Broken Hill railway line

Broken Hill Line

Legend
Main West Line at Orange
Orange East Fork Platform
Canobolas
Nashdale
Borenore
Molong (1200m)
Molong-Dubbo line to Dubbo (inactive)
Pinecliffe
Gregra
Manildra (630m)
Bumberry (931m)
Mandagery
Cookamidgera
Mugincoble
Parkes Racecourse
Parkes
branch line to Stockinbingal
Goobang Junction (1870m)
branch line to Narromine
Brolgan
Gunningbland (398m)
Bogan Gate (553m)
Tottenham line to Tottenham
Yarrabandai (1850m)
Derriwong (310m)
Condobolin (964m)
Micabil
Kiacatoo (1850m)
Gunebang
Euabalong West (920m)
Matakana (1850m)
Roto (block post)
line to Temora (closed)
Wee Elwah
Trida (1850m)
Conoble
Ivanhoe (1850m)
Beilpajah
Darnick (900m)
Sayers Lake
Gum Lake
Kaleentha (1833m)
Menindee (1145m)
Box Tank
Horse Lake
Kinalung (1850m)
The Gorge
Mount Gipps
Broken Hill (1169m+890m)
South Australia border
Crystal Brook-Broken Hill railway line

The Broken Hill railway line is now part of the transcontinental railway from Sydney to Perth.

New South Wales's first line opened from Sydney to Parramatta Junction (near Granville Station) in 1855 and was extended as the Main Western line in stages to Orange in 1877. The Broken Hill line branched off the Main Western line at Orange and was opened to Molong in 1885. It was extended to Parkes and Forbes in 1893. This line was extended from Parkes to Bogan Gate and Condobolin in 1898 and Roto and Trida in 1919.

An isolated section of 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge line was also opened from Menindee to the town of Broken Hill in 1919, which met the 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) gauge Silverton Tramway at a break-of-gauge. At Cockburn, the Silverton Tramway connected with the South Australian Railways system to Port Pirie and via a break of gauge at Terowie to Adelaide. The final missing link between Trida and Menindee was completed in 1927. The Broken Hill Express, running from Sydney to Broken Hill, was introduced from November 1927. Included in its composition was Dining Car AB90, making it the first regularly scheduled Dining Car in that state.[1] In 1969, the Broken Hill - Port Pirie line was standardised, completing the Sydney–Perth standard gauge link.[2]

Branch line

A branch line was opened from Molong to Dubbo as an alternative route with better grades in 1925. It closed in 1987. Another branch line was opened from Bogan Gate to Trundle in 1907, Tullamore in 1908 and Tottenham in 1916.[3]

Crossing loops

Ivanhoe crossing loop

The maximum length of trains on this line is 1,800 metres (5,900 ft), but only some of the crossing loops are of this length.

See also

Notes

  1. On-train Catering in New South Wales Banger, Chris Australian Railway History, March, 2004 pp102-103
  2. "Broken Hill Line". www.nswrail.net. Retrieved 2006-11-17.
  3. "Tottenham Branch". www.nswrail.net. Retrieved 2006-11-17.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, January 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.