Milang railway line explained

Milang railway line
System:The former South Australian Railways
Status:Closed and removed
Start:Sandergrove (farming locality) at -35.3337°N 138.8719°W
End:Milang (railway museum at former railway station) at -35.4092°N 138.9716°W
Continuesfrom:
Strathalbyn to Victor Harbor railway line
Stations:Nurragi (unattended station) at -35.3713°N 138.9093°W and Punkulde (stopping place) at -35.3393°N 138.938°W
Open:17 December 1884
Close:17 June 1970
Linelength Km:13.1
Map State:collapsed
Operator:The former South Australian Railways
Embed:yes
Nurragi Conservation Reserve
Milang railway line rail trail
Established:1991
Location:Between Sandergrove and Milang
Designation:Nurragi conservation reserve
Use:Hiking (easy topography; fences are crossed using stiles)
Sights:Wildflowers, plants and wildlife
Surface:Natural; compacted gravel
Row:Former Milang railway line

The Milang railway line was a branch line, now closed, of the former South Australian Railways that left the mainline to Victor Harbor at the farming locality of Sandergrove, 9km (06miles) south of Strathalbyn and 89.7km (55.7miles) by rail from Adelaide. From there it proceeded in a south-easterly direction for 13.1km (08.1miles) to the riverport of Milang on Lake Alexandrina, in the estuary of the River Murray. The line was opened on 17 December 1884; it was formally closed on 17 June 1970.[1] [2] The route is now a "rail trail" that is popular with hikers. The precincts of the former Milang station house a railway museum that includes an innovative locomotive driving simulator for visitors to operate. Onsite is a centre for South Australian historical light railways.[3] [4] [5]

The new river trade

During the latter half of the 19th century, many moves and counter-moves, in trade and politics, were prompted by inter-colonial rivalry and fierce competition. Boat-borne trade on the MurrayDarling river system, which started in 1853, was no exception. The creation of the Milang railway line only occurred after a third of a century of such contention – and it was parliamentary influence of the man who founded Milang, rather than economics, that brought it into being.[6] [7]

Two driving forces in the river trade were the need to reduce the cost of transporting heavy produce, especially wool, to seaports and to maximise state governments' customs revenue.[8] State governments, pastoralists, businessmen and boat owners were quick to seize any competitive advantage.[9]

Before the arrival of the river boats, of which there would be more than 100,[10] goods and produce were moved by rough tracks using bullocks or horses and wagons – a slow and arduous process. River travel along the Murray and Darling allowed traders to transport perishable goods to pastoralists on inland properties. In turn, pastoralists could ship their valuable wool clips much faster to ocean ports for export to the mills of Britain.[11]

A railway to the wrong place

In 1853, after the navigability of the river 2400km (1,500miles) upstream to its junction with the Darling River had been proved,[12] the estuarine town of Goolwa Goolwa monopolised South Australia's river trade with Victoria and New South Wales, and the town was to enjoy this primacy for 25 years.[9] [10]

The destination for agricultural produce (mainly wool) carried down the river was Port Adelaide, before shipping to Britain. In the absence of railway transport in South Australia, boats had to risk the hazards of sandbars and currents at the river mouth and the Southern Ocean shores. To bypass them, an 11.2km (07miles) railway line – the first full-scale railway in Australia – was built from Goolwa to Port Elliot, where ocean-going vessels docked. The line opened in 1854.[9] [10]

Timeline – the Milang line in context
Prompted by Opening of Date Length Traction
Access to ocean-going and coastal vesselsGoolwa–Port Elliot line 185411.2km (07miles)Horse until 1869
Hazards of Port Elliot waters Westward extension, Port Elliot to Port Victor 1864 6.4km (04miles)Horse until 1869
Pressure from hinterland for access to seaport Eastward extension, Goolwa to Strathalbyn 1869 33km (21miles)Steam
Market advantage of rail connection to Adelaide (and in 1887 to Melbourne)Link to Adelaide: Strathalbyn to Mount Barker 1884 26.5km (16.5miles)Steam
Albert Landseer's advocacy Branch line to Milang 1884 13.1km (08.1miles)Steam

The grave mistake in choosing Port Elliot as a harbour soon became apparent: by 1864, seven ships at anchor had been wrecked. Port Victor, later named Victor Harbor, 4miles to the west, was a much safer seaport. In that year, therefore, a jetty and pier were built at Port Victor and the railway line was extended west to the town to reach them. At the same time, the people of Strathalbyn and surrounding areas successfully applied political pressure to build a line connecting their town to the eastern end of the railway. The line was completed in 1869.[13]

Railways draw off the river trade

By the end of the 1870s, in the same way that river boats had revolutionised the transport of produce, steam trains rapidly cut into their market. Produce brought from the upper reaches by boat could be hastened to Port Adelaide by rail without needing to continue on the river to the lower reaches. The opening of one railway in particular had a huge impact on lower River Murray ports: the line to Morgan, which was extended from Kapunda in 1878, provided a connection with the state capital. Since Morgan was 306km (190miles) and up to a week's journey by river from Goolwa, but only 160km (100miles) of faster transit by rail to Adelaide, the town almost immediately eclipsed Goolwa as the busiest riverport in South Australia. The smaller settlement of Wellington, 63km (39miles) upstream from Goolwa, was similarly overtaken when a railway from Adelaide arrived at nearby Murray Bridge the following year.[9]

Throughout this period of change, primary producers in the Murray mouth region were disadvantaged by the comparatively higher costs of either transporting produce overland to Adelaide by dray or by coastal shipping, since the Port Victor line had not been extended further north than Strathalbyn.[6] Eventually the South Australian parliament appointed a select committee to investigate building a connecting line of about 30km (20miles) from Strathalbyn to the Adelaide–Melbourne line then under construction.[6]

Political push for Milang (and Mr Landseer)

One of the select committee members was a prominent and highly respected Member of Parliament, Albert Landseer. In 1856 he had founded Milang, where he continued to have his headquarters, and he was renowned for his intimate connection with the town and district. His business interests in the area – including flour milling, ownership of river steamers and barges, agent for the paddle steamer pioneer Francis Cadell, and wool warehousing – were immense. As the senior representative for Mount Barker since 1875 he had become highly prominent in public life – "almost a household word".[14] He made sure the committee heard evidence supporting a branch line to Milang that would allow steamboats to use what he considered to be a more conveniently located railhead than Goolwa, despite unfavourable assessment as early as 22 years beforehand.[6]

So it was that in November 1881, when assent was granted to an Act – short title The Mount Barker and Strathalbyn Railway Act [15] – it authorised not only a link to Mount Barker but the branch line from Sandergrove to Milang that Landseer had been seeking. When the line was opened, a newspaper report started with a remark that the branch was "jocularly styled 'Landseer's line'".

The "palmy days" of river trade were over, however, by the mid-1880s. Morgan's primacy over the downstream ports – after the completion of its rail link with Adelaide – was well established and the trade itself was on the eve of decline.[14]

The line is built

Tenders were called for building the line to Strathalbyn and the branch to Milang in April 1882. The company of Walker and Swann (builders of the first section of the Intercolonial Railway between Adelaide and Aldgate that opened in March 1883) were awarded the contract for both lines and signed the papers in June 1882. The contract price was £143,678 for the main line (20 per cent lower than the survey estimate of £155,000) and £25,600 for the branch line.[16]

Five hundred men started building the main line from Mount Barker junction via Philcox Hill to Strathalbyn in November 1883, completing it in September 1884. The first load of wool was consigned from Mr A. McFarlane's property at Milang to A.H. Landseer's store at Port Adelaide. By late August, the workforce transferred en masse to the Milang branch, on which earthworks had been completed and all that was needed was to lay the rails and steel sleepers, and perform ballasting operations. The branch opened three months later, on 17 December 1884 – the same day as the line from Strathalbyn to Goolwa changed over from horse to steam power. No ceremony was performed but the public were given free rides and a special train brought invited guests from Strathalbyn, stopping almost halfway between Sandergrove and Milang for a picnic in the scrub, followed by entertainment at Milang's institute hall in the late afternoon. [17]

Traffic

The Milang terminus comprised a main line, passing siding and stock siding; the goods siding was an extension of the main line. A 16.2m (53.1feet) human-propelled turntable was provided to turn locomotives and railcars. Narrow gauge (1067mms) track was laid from its longstanding location at the jetty to the station, and all goods from river vessels – plus fish, since Milang was a flourishing fishing centre – were transferred on to broad-gauge vehicles at the wharf end of the station yard. Facilities on the way to Milang were minimal: at Sandergrove junction there was a platform and small shed; at Nurragi a passing loop about 70m (230feet) long, a very short platform, and a small shed; and at Punkulde a passenger stopping sign where the Finniss to Milang road crossed the line.[6]

Traffic of wool and supplies up and down the Murray in the early years of the Milang branch resulted in steady business, even if not large-scale. However, from 1929, when road transportation was deregulated and the economic slump of the previous two years deepened, traffic declined and did not recover. In 1931 the Transport Control Board asked the South Australian Railways to provide a report on the estimated savings to be made by closure of unprofitable branchlines, including those south of Mount Barker. Closure was averted by the prospect of heavy expenditure being needed to upgrade roads for heavy goods transport and by the expectation of impending increases in revenue following the severe drought of 1928–29 and an expected waning of the economic depression. Repeal of the 1930 Road and Railways Transport Act in 1964[18] exposed the railways to intense competition from road transport and reduced traffic severely. The line stumbled on for another six years before it closed.[19]

Freight and livestock at Milang, 1890–1969
Year Goods inwards (tons) Goods outwards (tons) Livestock inwards (head) Livestock outwards (head)
18901,101 566Not avail.5,313
1900 1,756 1,490 Not avail.14,000
1910 3,576 1,970 Not avail.16,000
19203,807 1,422 Not avail.13,000
1930 1,613 1,674 1,2187,391
19401,764 477 2,2674,044
19501,580 1,615 8611,948
19601,043 1,090 1,5562,834
1969234 650

Other than in the early years, safety in train operation was secured by the train order system. A mixed (freight and passenger) steam-hauled train provided the service from Strathalbyn until 1925, when new Brill Model 55 railcars commenced running daily between Adelaide and Milang.[20] A goods train worked several times a week from Strathalbyn. By the late 1930s, a larger Brill Model 75 railcar stationed at Strathalbyn worked all Milang services except for a weekly locomotive-hauled train. From 1942 to 1968, all goods and livestock traffic was in four-wheeled vehicles towed by the railcar.[21] In 1968 (the year the passenger service was halted), legislative protection of goods traffic on the South Australian Railways ceased and traffic plummeted on the line. Motive power for solely goods traffic was then provided on demand by mainline trains[22] doubling back from Sandergrove or Strathalbyn as necessary until the line was closed two years later.[19]

The maximum speed permitted on the line was 30mph, but a journalist taken on a train just before the line opened enthused:[17]

Milang line timetable, 1966
Adelaide–Milang
Sat
am
Tue and Wed am Fri
pm
Sat
pm
Sun
pm
Fri
pm
Adelaide dep 9.00 12.556.10
Strathalbyn arr 10.57* 2.47*8.04*
dep 11.20 11.45 12.453.104.00 8.30
Milang arr 11.57 12.021.22 3.474.359.07
Milang–Adelaide
Sat
pm
Tue, Wed & Fri pm Sun
pm
Sat
pm
Fri
pm
Milang dep 1.35 2.074.505.109.40
Strathalbyn arr 2.12 2.45 5.25*5.45* 10.08
dep 5.566.16
Adelaide arr 8.00 8.20
In 1969, a review by the Transport Control Board found that even on the Strathalbyn–Victor Harbor line, a total of only 4,500 passengers had boarded at stations during the previous year; closure of the lines south of Strathalbyn was recommended. The Parliamentary Standing Committee on Public Works then recommended an attempt be made to reinvigorate freight traffic rather than immediate closure of the main route, but recommended closure of the Milang branch. By then, although goods trains had operated occasionally, the last timetabled passenger service had run, on 30 November 1968. A special charter trip was operated on 15 June 1970, two days before the line was formally closed.[19] [23]

Milang railway museum

The Milang Historical Railway Museum,[24] which opened in 1992, has become one of Milang's major attractions. After the line was closed, the track and structures had been removed; the wooden station building was purchased and used for 20 years as an outbuilding on a farm. Subsequently, it was donated to the museum and members transported it back to its original site, to become the centrepiece of the museum on a new platform. All track and ballast had been removed, so museum members acquired and installed components that allowed them to replicate the previous track layout.[7]

Railway memorabilia and displays of the railway-era history of the town and surrounding districts are situated in the building and in several items of rolling stock next to the platform. An innovative feature in the cab of a static-display diesel locomotive cab is a computer operated driving simulator that visitors can operate.[25] [26] [27] In the station building the focus is on the South Australian Railways and the importance of the railway to the district. On display are many old photos and railway memorabilia.[28]

The story of the light railways of South Australia – of which there were about 700, operating in mines, forests, wineries, munitions factories and quarries, and at jetties to transport goods from ships – is also told on many wall displays, and models of rolling stock that ran on those railways are adjacent. Visitors can operate a model light railway. Outside In the station yard, three historic light railway locomotives and two section cars are on display. This aspect of the museum, operating under the name of the South Australian Light Railway Centre, is the result of collaboration between museum members, the Light Railway Research Society of Australia and the History Trust of South Australia.[29]

The Museum published a book about the line, The Lakes Railway, in 2018.[7]

Rail trail (Nurragi conservation reserve)

The right-of-way of the former railway line was declared in 1991 as the Nurragi Conservation Reserve, permanently protected by a native vegetation heritage agreement. Linking the eastern Mount Lofty Ranges and Lake Alexandrina, it contains extremely important remnant native vegetation in a region that has been cleared of more than 98 per cent of its original cover.

More than 300 native plant species are present in the conservation reserve, of which more than 50 are of particular conservation significance. A community group, the Friends of Nurragi Association,[30] has worked to re-establish flora indigenous to the Milang Scrub, which originally extended from Belvidere in the north to Point Sturt in the south and Finniss to the west;[31] local primary school children have also taken part. Bare areas are being revegetated with species of the original Milang Scrub, including Aboriginal food plants such as muntries, quandongs and native currants. The reserve is also an important link for wildlife and birds between the lakeside environment and the foothills, providing them with food and protective cover.[32] [33] [34] [35]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Along the Line – Strathalbyn to Sandergrove . . 21 February 2015.
  2. Book: Quinlan. Howard. Newland. John. Australian Railway Routes 1854–2000. 2000. Australian Railway Historical Society. Redfern. 0-909650-49-7. 54.
  3. Web site: Milang Community News . . May 2019 . Milang – South Australia's historic lake town . Milang & District Community Association . 18 June 2019 .
  4. Web site: Port Milang Historic Railway Museum . . 2019 . Port Milang Historic Railway Museum . Milang Historical Railway Museum Inc. . 18 June 2019 .
  5. Web site: The new South Australian Light Railway Centre . . 2019 . Port Milang Historic Railway Museum . Milang Historical Railway Museum Inc. . 18 June 2019 .
  6. Book: Lucas . Peter . Beaumont . Alan . 2015 . Modelling the Milang Branch . Adelaide . Modelling the Railways of South Australia Convention . 9–189, 9–190.
  7. Book: Lucas, Peter. The Lakes Railway. Railmac Publications. Elizabeth, SA. 2018. 9781864771237.
  8. Until Federation brought the Australian states together in 1901, they levied customs duties at their borders. In 1853, William Randell, the first steam navigator of the rivers in the PS Mary Ann, built at Mannum, had to steam 100 miles downstream to Goolwa to get customs clearance for the first cargo borne on the Murray.
  9. Book: Baker . Ronald . Baker . Margaret . Reschke . William . 1981 . 2nd . Murray River pilot: Goolwa to Renmark, South Australia . Adelaide . Fullers Services Pty Ltd.
  10. Book: . Goolwa state heritage area: guidelines for development. 2018. Government of South Australia, Department for Environment and Water. Adelaide . 9781921800887.
  11. Web site: Paddle Steamer Enterprise . . 2019 . National Museum of Australia . National Museum of Australia . 13 June 2019 .
  12. Book: Painter, Gwenda . The river trade: wool and steamers. 1987. Turton & Armstrong with Pioneer Settlement Press. Wahroonga, New South Wales . 0908031092. 12–13.
  13. Strempel . A.A.. May 1954 . The Centenary of the Goolwa–Port Elliot Line . . 1449-6291 . Redfern, New South Wales . Australian Railway Historical Society . 49–62.
  14. News: Death of Mr. A. H. Landseer . . (Original, Adelaide. Digital reproduction, Canberra. National Library of Australia (Trove digital newspaper archive)). 28 August 1906 . 19 June 2019 . 5 .
  15. Web site: Mount Barker and Strathalbyn Railway Act 1881 . . 18 November 1881 . Flinders Academic Commons . Flinders University . 7 June 2019 .
  16. Book: Bird, Kim . 1972 . South Coast Limited: a history of the Victor Harbor and Milang railway lines in South Australia . Adelaide . Australian Railway Historical Society (SA Division) Inc. .
  17. News: The southern railway line . . XVIII . 978 . (Original, Port Elliot. Digital reproduction, Canberra. National Library of Australia – Trove digital newspaper archive) . 4 December 1884 . 3 . 27 June 2019.
  18. Web site: Road and Railway Transport Act Amendment Act 1964 . . 22 October 1964 . Flinders Academic Commons . Flinders University. Adelaide . 7 June 2019 .
  19. Book: Bird, Kim . 15 June 1970 . Guide to the Milang Branch [brochure] ]. Adelaide . Australian Railway Historical Society (SA Division) Inc. 3 June 2019 .
  20. The schedule was: depart Adelaide 7.02 am, arrive Milang 10.50 am; depart Milang 3.20 pm, arrive Adelaide 6.48 pm.
  21. The load limit of these vehicles was 25 tons behind 55 class railcars and 50 tons behind 75 class railcars
  22. Hauled by 830 class locomotives.
  23. Web site: Port Milang Historic Railway Museum: A short history of the Lakes railway . . 2019 . Port Milang Historic Railway Museum . Milang Historical Railway Museum Inc. . 18 June 2019 .
  24. Web site: Milang Railway Museum.
  25. Web site: Port Milang Historic Railway Museum . Walsh . Dave . 12 December 2016 . Weekend notes . Oat Labs, Sydney . 3 June 2019 .
  26. Web site: The Port Milang Historic Railway Museum .
  27. The museum, including the locomotive driving simulator, entry to both of which is stated to be free, is open on Saturdays and Sundays from noon to 4 pm. Children under 10 need adult assistance to use the simulator because the locomotive's controls are heavy after many years of use.
  28. Web site: South Australian Light Railway Centre opening . Walsh . Dave . 14 December 2016 . Weekend notes . Oat Labs, Sydney . 3 June 2019 .
  29. Web site: The new South Australian Light Railway Centre .
  30. Web site: Friends of Nurragi Association Inc. . sacommunity.org.
  31. Belvidere is at -35.29°N 138.94°W; Point Sturt -35.5°N 139.01°W; and Finniss -35.4°N 138.83°W.
  32. Web site: Nurragi Conservation Reserve . 2019 . National Trust . Australian Council of National Trusts. 26 June 2019.
  33. Web site: Nurragi Conservation Reserve walking trail . 2019 . Walking SA . Walking SA Inc.. 26 June 2019.
  34. Web site: Nurragi Conservation Reserve – trail description . 26 June 2019 . Rail Trails Australia Inc..
  35. Web site: Walking guide brochure and map prepared by the Friends Group . 2019 . Rail Trails Australia. Friends of Nurragi . 26 June 2019.