Walhalla railway line

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use Australian English Template:Side box Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". The Walhalla railway line was a Template:RailGauge narrow gauge railway located in Gippsland, Victoria, Australia. The line ran from Moe to the former gold-mining town and popular tourist destination of Walhalla. Construction began in 1904. The line closed in sections from 1944 to 1954.

History

File:Historic photo of Walhalla railway station ~1910.jpg
Walhalla railway station, c.1910
File:Walhalla railway line and worders.jpg
A special train poses on a bridge of the Long Tunnel Extended timber tramway built to supply wood to the mines at Walhalla. The occasion, a visit by the State Governor in February 1907, shows passengers in ties and hats sitting on empty log trucks, along with the Bagnall 0-4-0ST locomotive and its crew in the foreground.

The last of the four narrow gauge lines of the Victorian Railways to be opened, construction of the Moe–Walhalla railway began in 1904 but was not completed until 1910 due to the difficult mountainous terrain to be contended with. The railway was expected to be a boon for the town, which was in a state of economic and population decline due to gold mining operations becoming increasingly uneconomical, with the largest gold mining company closing in 1914. However, the arrival of the railway did not save the town.

After the closure of the Walhalla mines, substantial timber traffic was carried from sawmills in the Erica area until the late 1940s. Although the line carried numerous special passenger trains to Walhalla in the 1930s and early 1940s, freight and passenger traffic to Walhalla itself had declined to almost nothing by 1939.

The railway was closed in sections from 1944 to 1954. The section from Platina to Walhalla was closed in April 1944[1]Template:Rp[2] and the final section from Moe to Erica was closed on 25 June 1954. The tracks and buildings had been removed by 1960, leaving only the roadbed and a number of bridges.

The Thomson River Railway Bridge is listed on the Register of the National Estate. The centre span had been part of a road bridge over the Murray River at Tocumwal (NSW).[3]

In 1938, the station building at Walhalla was relocated to the Melbourne suburban station of Hartwell.

Reconstruction

Template:Main article In recognition of the outstanding tourist potential of the railway, a number of attempts were made to reopen the line for tourist traffic, but none were successful until the early 1990s. The Walhalla Railway Taskforce was formed in 1991, becoming the Walhalla Goldfields Railway, Inc., in 1993. By this time the roadbed was a totally overgrown jungle of blackberries and heavy scrub, with numerous sections of the trackbed having collapsed and all being derelict except one of the bridges. Restoration began with the establishment of Thomson Station and its accompanying yard on the site of an original station. The railway commenced operations in April 1994, within the Thomson Station yard. Gradually the line extended, first over the nationally heritage-classified Thomson River Bridge[4] in October 1994, pushing up the Stringers Creek Gorge to Happy Creek. This became the terminus for the line until the six bridges in the last kilometre into the Walhalla Station yard were completed, this section of line opening on 15 March 2002. The operating line is Script error: No such module "convert". in length.

See also

References

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External links

Template:Victorian Railway Lines

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