Waitara Branch
Overview
Other name(s)Waitara Industrial Line
New Plymouth - Waitara Railway
StatusPreserved
OwnerWaitara Railway Preservation Society
LocaleTaranaki, New Zealand
Termini
Stations4
Service
TypeHeavy Rail
SystemNew Zealand Government Railways (NZGR)
Operator(s)Waitara Railway Preservation Society
History
Commenced1872
Opened14 October 1875
Closed2 February 1999
Technical
Line length7.25 km (4.50 mi)
Number of tracksSingle
CharacterRural
Track gauge3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm)
Route map

km
7.25
Waitara Port Sidings
Borthwicks Freezing Works
Whitaker Street
6.80
Waitara
Grey Street
Browne Street
Cracoft Street
State Highway 3 NZ.svg SH 3 (
Big Jim's
Overpass
)
Waitara Road
4.00
Waitara Road
Waitara Co-operative
Dairy Company
3.53
Magnolia Grove
Richmond Road
Kairau Road East
Waiongana Stream
Te Arei Road West
1.30
Sentry Hill
(original)
former route to
New Plymouth
0.80
Sentry Hill
(new)
parallel tracks
0.00
Lepperton Junction

The Waitara Branch is a 7.245 km long branch line railway in the Taranaki region of New Zealand's North Island. It was built as part of the region's first railway, linking New Plymouth with the closest suitable port, then the river port of Waitara. In 1884 the Breakwater port was opened in New Plymouth, but the line was saved when a (meat) freezing works was opened at Waitara in 1885.

For many years the line served the Borthwicks freezing works in town, until it closed in 1995. Services ceased on 16 June 1995.[1] The branch was closed on 2 February 1999.[2] The line has since been purchased by the Waitara Railway Preservation Society, who now operate tourist trains on the line.

Construction

In 1872 surveys began for the best route and two were considered: a coastal route which was more direct, and an inland route which was longer, but more convenient for future extensions to the south. The inland route was chosen. The contract to build the railway was let in 1873 and the line was completed and opened in October 1875.

In 1874, while the land was being cleared at Sentry Hill for the new railway, the daughter of William Perrett (a labourer working on the line) was abducted after he had ignored requests not to dig through a Māori burial ground from the New Zealand Wars a decade earlier. Caroline Perrett (known to all as "Queenie") was not seen by her parents again and not rediscovered by her original family until 1926, 52 years after the incident occurred.[3][4]

Operation

The line was officially opened on 14 October 1875, with the first train departing New Plymouth with around 100 passengers.[5] Trains were operated initially by two A class locomotives named "Fox" and "Ferret" which ran mixed trains services over the line.[6] The first trip over the line took just 46 minutes to complete.[7] Shortly after the railway was complete, extensions began due south from Sentry Hill alongside Mountain Road towards Inglewood, which was opened in 1877.

Waitara's role as the main port for New Plymouth did not last long. Shortly after the line was completed a breakwater was built at what is now Port Taranaki and Waitara became a local port only. The establishment of a freezing works in 1887 provided steady traffic over the line and prevented the line from closure. Other notable traffic included plants from the Duncan & Davies nurseries and produce from the Waitara Taranaki Co-operative Dairy Factory (later Moa-Nui Co-op Daries)[8][9] sidings, both located at Waitara Road station.

Passenger Services

Passenger services were usually run as mixed services, with a service run early in the morning to take children to high school in New Plymouth, returning in the late afternoon. In 1877 there were two return services, operated from New Plymouth,[10] with a third service added three times a week by 1883.[11] As well as regular services, picnic trains to Sentry Hill [12][13] were popular in the late 19th and early 20th century.

Passenger accommodation was removed after World War Two, to be replaced with Railways Road Service buses. These continued operating until 1991 when private enterprise took over the services.

Motive power

When the Waitara - New Plymouth railway line was opened the rolling stock consisted of "two 11-ton A class locomotives, ...three carriages, three box wagons, six low-sided wagons, two brake vans, two weighbridges and 12 tarpaulins". However issues with hauling trains up the 1-35 grade out of New Plymouth or the 1-40 grade out from Waitara led to two new C class locomotives being introduced, with the older locomotives being relegated to shunting duties.[14] The line continued to be served by tank engines for many years, including at various times F class and WF class locomotives.

By the 1950s the line was operated by tender engines such as the AB class, the last of which (AB 708) departed Waitara Station on 8 November 1966.[15] These were replaced with the DB class in the 1970s and DBR, DC and DSC class in the 1980s and 90s. In the final years it was not uncommon for trains to be replaced with trucks as tonnages declined.

Stations

The following stations were located on the Waitara Branch. Distance measured from final junction in Lepperton.

Station NameDistanceOpenedClosed PassengerClosed Freight
Lepperton0 km12 Nov 189421 Jan 198322 Sep 1986
Sentry Hill1.2 km14 Oct 187529 Apr 19465 Dec 1963
Waitara Road4.0 kmc. 188329 Apr 19462 Feb 1999
Waitara6.8 km14 Oct 187529 Apr 19462 Feb 1999

Station buildings at Waitara Road and Sentry Hill were simple Class 6 shelter sheds, befitting their status as flag stops only.

Waitara Station

Waitara's original Class 5 station building was located on the north side of the tracks (close to where the good shed was eventually located).[16] The replacement Class 4 station building was located on the south (town) side of the yard when it was built in 1893,[17] after lobbying from the Raleigh Town Board for the station to be in a more convenient location.[18] This change of location created a situation where the passenger station was located on a loop in the goods yard, rather than the main line as is more usual.

The station complex was upgraded again at the end of 1911 with a full repaint and the addition of a veranda to the station building.[19]

Sentry Hill Junction

The railway junction at Sentry Hill was built facing Waitara rather than New Plymouth. Initially, this made sense as Waitara was the major port for the region, but this decision required that all trains from New Plymouth to destinations south were required to stop and have the locomotive swap ends of the train to continue their journey. This operation became an increasing bottleneck in the system, especially after 1886 when through services began between Wellington and the new deep water port at the New Plymouth Breakwater. A proposed "loop line" bypassing Sentry Hill station and allowing the direct running of trains was eventually approved and opened in 1892, creating a triangle junction arrangement and avoiding the need to remarshal through trains between New Plymouth and points south.[20]

With this solution came a new issue, however, as it caused direct trains to bypass the old Sentry Hill station site which was now located on the branch line instead of the main line. For a time, trains needing to stop at the station would reverse into or out of the station yard before continuing their journey, but this wasn't a satisfactory solution.

To fix this problem, in 1894 a new Sentry Hill passenger station was opened[21] located roughly 49 chains south of the old station and just past the junction points for the new loop line.[20] The old Sentry Hill station was closed and passenger facilities removed (though the yard and goods shed remained at the old location pending completion of the new station site).

The new Sentry Hill station location was not entirely satisfactory. There were complaints about poor access to the new platform, and the station location was located on a grade that was less than desirable from an operational perspective. In 1903 a new passenger shelter was even constructed at the old Sentry Hill station site after petitions from the local community and was served by branch line trains, despite the new station still being in operation a short distance away on the mainline.[20]

Lepperton Junction

In 1907 it was decided to relocate the entire junction half a mile south to a more suitable site. The new site was closer to Lepperton than Sentry Hill and so the new junction was named Lepperton Junction. The station and yards opened in 1908 and included extending the Waitara Branch line parallel with the main line between the old and new station sites.

On the same date that Lepperton Junction opened both the “new” Sentry Hill station and the original Lepperton station (located closer to Manutahi Road) were closed to all traffic.[18] From the same date the “old” Sentry Hill station was fully reopened, now serving as a branch line station only. The rails for the direct link between Waitara and New Plymouth remained in situ (though largely unused) until 1914. In that year the rails for the original direct link between Waitara and New Plymouth were finally lifted and the triangle junction arrangement was removed for good.[20]

Proposed extensions

Routes North

During the 1880s the final route for what would become the North Island Main Trunk railway between Auckland and Wellington was still being considered. The current route was decided in 1884, but, when it was realised just how difficult that route was, further surveys considered two other options in 1888. One of these was via Taumarunui to Waitara.

A practical route for the line was found by heading north from Waitara along the coast until reaching the Mimi River valley, before heading inland along the river valley. From the top of the valley, a tunnel to Tangarakau was needed, before following the Ohura River Valley. "The total distance is 40. miles, and the steepest gradient one in 50, and only two small tunnels will be required. The country is somewhat broken."[22]

This proposal was still under consideration in 1893 (along with an alternative route linking just south of Stratford, which would eventually become the Stratford – Okahukara Line).[23] An alternative survey considered taking the link up the Urenui River.[24] A report in 1899 ended any chance of the route being built through Waitara, citing that the land for most of the route is not well suited for development and, as the route would not be able to compete with sea travel, the aim of the route should be to connect as much back country as possible with the local port instead.[25]

Extension to Urenui

In 1911 the Clifton Country Council passed a resolution calling for the railway to be extended to the township of Urenui,[26] a distance of approximately 9 miles (14 km). It was stated that "That the ordinary traffic on the main road between Urenui and Waitara has increased to such proportions as to make a railway a matter of necessity," as well as citing the difficulty to sourcing suitable roading metal and the undue burden of the cost of maintaining the road. In 1912 North Taranaki Dairy Company lent their support to the idea, suggesting the extension run further to Mimi Junction.[27]

Such an extension would have required a substantial bridge over the Waitara river, with an opening span to allow for steamer traffic to pass through.[28]

Light railway to Te Kuiti

In 1920 another extension proposal was put forward by the Clifton County Council, this time for a light railway between Waitara and Te Kuiti via Mokau and its coal mines.[29] Concern was raised by some councils that this might hamper the push for the completion of the Main North Road and the Mokau River bridge. Nothing came of this proposal.

Notable events

Waitara Railway Station in 1904.

At 2:00am on the morning of 15 June 1893, the station building at Waitara was burned to the ground by a fire originating in the lamp room of the building. It was reported that "all the records were burnt, but the safe with cash is intact."[30] Consideration was given in the following months to relocating the Ngaire station building to Waitara as a replacement.[31]

In 1929 preparations were made to replace the level crossing between the railway and Mamaku Road (later Devon Road and now part of State Highway 3) at Big Jim's Hill.[32] This location had become the site of a few near-misses over the previous decades, including from 'trolleys' which provided no warning to road users of their approach.[33] The level crossing was replaced with an overpass for the highway, known today as Big Jim's Overpass.

On the 3rd March 1962 AB817 was taken for a joyride from the Waitara Engine shed to the top of Big Jims hill by four locals (including a former railways employee) in the early hours of the morning. The engine was then driven back to the Waitara station yard.[34]

In the 13 July 1970 the Waitara railway station had part of its roof torn off in a tornado. The tornado (which travelled inland along Domett Street) also ripped roofs of several houses and the St Johns Anglican church hall.[35]

At the other end of the line, the island railway station at Lepperton Junction was replaced in 1965[36] with a smaller station adjacent to Mountain Road (State Highway 3A), that survived onsite until 1994 when the building was removed (having been sold in 1992).[37]

Closure and preservation

In 1999, Tranz Rail announced that the Waitara Branch, along with the Hautapu-Cambridge section of the Cambridge Branch railway, were to close. After the AFFCO freezing works had closed, there was little prospect of much new freight traffic being on offer. On 25 May 1999 the Waitara Railway Preservation Society was formed with the aim to save the line. This goal was finally achieved in 2001[38] when the line was purchased with the help of grants from the Taranaki Electricity Trust and the TSB Community Trust.

Since that time passenger services have resumed and work is being done to rehabilitate the line. The former Tahora railway station[39] building has been relocated to the site of the former Waitara Road station and various carriages, locomotives and other rolling stock is being restored to operational standards for use on the line. The former port sidings have been removed as part of a riverside redevelopment, shortening the branch to 7.03 km in length.

Other railway buildings

Aside from the railway proper, other railway buildings still exist in the vicinity. The former Sentry Hill goods shed is still extant a short distance from where it originally stood. It is visible behind the Lepperton Tennis Club courts on Manutahi Road, which has been there since the 1950s.[40] In Waitara, two-thirds of the former Midhirst railway station sits on Memorial Place next to the War Memorial Hall. By the river mouth, the former north signal box from Stratford was relocated to Waitara in 1960 as a clubhouse for the Waitara Boating Club.[41]

Official name

When first opened the railway line was generally referred to using variations of "New Plymouth Waitara Railway." From 1877 when the line to Inglewood opened, it became the "Waitara Branch Railway" and this name was reconfirmed on 5 May 1977 in The New Zealand Gazette.[42] On 13 August 1996 the line was officially renamed as the "Waitara Industrial Line",[43] the legal name it carries to this day.

See also

References

Citations

  1. Hermann, Bruce (1995). "Small Lots". New Zealand Railway Observer. New Zealand Railway and Locomotive Society (222): 63.
  2. Hermann, Bruce J (2007). North Island Branch Lines. Wellington: New Zealand Railway & Locomotive Society. pp. 45, 46. ISBN 978-0-908573-83-7.
  3. Carolyn Johnson. "The Story of Queenie". Tall Trees Family History.
  4. "STRANGE STORY". Nelson Evening Mail. Vol. LXIII. 3 July 1929. Retrieved 13 December 2020 via PapersPast.
  5. "NEW PLYMOUTH". Wanganui Chronicle. No. 2878. 15 October 1875. Retrieved 12 December 2020 via PapersPast.
  6. "Construction of the Waitara – New Plymouth Railway 1873–75". Personal View of the Waitara Railway Preservation Society Inc.
  7. Hoskin, Sorrel (18 February 2005). "Transport – Rail relief – New Plymouth's first railway". Puke Akiri. Archived from the original on 8 April 2009.
  8. "Waitara Taranaki Co-operative Dairy Company, Limited. Factory, 1936". Tāmiro. Massey University. Retrieved 3 July 2022.
  9. "Moa Nui Co-op Daries Limited, Exterior". Puke Ariki. New Plymouth District Council. Retrieved 3 July 2022.
  10. "New Zealand Railways". Taranaki Herald. 15 August 1877. p. 3 via PapersPast.
  11. "Railway Time Tables". Taranaki Herald. 13 February 1883. p. 4 via PapersPast.
  12. "A Grand Outing for Fathers, Mothers, Children & Sweethearts (Advertisements Column 1)". Papers Past. TARANAKI HERALD. 24 December 1895. p. 2. Retrieved 3 July 2022.
  13. "A Day in the Country. Friendly Societies' Picnic. (Advertisements Column 5)". Papers Past. TARANAKI HERALD. 22 December 1902. p. 5. Retrieved 3 July 2022.
  14. "Waitara Railway an early sign of progress". Taranaki Daily News. 29 August 2009. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  15. "Letting off some steam". The Daily News. New Plymouth. 19 January 2013. p. 16.
  16. Unknown. "Waitara railway station and yards" (Photograph). Pukeariki. New Plymouth. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  17. Unknown. "Waitara Railway Station" (Photograph). Pukeariki. New Plymouth. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
  18. 1 2 "Station Archive". New Zealand Railway Documents. Rail Heritage Trust of New Zealand. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
  19. Inhouse Correspondent (16 January 1912). "Waitara". Taranaki Herald. No. 143694. Papers Past. p. 7. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  20. 1 2 3 4 "Station Archive". New Zealand Railway Documents. New Zealand Rail Heritage Trust. Retrieved 7 June 2022.
  21. "Chit-Chat". Taranaki Herald. No. 10165. Papers Past. 21 November 1894. p. 2. Retrieved 15 June 2022.
  22. "THE TRUNK RAILWAY". The Auckland Star. No. 105. 4 May 1888. Retrieved 12 December 2020 via PapersPast.
  23. "Stratford News". Taranaki Herald. Vol. XL, no. 9271. 22 December 1891. Retrieved 12 December 2020 via PapersPast.
  24. "North Island Trunk Railway". Auckland Star. Vol. XXV, no. 199. 21 August 1894. Retrieved 12 December 2020 via PapersPast.
  25. "Taranaki – Auckland Railway Construction". Hawera & Normanby Star. Vol. XXXVII, no. 5029. 16 September 1899. Retrieved 13 December 2020 via PapersPast.
  26. "Waitara-Urenui Railway". Taranaki Herald. No. 143516. 3 June 1911. Retrieved 12 December 2020 via PapersPast.
  27. "RAILWAY EXTENSION". Evening Post. Vol. LXXXIV, no. 90. 12 October 1912. Retrieved 13 December 2020 via PapersPast.
  28. "Waitara to Urenui". Taranaki Daily News. Vol. LIII, no. 315. 31 May 1911. Retrieved 12 December 2020 via PapersPast.
  29. "BACK COUNTRY DEVELOPMENT". Taranaki Herald. Vol. LXVIII, no. 16637. 10 January 1920. Retrieved 13 December 2020 via PapaersPast.
  30. "Waitara Railway Station Destroyed by Fire". Hawera & Normanby Star. 15 June 1893. p. 2 via PapersPast.
  31. "Waitara Station". Hawera & Normanby Star. 3 August 1893. p. 2 via PapersPast.
  32. "TARANAKI LOCAL BODIES". Papers Past. Stratford Evening Post. 28 February 1929. p. 5. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  33. "Waitara Railway Crossing". Papers Past. Taranaki Herald. 11 August 1911. p. 7. Retrieved 1 October 2022.
  34. "My father- a railway worker". Tiptoe-ing back with family. Retrieved 15 August 2021.
  35. "Roofs Lost in Tornado". New Zealand Press Association. 13 July 1970. p. 1. Retrieved 1 October 2022 via PapersPast.
  36. New Zealand Historic Places Trust. "Inglewood Railway Station and Yard". Historical Narrative.
  37. "Record Mix-up Sparks Change of Plan". North Taranaki Midweek. New Plymouth. 6 July 1994. p. 3.
  38. Hoskin, Sorrel (18 February 2005). "Transport – Rail relief – New Plymouth's first railway". Puke Akiri. Archived from the original on 9 April 2009.
  39. "Brixton Station". Waitara Railway Preservation Society Inc.
  40. "Refining history at Lepperton". The Daily News. New Plymouth. 28 July 2012. p. 2.
  41. Waitara Public Relations. "Waitara Heritage Trail". waitara.co.nz website.
  42. "Railway Line Names". Land Information New Zealand. Retrieved 18 April 2014.
  43. "Notice of Final Decision as to Assignment of Place Names". The New Zealand Gazette. Retrieved 18 April 2014.

Bibliography

  • Leitch, David; Scott, Brian (1995). Exploring New Zealand's Ghost Railways (1998 ed.). Wellington: Grantham House. ISBN 1-86934-048-5.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.