

R. McNulty, Pat Neals, Thomas Welsh and James Young were all listed as stone masons who worked on the Canal during the first attempt (1826 – 1831).   We can’t be sure but they may well have been on the Ship Corsair which arrived in 1827 from Scotland.  Also they may have been involved in the construction of the five locks which were located between the Harbour and Sullivans Pond.   We do know that a number of Irish workers and their families lived in the area of Sullivans Pond in the community known as Irishtown.  What is so exciting is that we can still see elements of their work as one of the Locks which they constructed, Lock 3, was later used to form the east and west walls of the Turbine Chamber on the Marine Railway.  Fortunately, these walls still stand and when the Power House is open to the public you will be able to look down into the Chamber where these walls still stand.  It is fascinating to try to visualize these men lowering one of the large granite blocks or, perhaps, applying wet mortar in the crevices. The back wall in the photo , thewest wall of the original Lock 3, was one of the walls of the Turbine Chamber used by the Marine Railway.   Not long after the Canal ceased operating in 1871, Starr Manufacturing used this same stone chamber to house their turbine to power the equipment used to manufacture over eleven million pairs of skates.  Little did the Irish workers know what would become of their handiwork and the uses to which it would be put. Remains of the other four locks are also buried on the site.

-Bernie Hart

The Flume is almost complete

The Flume is almost complete

The wood surround is now going up on the Flume and we now can get a feel for what the Dartmouth Incline Plane Marine Railway site would have looked like when it was in operation. St. James Church, which you can see in the background of the second photo, would have been present at this time as well.