Callide Valley railway line explained

The Callide Valley railway line ran from Rannes to Lawgi in Queensland, Australia. The Callide Valley lies to the south-west of Rockhampton in Central Queensland.

History

There were grand plans to link Monto by railway with the south, east and north. Links with Maryborough to the south and Gladstone to the east materialised but the northern link terminated at Lawgi some 70 kilometres away. Rannes was already linked by rail to Rockhampton by the Dawson Valley railway line via Mount Morgan and a branch line from Rannes to Lawgi provided access to the rich Callide Valley and justified its construction.

Opening

The first stage commenced from Rannes, heading south-east to Callide (originally called Callidi) and opened on 3 May 1924. Stops en route were Jooro, Goovigen, Jambin and Argoon. A mixed train ran twice a week from Baralaba, west of Rannes on the Dawson Valley branch, to Callide and connected at Rannes with a service northeast to Rockhampton. A 22 kilometre extension was opened on 24 August 1925 south from Callide via Biloela to Thangool which at the time was the main township between Rannes and Monto.

Train services

A mixed service took 7½ hours for the journey from Thangool to Mount Morgan and a later passenger service took 6 hours from Thangool to Rockhampton. The terminus at Thangool was intended to be temporary and trucking yards were not constructed. However, facilities were provided at Biloela siding and it quickly became the major centre of the district.

Later stages

Construction beyond Thangool was halted in August 1926 and resumed during the depression as an employment creation measure. The third and final stage took the line a further 14 kilometres via Mount Scoria to Lawgi. Proposed construction to Monto did not eventuate and isolated Lawgi became the terminus on 19 September 1932. The Lawgi station mistress was withdrawn in 1952 and the section to Thangool was closed on 1 July 1955. The Thangool to Biloela section closed on 31 January 1988 and Biloela became the railhead. The line between Biloela and Lawgi was taken up. It remains in place between Rannes and Biloela, though only the section between Dakenba and Earlsfield is in service.

A 1939 map shows the proposed railway beyond Lawgi with the following planned railway stations:[1]

Timeline

Moura Short Line

In 1968 the Moura Short Line was opened to transport coal from the Callide and Moura mines to Gladstone port.[3] The line crosses the Callide branch line between Jambin and Callide at Earlsfield Junction and thus links Biloela with Gladstone in lieu of its previous link to Rockhampton.

Route

Callide Valley railway line!Distance from Rockhampton!Stations!Present locality!Coordinates!Altitude!Notes
66milesRannesGoovigen, Shire of Banana[4]
72milesJooroGoovigen, Shire of Banana[5]
78milesGoovigenGoovigen, Shire of Banana[6]
84milesJambinJambin, Shire of Banana
90milesArgoonJambin, Shire of Banana[7] [8]
94milesCallideCallide, Shire of Banana
102milesBiloelaBiloela, Shire of Banana
109milesThangoolThangool, Shire of Banana
110milesKariboeThangool, Shire of Banana
113milesMount ScoriaThangool, Shire of Banana
117milesLawgiLawgi Dawes, Shire of Banana

See also

References

Works cited

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1939 . Queensland Two Mile series sheet 2m163 . 27 December 2022 . . Map.
  2. News: 15 January 1955 . 6 State Branch Railway lines To Be Closed . 8 June 2024 . . Queensland, Australia . 1 . National Library of Australia . LXXV.
  3. http://qtrain0.tripod.com/id11.html Moura Line
  4. Web site: 1975 . Towns of Rannes . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20221124043953/https://gisservices.information.qld.gov.au/arcgis/rest/directories/historicalscans/cad_scans/cad-map-town-rannes-1975.jpg . 24 November 2022 . 29 December 2022 . . Map.
  5. Web site: 1948 . Queensland Two Mile series sheet 2m202 . 29 December 2022 . . Map.
  6. Web site: 1947 . Queensland Two Mile series sheet 2m201 . 29 December 2022 . . Map.
  7. Web site: 1950 . Queensland Two Mile series sheet 2m163 . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20221226215121/https://gisservices.information.qld.gov.au/arcgis/rest/directories/historicalscans/cad_scans/cad-map-2mile-qld-2m163-admin-bdy-1950.jpg . 26 December 2022 . 27 December 2022 . . Map.
  8. Web site: 2 October 2020 . Railway stations and sidings - Queensland . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20201005070354/https://www.data.qld.gov.au/dataset/transport-features-queensland-series/resource/84fff9a0-e315-4844-9c4d-63934562a9bd . 5 October 2020 . 5 October 2020 . Queensland Open Data . Queensland Government.