Esperance Branch Railway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Esperance Branch Railway
Overview
TerminiCoolgardie (NG) and Kalgoorlie (SG)
Esperance
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Old gaugeNarrow gauge
Route map

Legend
0km
Kalgoorlie
Eastern Goldfields Railway
(0km)
Coolgardie
Original rail alignment (closed 1960s)
(11) Burbanks
(16) Londonderry
19 Hampton Siding
22 Hampton
60 Kambalda
68 Redmine spur
89 Roysalts spur
(57) Logans Find
93 Lefroy Siding
(75) Widgiemooltha (NG)
101 Widgiemooltha (SG)
131 Higginsville
134 Higginsville Siding
163 Pioneer
189 Norseman
193 Cowan
193 Cowan Minerals
201 Lake Kirk
212 Goodia
223 Bromus
238 Daniell
252 Beete
262 Kumarl
274 Dowak
285 Salmon Gums
288 Salmon Gums grain loop
296 Circle Loop
305 Red Lake
314 Grass Patch
326 Truslove
338 Scaddan
347 Speddingup
354 Flemming
362 Gibson
372 Gibson siding
374 Caitup
378 Shark Lake
386 Collier
Esperance...
389 Goods Yard
390 Grain depot
390 Fuel depot
391 Fuel jetty
392 Esperance Station
393 km Esperance Port

The Esperance Branch Railway is a railway from Kalgoorlie to the port of Esperance in Western Australia.

It was lobbied for by Esperance residents to be linked into the WAGR railway network to provide land transport to their region.[1][2][3]

In the strictest terms it was an extension of the Eastern Goldfields Railway.[4]

Originally, the railway ran from Coolgardie to Esperance, but following the Standard Gauge project in the 1960s it ran from Kalgoorlie to Esperance, as Coolgardie was no longer connected by rail.

Sub-divisions/Sections[]

  • Coolgardie – Widgiemooltha – 51 miles 38 chains (82.8 km), completed in 1908.
  • Widgiemooltha – Norseman – 56 miles 59 chains (91.3 km), completed in 1909
  • Norseman – Salmon Gums – 58 miles 46 chains (94.3 km), completed in 1927
  • Salmon Gums – Esperance – 65 miles 56 chains (105.7 km), completed in 1925.[5]

Steam era water supplies[]

During the time the narrow gauge railway was in operation, due to the distances through dry country, dams and tanks were of importance to supply the steam engines in operation. Between Coolgardie and Esperance, water supply sources were from Water Supply Department (Coolgardie), Mines Department Dam (Widgiemooltha),and WAGR dams – WAGR annual reports took into consideration: Catchment area, Capacity, Pumped or gravitation collection of water, estimated loss by evaporation and absorption, and total amount of water stored.

Esperance Flyer[]

This passenger train started in 1932. It was 5 hours faster than the mixed goods train,[6] though averaging only about 35 km/h (22 mph).[7] Trains were sped up by a further 1½ hours when diesels took over in 1954.[8] By 1967 a bus had replaced the train.[9]

Gauge and route[]

It was originally built as narrow gauge, but with gauge standardisation of the main interstate railway in the late 1960s, it was converted to standard gauge to, so as not to become a gauge orphan. The route was also changed somewhat with standardisation, with a junction at Kalgoorlie replacing the junction at Coolgardie.

Selected stopping locations[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ http://henrietta.liswa.wa.gov.au/record=b2395637~S2
  2. ^ http://henrietta.liswa.wa.gov.au/record=b1891792~S2
  3. ^ http://henrietta.liswa.wa.gov.au/record=b1869671~S2
  4. ^ Western Australian Government Railways (1954), Report of the Western Australian Government Railways Commission for the year ended, W.H. Wyatt, retrieved 5 July 2012 Appendix F, page 60 – 'Eastern Goldfields Railway'
  5. ^ Alex Gibson and D. H. S. du Plessis (December 1947). "Report to the Royal Commission appointed to inquire into the management, workings and control of the Western Australian Government Railways" (PDF). Parliament of Western Australia. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  6. ^ "BY RAIL TO ESPERANCE". West Australian (Perth, WA : 1879 – 1954). 20 December 1932. p. 15. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  7. ^ Fitch, Ron J. (2006). Australian Railwayman: From Cadet Engineer to Railways Commissioner. Rosenberg Publishing Pty, Limited. ISBN 9781922013095.
  8. ^ "Westland will be nearly four hours faster". Sunday Times (Perth, WA : 1902 – 1954). 21 November 1954. p. 6. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  9. ^ "Week-end Bus Service for Kambalda". Beverley Times (WA : 1905 – 1977). 1 December 1967. p. 8. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  10. ^ Railway Digest October 2009, p17

Further reading[]

  • Affleck, Fred N.(1978) On track: the making of Westrail, 1950 to 1976 . Perth: Westrail. ISBN 0-7244-7560-5
  • Quinlan, Howard & Newland, John R. (2000) Australian Railway Routes 1854-2000 ISBN 0-909650-49-7

External links[]

Old photos – Esperance station, Esperance Flyer

Retrieved from ""