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Tablelands railway line

The Tablelands railway line is a railway line in North Queensland, Australia. It was opened in a series of sections between 1887 and 1916. It commences at Cairns and at its maximum extent, reached Ravenshoe at the southern end of the Atherton Tableland. The rail system served by this line was unusual for Queensland in that the majority of lines that connected to it were built by private companies and later purchased by the Queensland Government.

Cairns Railway Station ~1890
Works train in the Barron Gorge section
Stoney Creek bridge
Biboohra bridge ~1895
Stoney Creek trestle bridge in the Barron gorge, September 1989
QR loco 1760 hauls a special train on the Mareeba-Almaden section of the Mungana line, September 1989
Arrival of the train at Atherton station, 1928
View from a loco cab on the Mungana line, September 1989
Train at Yungaburra, 1929
1760 and special train crossing a low level bridge on the Forsayth line, September 1989. Note the short, steep approaches to the bridge, as steep as 1 in 15, known as 'momentum' grades. The bridge is designed so floodwaters pass over it and minimise the risk of damage.

History edit

Following the discovery of tin at Herberton in 1879, the ports of Cairns and Port Douglas were established, competing for the role of dominant settlement in the area. The summer tropical rainfall in the region made roads virtually impassable in the wet season, leading to calls for improved land transportation in the region. The region to the west of this section of the Queensland coast was relatively rugged, being mountainous rainforest.

Three potential routes were investigated to reach Herberton, via Port Douglas, Cairns and Geraldton (now Innisfail). The shortest route was from Innisfail, but it was the steepest and through very rugged country. The Port Douglas route was the easiest but longest. Cairns had the best port, and the unstable geology of the Barron Gorge was not known at the time.

After extensive debate, the Queensland Government selected Cairns (16°55′30″S 145°46′15″E / 16.9251°S 145.7707°E / -16.9251; 145.7707 (Cairns railway station)) as the starting point of the line, and the first section opened to Redlynch (16°53′13″S 145°41′48″E / 16.8870°S 145.6967°E / -16.8870; 145.6967 (Redlynch railway station)), at the base of the range, 11.6 km (7.21 mi) from Cairns on 8 October 1887.[1][2]

Climbing the Kuranda Range edit

The next section climbed the Barron River Gorge reaching 317 m asl using 1 in 50 grades and 4 chain (~88m) radius curves (the tightest used on the system) involving 15 tunnels and several major bridges. The Redlynch section was built with 21 kg/m (42 lb/yd) rails, but in recognition of the high wear the sharp curves would cause, the Gorge section was laid with 30 kg/m (60 lb/yd) rails.[3] This section opened to Myola (16°48′06″S 145°36′41″E / 16.8017°S 145.6113°E / -16.8017; 145.6113 (Myola railway station)) in 1891, and the line reached Mareeba (16°59′34″S 145°25′16″E / 16.9928°S 145.4212°E / -16.9928; 145.4212 (Mareeba railway station)) in 1893.[2] The Barron Gorge section had cost nearly three times the original estimate, and the government, reluctant to commit to any further public expenditure on extending the Tablelands rail network, sought alternative options.[4]

Private railways edit

The area west of Mareeba was known to be mineralised, and mining pioneer John Moffat received government approval to build a copper mine at Chillagoe, smelter at Barron Falls and railway to connect the mine to the QR line, to be the same gauge and standard as the QR line. The Chillagoe Railway & Mining Co. was created for the project, but the public outcry over the site of the smelter forced its relocation to Chillagoe, the railway then becoming vital to ship coal and coke for the smelter from the wharf at Cairns.

The 164 km (101.90 mi) line opened to Mungana (17°06′14″S 144°23′26″E / 17.1038°S 144.3905°E / -17.1038; 144.3905 (Mungana railway station)), 16 km beyond Chillagoe in 1901, built with 1 in 50 (2%) grades, 30 kg/m (60.48 lb/yd) rail and 5-chain (330.0 ft; 100.6 m) curves, with its own locomotives but hiring rolling stock from QR. A travelling post office was provided between Cairns and Almaden (17°20′18″S 144°40′41″E / 17.3384°S 144.6780°E / -17.3384; 144.6780 (Almaden railway station)) from 1911 to 1918.[2]

Another smelter was built at Mount Garnet and a 50 km line from Lappa Junction (17°21′33″S 144°53′10″E / 17.3591°S 144.8861°E / -17.3591; 144.8861 (Lappa railway station)) was opened in 1902 with 1 in 40 (2.5%) grades and 4-chain (264 ft; 80 m) radius curves.[2] The Queensland Government purchased the line in 1915, and contracted the Chillagoe Railway to run the line. Traffic was significantly boosted from 1938 when a tin mine was opened.

A 610 mm (2 ft) gauge tramway was opened from Boonmoo (17°14′44″S 145°04′24″E / 17.2456°S 145.0734°E / -17.2456; 145.0734 (Boonmoo railway station)) to Rocky Bluffs in 1902 to serve a further mining field, and a branch built from Stannary Hills to Irvinebank in 1907, closing in 1937.[2]

Another copper smelter was built at Mount Molloy (16°40′29″S 145°20′05″E / 16.6748°S 145.3346°E / -16.6748; 145.3346 (Mount Molloy railway station)), and a 32 km (19.88 mi) line with 1 in 40 grades opened in 1908 from Biboohra (16°55′11″S 145°25′12″E / 16.9196°S 145.4201°E / -16.9196; 145.4201 (Biboohra railway station)) to serve it and a sawmill. This line was purchased by the Queensland Government in 1917 so it could be extended to a potential agricultural area, but construction was delayed for 5 years and an 11 km extension to Rumula (16°35′45″S 145°20′25″E / 16.5957°S 145.3403°E / -16.5957; 145.3403 (Rumula railway station)) finally opened in 1926.[2]

The Etheridge railway was a 229-kilometre (142.29-mile) line from Almaden to Forsayth (18°35′13″S 143°36′10″E / 18.5869°S 143.6028°E / -18.5869; 143.6028 (Forsayth railway station)).[2] It opened between 1909–1910 to provide additional ore for the Chillagoe smelter. It was built with 21 kg/m (42.3 lb/yd) rails, 1 in 40 grades, 4-chain (264 ft; 80 m) radius curves and low level bridges.

The discovery of coal at Mount Mulligan (16°51′23″S 144°52′15″E / 16.8563°S 144.8707°E / -16.8563; 144.8707 (Mount Mulligan railway station)) was a significant development for the mining fields,[2] which were finding the cost of shipping coal and coke from the Cairns wharf a major impediment. A 48 km line was opened from Dimbulah (17°08′59″S 145°06′40″E / 17.1496°S 145.1112°E / -17.1496; 145.1112 (Dimbuah railway station)) in 1915 using 1 in 30 (3.3%) grades in the uphill direction (1 in 40 for the grade against loaded trains).[2]

The collapse of the world copper price at the end of World War I led to the Queensland Government purchasing all the privately owned 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) lines in 1919.

The section of the Etheridge railway line west of Mount Surprise (18°08′48″S 144°19′04″E / 18.1468°S 144.3179°E / -18.1468; 144.3179 (Mount Surprise railway station)) was badly damaged by cyclonic rainfall in 1927,[2] and from that time until 1939 the only service was provided by a railmotor which could haul two small goods wagons. The first diesel locomotive used by the Queensland Railways was introduced that year to enable the return of locomotive hauled trains to Forsayth.

To the southern Atherton Tableland edit

Although it received an offer for a private line to be built south of Mareeba, the government considered that to be prime agricultural land, and constructed the line itself, opening the line from Mareeba to Atherton (17°15′48″S 145°28′33″E / 17.2634°S 145.4759°E / -17.2634; 145.4759 (Atherton railway station)) on 10 August 1903.[5] By the time the railway reached Herberton (17°23′08″S 145°23′06″E / 17.3855°S 145.3849°E / -17.3855; 145.3849 (Herberton railway station)) on 20 October 1910 the tin mining boom was long over, and the line was being built to facilitate development.[5] The line opened on Tumoulin on 31 July 1911 with Tumoulin railway station (17°33′51″S 145°27′09″E / 17.5641°S 145.4526°E / -17.5641; 145.4526 (Tumoulin railway station)) being Queensland's highest railway station at 965 metres (3,166 ft) above sea level.[2][5][6] The line opened to the timber milling town of Ravenshoe (17°36′33″S 145°28′58″E / 17.6093°S 145.4827°E / -17.6093; 145.4827 (Ravenshoe railway station)) on 11 December 1916.[2][5] The line used grades as steep as 1 in 33 (3%) and a tunnel at the summit to cross the Herberton Range.

Millaa Millaa branch line edit

The Queensland Government also built the Millaa Millaa branch line from Tolga, opening to Yungaburra (17°16′15″S 145°35′01″E / 17.2707°S 145.5836°E / -17.2707; 145.5836 (Yungaburra railway station)) on 15 March 1910, to Kureen (17°20′04″S 145°35′46″E / 17.3345°S 145.5962°E / -17.3345; 145.5962 (Kureen railway station)) on 18 October 1910, to Malanda on 20 December 1910, to Jaggan on 22 October 1915, to Tarzali on 15 December 1916, and finally to Millaa Millaa on 19 December 1921.[2][5] The route involveds grades of 1 in 44 (2.27%) and 5 chain [100 m (109.36 yd)] radius curves. The line facilitated the transport of significant volumes of logs for sawmilling in its early years, but once all-weather roads were provided, traffic declined, although the grain silos at Kairi provide significant if seasonal loadings. An 18 km (11.18 mi) branch line from Peeramon (situated between Yungaburra and Malanda) south east to Boonjee was proposed in 1920 but never constructed.

Closures edit

  • Dimbulah – Mt Mulligan 1958
  • Lappa Junction – Mt Garnet 1961
  • Biboohra – Rumula, Millaa Millaa – Kairi 1964
  • Tolga – Kairi 1987
  • Atherton – Ravenshoe 1988
  • Almaden – Mungana 1992
  • Mareeba - Atherton 15 March 2013[7]

Passenger services edit

In 1936 demand from tourists wanting to travel through the Barron River gorge section resulted in the introduction of what is today known as the Kuranda Scenic Railway service.

A daily railmotor ran from Cairns to Ravenshoe and return.[8]

A twice weekly mixed train (marketed as "The Last Great Train Ride") ran from Cairns to Forsayth until 1995, when it was replaced by the Savannahlander tourist service.

Suburban services edit

Frequent daily passenger services were provided between Cairns and Redlynch from 1927 to 1969.

Rail ambulance edit

One of the last rail ambulances in Queensland was based at Mareeba until 1990.

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Kerr 1990, p. 224
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Railway stations and sidings - Queensland". Queensland Open Data. Queensland Government. 27 August 2020. from the original on 5 October 2020. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  3. ^ Ellis, R.F. 'Rails to the Tableland' ARHS 1976
  4. ^ Kerr 1990
  5. ^ a b c d e Kerr 1990, p. 225
  6. ^ "Ravenshoe Steam Railway". Ravenshoe Steam Railway. from the original on 5 October 2020. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  7. ^ (PDF). Queensland Rail. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 April 2014. Retrieved 24 April 2014.
  8. ^ "2000 CLASS RAILMOTORS" (PDF). Queensland Museum. (PDF) from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2015.

Sources edit

  • Kerr, John (1990). Triumph of narrow gauge : a history of Queensland Railways. Boolarong Publications. ISBN 978-0-86439-102-5.

External links edit

  • 1925 map of the Queensland railway system

tablelands, railway, line, railway, line, north, queensland, australia, opened, series, sections, between, 1887, 1916, commences, cairns, maximum, extent, reached, ravenshoe, southern, atherton, tableland, rail, system, served, this, line, unusual, queensland,. The Tablelands railway line is a railway line in North Queensland Australia It was opened in a series of sections between 1887 and 1916 It commences at Cairns and at its maximum extent reached Ravenshoe at the southern end of the Atherton Tableland The rail system served by this line was unusual for Queensland in that the majority of lines that connected to it were built by private companies and later purchased by the Queensland Government Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMapDownload coordinates as KML GPX all coordinates GPX primary coordinates GPX secondary coordinates Cairns Railway Station 1890Works train in the Barron Gorge sectionStoney Creek bridgeBiboohra bridge 1895Stoney Creek trestle bridge in the Barron gorge September 1989QR loco 1760 hauls a special train on the Mareeba Almaden section of the Mungana line September 1989Arrival of the train at Atherton station 1928View from a loco cab on the Mungana line September 1989Train at Yungaburra 19291760 and special train crossing a low level bridge on the Forsayth line September 1989 Note the short steep approaches to the bridge as steep as 1 in 15 known as momentum grades The bridge is designed so floodwaters pass over it and minimise the risk of damage Contents 1 History 1 1 Climbing the Kuranda Range 1 2 Private railways 2 To the southern Atherton Tableland 2 1 Millaa Millaa branch line 3 Closures 4 Passenger services 4 1 Suburban services 4 2 Rail ambulance 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 External linksHistory editFollowing the discovery of tin at Herberton in 1879 the ports of Cairns and Port Douglas were established competing for the role of dominant settlement in the area The summer tropical rainfall in the region made roads virtually impassable in the wet season leading to calls for improved land transportation in the region The region to the west of this section of the Queensland coast was relatively rugged being mountainous rainforest Three potential routes were investigated to reach Herberton via Port Douglas Cairns and Geraldton now Innisfail The shortest route was from Innisfail but it was the steepest and through very rugged country The Port Douglas route was the easiest but longest Cairns had the best port and the unstable geology of the Barron Gorge was not known at the time After extensive debate the Queensland Government selected Cairns 16 55 30 S 145 46 15 E 16 9251 S 145 7707 E 16 9251 145 7707 Cairns railway station as the starting point of the line and the first section opened to Redlynch 16 53 13 S 145 41 48 E 16 8870 S 145 6967 E 16 8870 145 6967 Redlynch railway station at the base of the range 11 6 km 7 21 mi from Cairns on 8 October 1887 1 2 Climbing the Kuranda Range edit The next section climbed the Barron River Gorge reaching 317 m asl using 1 in 50 grades and 4 chain 88m radius curves the tightest used on the system involving 15 tunnels and several major bridges The Redlynch section was built with 21 kg m 42 lb yd rails but in recognition of the high wear the sharp curves would cause the Gorge section was laid with 30 kg m 60 lb yd rails 3 This section opened to Myola 16 48 06 S 145 36 41 E 16 8017 S 145 6113 E 16 8017 145 6113 Myola railway station in 1891 and the line reached Mareeba 16 59 34 S 145 25 16 E 16 9928 S 145 4212 E 16 9928 145 4212 Mareeba railway station in 1893 2 The Barron Gorge section had cost nearly three times the original estimate and the government reluctant to commit to any further public expenditure on extending the Tablelands rail network sought alternative options 4 Private railways edit The area west of Mareeba was known to be mineralised and mining pioneer John Moffat received government approval to build a copper mine at Chillagoe smelter at Barron Falls and railway to connect the mine to the QR line to be the same gauge and standard as the QR line The Chillagoe Railway amp Mining Co was created for the project but the public outcry over the site of the smelter forced its relocation to Chillagoe the railway then becoming vital to ship coal and coke for the smelter from the wharf at Cairns The 164 km 101 90 mi line opened to Mungana 17 06 14 S 144 23 26 E 17 1038 S 144 3905 E 17 1038 144 3905 Mungana railway station 16 km beyond Chillagoe in 1901 built with 1 in 50 2 grades 30 kg m 60 48 lb yd rail and 5 chain 330 0 ft 100 6 m curves with its own locomotives but hiring rolling stock from QR A travelling post office was provided between Cairns and Almaden 17 20 18 S 144 40 41 E 17 3384 S 144 6780 E 17 3384 144 6780 Almaden railway station from 1911 to 1918 2 Another smelter was built at Mount Garnet and a 50 km line from Lappa Junction 17 21 33 S 144 53 10 E 17 3591 S 144 8861 E 17 3591 144 8861 Lappa railway station was opened in 1902 with 1 in 40 2 5 grades and 4 chain 264 ft 80 m radius curves 2 The Queensland Government purchased the line in 1915 and contracted the Chillagoe Railway to run the line Traffic was significantly boosted from 1938 when a tin mine was opened A 610 mm 2 ft gauge tramway was opened from Boonmoo 17 14 44 S 145 04 24 E 17 2456 S 145 0734 E 17 2456 145 0734 Boonmoo railway station to Rocky Bluffs in 1902 to serve a further mining field and a branch built from Stannary Hills to Irvinebank in 1907 closing in 1937 2 Another copper smelter was built at Mount Molloy 16 40 29 S 145 20 05 E 16 6748 S 145 3346 E 16 6748 145 3346 Mount Molloy railway station and a 32 km 19 88 mi line with 1 in 40 grades opened in 1908 from Biboohra 16 55 11 S 145 25 12 E 16 9196 S 145 4201 E 16 9196 145 4201 Biboohra railway station to serve it and a sawmill This line was purchased by the Queensland Government in 1917 so it could be extended to a potential agricultural area but construction was delayed for 5 years and an 11 km extension to Rumula 16 35 45 S 145 20 25 E 16 5957 S 145 3403 E 16 5957 145 3403 Rumula railway station finally opened in 1926 2 The Etheridge railway was a 229 kilometre 142 29 mile line from Almaden to Forsayth 18 35 13 S 143 36 10 E 18 5869 S 143 6028 E 18 5869 143 6028 Forsayth railway station 2 It opened between 1909 1910 to provide additional ore for the Chillagoe smelter It was built with 21 kg m 42 3 lb yd rails 1 in 40 grades 4 chain 264 ft 80 m radius curves and low level bridges The discovery of coal at Mount Mulligan 16 51 23 S 144 52 15 E 16 8563 S 144 8707 E 16 8563 144 8707 Mount Mulligan railway station was a significant development for the mining fields 2 which were finding the cost of shipping coal and coke from the Cairns wharf a major impediment A 48 km line was opened from Dimbulah 17 08 59 S 145 06 40 E 17 1496 S 145 1112 E 17 1496 145 1112 Dimbuah railway station in 1915 using 1 in 30 3 3 grades in the uphill direction 1 in 40 for the grade against loaded trains 2 The collapse of the world copper price at the end of World War I led to the Queensland Government purchasing all the privately owned 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in lines in 1919 The section of the Etheridge railway line west of Mount Surprise 18 08 48 S 144 19 04 E 18 1468 S 144 3179 E 18 1468 144 3179 Mount Surprise railway station was badly damaged by cyclonic rainfall in 1927 2 and from that time until 1939 the only service was provided by a railmotor which could haul two small goods wagons The first diesel locomotive used by the Queensland Railways was introduced that year to enable the return of locomotive hauled trains to Forsayth To the southern Atherton Tableland editAlthough it received an offer for a private line to be built south of Mareeba the government considered that to be prime agricultural land and constructed the line itself opening the line from Mareeba to Atherton 17 15 48 S 145 28 33 E 17 2634 S 145 4759 E 17 2634 145 4759 Atherton railway station on 10 August 1903 5 By the time the railway reached Herberton 17 23 08 S 145 23 06 E 17 3855 S 145 3849 E 17 3855 145 3849 Herberton railway station on 20 October 1910 the tin mining boom was long over and the line was being built to facilitate development 5 The line opened on Tumoulin on 31 July 1911 with Tumoulin railway station 17 33 51 S 145 27 09 E 17 5641 S 145 4526 E 17 5641 145 4526 Tumoulin railway station being Queensland s highest railway station at 965 metres 3 166 ft above sea level 2 5 6 The line opened to the timber milling town of Ravenshoe 17 36 33 S 145 28 58 E 17 6093 S 145 4827 E 17 6093 145 4827 Ravenshoe railway station on 11 December 1916 2 5 The line used grades as steep as 1 in 33 3 and a tunnel at the summit to cross the Herberton Range Millaa Millaa branch line edit The Queensland Government also built the Millaa Millaa branch line from Tolga opening to Yungaburra 17 16 15 S 145 35 01 E 17 2707 S 145 5836 E 17 2707 145 5836 Yungaburra railway station on 15 March 1910 to Kureen 17 20 04 S 145 35 46 E 17 3345 S 145 5962 E 17 3345 145 5962 Kureen railway station on 18 October 1910 to Malanda on 20 December 1910 to Jaggan on 22 October 1915 to Tarzali on 15 December 1916 and finally to Millaa Millaa on 19 December 1921 2 5 The route involveds grades of 1 in 44 2 27 and 5 chain 100 m 109 36 yd radius curves The line facilitated the transport of significant volumes of logs for sawmilling in its early years but once all weather roads were provided traffic declined although the grain silos at Kairi provide significant if seasonal loadings An 18 km 11 18 mi branch line from Peeramon situated between Yungaburra and Malanda south east to Boonjee was proposed in 1920 but never constructed Closures editDimbulah Mt Mulligan 1958 Lappa Junction Mt Garnet 1961 Biboohra Rumula Millaa Millaa Kairi 1964 Tolga Kairi 1987 Atherton Ravenshoe 1988 Almaden Mungana 1992 Mareeba Atherton 15 March 2013 7 Passenger services editIn 1936 demand from tourists wanting to travel through the Barron River gorge section resulted in the introduction of what is today known as the Kuranda Scenic Railway service A daily railmotor ran from Cairns to Ravenshoe and return 8 A twice weekly mixed train marketed as The Last Great Train Ride ran from Cairns to Forsayth until 1995 when it was replaced by the Savannahlander tourist service Suburban services edit Frequent daily passenger services were provided between Cairns and Redlynch from 1927 to 1969 Rail ambulance edit One of the last rail ambulances in Queensland was based at Mareeba until 1990 Gallery edit nbsp Works train in the Barron Gorge section 1911 nbsp RM 34 at Mareeba 1942 nbsp Trains crossing at Lappa on the Mungana line September 1989 nbsp Stannary Hill tramway Eureka Creek valley 1902 nbsp Irvinebank Tramway station 1909 nbsp Steam tram crossing Irvinebank bridge over Gibbs Creek 1911 Locomotive is called Baby and is on a picnic tour to Stannary Hills Description supplied with photograph See also editRail transport in QueenslandReferences edit Kerr 1990 p 224 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Railway stations and sidings Queensland Queensland Open Data Queensland Government 27 August 2020 Archived from the original on 5 October 2020 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Ellis R F Rails to the Tableland ARHS 1976 Kerr 1990 a b c d e Kerr 1990 p 225 Ravenshoe Steam Railway Ravenshoe Steam Railway Archived from the original on 5 October 2020 Retrieved 5 October 2020 Northern Queensland Line Diagrams PDF Queensland Rail Archived from the original PDF on 25 April 2014 Retrieved 24 April 2014 2000 CLASS RAILMOTORS PDF Queensland Museum Archived PDF from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 22 November 2015 Sources edit Kerr John 1990 Triumph of narrow gauge a history of Queensland Railways Boolarong Publications ISBN 978 0 86439 102 5 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tablelands railway line Queensland 1925 map of the Queensland railway system Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tablelands railway line amp oldid 1163175338, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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