Patriotic postcard dry dock Halifax (Canada) 1907

$14.50 CAD

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Dry Dock Halifax

Mailed to U.S.A., cancelled 'Halifax NS Sep 16 1907’.

Warwick Brothers & Rutter, Ltd #3528.

Some nicks along left edge. Postal cancellation bars on front.

 

The Halifax yard did not have a dry dock until 1887 so it was officially called the "Halifax Naval Yard" when first established, although it was popularly known as the Halifax Dockyard. The graving-dock, coaling facilities and torpedo boat slip were added between 1881 and 1897. The station closed in 1905 and sold to Canada in 1907 becoming Her Majesty's Canadian Dockyard, a function it still serves today as part of CFB Halifax. 

The Yard was located on the western shores of Halifax Harbour to the north of Citadel Hill and the main Halifax townsite. The site was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1923.

WIKIPEDIA

Warwick Brothers & Rutter, Ltd., a Toronto-based printing company, is known to have published in the vicinity of 7,500 picture postcards between 1903 and 1912. Warwick produced colour lithographed cards on its own presses in Canada rather than outsourcing that work to printers in Germany or England, as was then the prevailing practice among its Canadian competitors (and among postcard publishers in most other countries as well).

Warwick was the first Canadian firm to enter the field with Canadian-made coloured cards, leading the way in three-colour and four-colour printing processes and making available the highest class of color printing at a popular price.

https://torontopostcardclub.com/canadian-postcard-publishers-2/warwick-bros-rutter/


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