Cavan railway station, Adelaide explained

Cavan
Address:Port Wakefield Road and Goldsborough Road
Borough:Cavan
Line:Northfield railway line
Distance:12.1 km from Adelaide
Platforms:1
Structure:demolished
Opened:1914
Closed:29 May 1987

Cavan railway station was located 7.5miles by rail from Adelaide on the now closed Northfield branch line. Its elevation was above sea level.[1]

History

The Stockade line (later known as the Northfield railway line), running from Dry Creek through to Stockade railway station, was first opened in 1857. Cavan station was probably opened along this line in 1914,[2] and was located at the corner of Port Wakefield Road and Goldsborough Road. The station was named after the suburb of Cavan, a namesake of a local hotel first licensed in 1855, which itself was named after Cavan in County Cavan, Republic of Ireland.[3]

Cavan station was closed to commuter traffic on 29 May 1987, but some cattle trains still used the stock ramp sidings near Cavan and Pooraka stations until the mid 1990s.

References

-34.8339°N 138.5998°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Placename Details: Cavan Railway Station . Property Location Browser Report . SA0012946 . Government of South Australia . 19 September 2007 . 21 September 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20161012010923/http://maps.sa.gov.au/plb/ . 12 October 2016 . dead .
  2. Web site: ATDB • View topic - 150th Anniversary of the Stockade (Northfield) Line. www.busaustralia.com. en-gb. 2017-09-20.
  3. News: The A-Z history of Adelaide's suburbs. 2017-09-20.