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Former Glenboro Canadian Pacific Railway Water
Tower
Railway Avenue, Village of Glenboro
Designation Date: 26 September 1996
Designation Authority: Honourable Harold
Gilleshammer, Minister of Culture, Heritage and Citizenship
Present Owner: The Village of
Glenboro
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This octagonal wooden
railway tower is a rare vestige from the age of the steam-powered
locomotive. This design, the "Standard No. 1 Plan" was pioneered by the
Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) in 1903 to replace the low, round, wooden
water tower in use since 1882. It quickly became part of the Manitoba
landscape, with 75 water towers constructed by the CPR from 1902 to 1925.
Towers, pumphouses, coal sheds, and sidings were constructed approximately
every 80 kilometres (50 miles), the distance a steam locomotive could
safely travel between water refills. Constructed in 1904,
the Glenboro structure is the best surviving example of an intact,
fully-equipped water tower in Manitoba. The adjacent pumphouse fed water
to the tank inside the water tower. A coal-burning boiler powered an
interior water pump and prevented the water in the tank from freezing. In
1939 this pumping mechanism was replaced by an electric motor and pump
installed inside the tower. A ball, or "float", glided along a pole atop
the tower to indicate the level of the water in the tank. The cedar water
tank, with a capacity of 181,840 litres (40,000 gallons) of water, rests
upon a framework of large wooden support timbers. By the
late 1950s, the railway companies converted to diesel-powered locomotives
which made the water structures obsolete. This tower once stored the
community water supply for the Village of
Glenboro.
This article saved from the Manitoba Provincial Heritage Web Site at http://www.gov.mb.ca/chc/hrb/prov/p093.html on 12 August 2000.
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