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Nova Scotia Light and Power

Nova Scotia Light and Power Company, Limited
Industry Electrical generation,
coal gas production,
public transit
Successor Nova Scotia Power Corporation
Nova Scotia Power Inc.
Emera Inc.
Founded June 11, 1866
as Halifax City Railroad Company
Defunct January 27, 1972
Headquarters Halifax, Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia Light and Power Company, Limited (NSLP) was an electric and gas utility company with its head office in Halifax, Canada. The company still exists as a shell but is no longer active; however, for more than a century, it was the major producer of energy in the province of Nova Scotia, and its largest public transit operator.

NSLP marked as its origin June 11, 1866 and the inauguration of street railway services in Halifax, Nova Scotia, by the Halifax City Railroad Company (HCR).

However, the antecedents of the company go back even farther, to March, 1840 and the charter of the Halifax Gas Light and Water Company, later renamed the Halifax Gas Light Company (HGL). The company's directors included Edward Cunard, third son of shipping magnate Samuel Cunard. By 1843, HGL was producing coal gas and distributing it via underground pipes to 281 stores and businesses in downtown Halifax.

Halifax businessman William D. O’Brien chartered HCR in 1863, beginning operations three years later with five horse-drawn tram cars. HCR suspended operations after ten years; but in 1886 a new company, the Halifax Street Railway Company, purchased the remaining HCR assets and resumed horse-powered operations.

In 1885, Halifax industrialist John Starr launched the Halifax Electric Light Company (limited), opening the city’s first electric generation plant, a 70 kW facility located at Black’s Wharf, near the corner of Lower Water and Prince Streets. Two years later, HGL purchased Starr's firm.

In 1889, a group of investors including Charles Annand, publisher of the Morning Chronicle newspaper, founded the Nova Scotia Power Company, Limited, taking over street railway operations with the intention of electrifying them; however, the firm was undercapitalized and was unable to build a generating station.

In 1893, Halifax lawyer Benjamin Franklin Pearson launched a second gas-producing firm, the People’s Heat and Light Company. In 1897, the company took over HGL. Pearson, with significant holdings in the Nova Scotia coal industry, saw the future in electric power and with three partners incorporated the Halifax Electric Tramway Company Limited on March 20, 1895. The company took over the operations of the Nova Scotia Power Company and then, in 1902, the People’s Heat and Light Company. In 1917, the consolidated company became Nova Scotia Tramways and Power Company Limited; finally, in 1928, the company was reorganized as Nova Scotia Light and Power Company, Limited.


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