Hamley Bridge railway station explained

Hamley Bridge
Type:Former Australian National regional rail
Address:Railway Terrace, Hamley Bridge, South Australia
Coordinates:-34.3575°N 138.6843°W
Owned:South Australian Railways 1860 - 1978 Australian National 1978 - 1997 One Rail Australia 1997-2022 Aurizon 2022-present
Operator:South Australian Railways 1860 - 1978 Australian National 1978 - 1986
Line:Roseworthy-Peterborough line
Distance:76 kilometres from Adelaide
Platform:3
Tracks:2
Structure:Ground
Status:Closed
Opened:1880
Closed:December 1986

Hamley Bridge railway station was located in Hamley Bridge at the junction of the Roseworthy-Peterborough railway line and the Hamley Bridge-Gladstone railway line in South Australia.

History

Opening

Hamley Bridge railway station opened on 3 July 1869 as part of the extension of what was then known as the Roseworthy-Forresters railway.[1] It became a junction with the opening of the Hamley Bridge-Balaklava railway on 15 January 1880.[2] The original station opened in 1880 and was a few hundred meters north of the original station originally called Alma. The station facilities included of a main building and four platforms. The foundation stone of the bridge was laid by Lady Edith Hamley, wife of Lt.-Col. Francis Gilbert Hamley, who was then the Governor of South Australia, on 25 July 1868. In 1925 the original stone bridge was demolished and a new bridge was erected in conjunction with the works to convert the narrow gauge line to broad gauge, despite this bridge already being broad gauge. Each platform was an island platform and a signal box was constructed. Silos, cranes and a goods shed were added. There were many sidings and tracks at the rail yards with the junction to the north and sidings for storing wagons to the south. The town of Hamley Bridge was named after the railway bridge over the Light River on the south side of the station for the Peterborough line. The bridge was 91 metres long and 24 metres high, in two spans on stone abutments and a cast iron cylindrical pier 1.8 metres in diameter.[3]

Break of gauge

Hamley Bridge was a break of gauge station with the Hamley Bridge-Balaklava line being constructed as narrow gauge. The Peterborough line was constructed as broad gauge. This problem was solved when the line to Balaklava (later extended to Gladstone) was converted to broad gauge in 1927.[4]

Closure

In 1978, the station and all associated infrastructure was included in the transfer of South Australian Railways to Australian National. Regular passenger services ceased in December 1986 but some special train tours used the station up until 2004. In 1997, the station and railway lines were included in the transfer of Australian National's freight assets to Australian Southern Railroad (later known as One Rail Australia.) Grain trains last used the line to Balaklava in 2004 [5] Grain trains last used the silos at Hamley Bridge on 31 October 2005. The station remnants and railway line were included in Aurizon's purchase of One Rail Australia in 2022.

Present day

The platforms, railway tracks and the station building remain. The silos were demolished in October 2022.[6] The station building has been converted into a private residence.[7] The station is located in the local council of Wakefield.[8]

Notes and References

  1. News: Roseworthy and Forresters railway. South Australian Chronicle and Weekly Mail . 3 July 1869. Trove.
  2. News: Opening of the Hamley Bridge And Balaklava Railway. South Australian Advertiser . 15 January 1880 . Trove.
  3. Web site: Railway Stations: Hamley Bridge, South Australia.
  4. News: The Big Push. Register . August 1927 . Trove.
  5. Web site: Hoyleton to Port Wakefield Railway Line. 6 July 2022 .
  6. News: Our changing landscape. SA Farmer. 16 April 2023.
  7. Web site: Historic railway station-turned-home for sale in Hamley Bridge. realestate.com.au.
  8. Wakefield regional council