Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

York–Bruce Rock railway line

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Operator(s)
  
Brookfield Rail

Track gauge
  
1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)

York–Bruce Rock railway line

Opened
  
1 September 1898 (York-Greenhills) 24 April 1908 (Greenhills-Quairading) 28 March 1913 (Quairading-Bruce Rock)

Owner
  
Public Transport Authority

Terminis
  
Bruce Rock, York railway station, Western Australia

The York–Bruce Rock railway line is a closed railway line in the wheatbelt region of Western Australia running from York to Bruce Rock.

History

On 29 June 1885, the Eastern Railway opened from Chidlow's Well to York. Another line opened south to Beverley on 5 August 1886 and ultimately Albany via the Great Southern Railway.

On 9 September 1897, construction commenced on a line to Greenhills with the line opening on 1 September 1898. On 24 April 1908, it was extended to Quairading and to Bruce Rock on 4 July 1913.

The line was initially served by a three times weekly mixed train, this was later reduced to twice weekly. Once the line from Bruce Rock to Merredin was opened in December 1913, a through service was introduced. In 1938, a thrice weekly through service from Perth to Merredin was introduced with ADE railcars. This reduced the travel time from 17 hours to eight.

In August 1949, a road bus service introduced. By January 1951, the railcar service had been reduced to once weekly and was withdrawn entirely in March 1952. Diesel locomotives were introduced to the line in 1955, working in parallel with steam locomotives until 1970.

In 1985, the line was closed between Yoting and Shackleton, the line now operating as two separate lines from York to Yoting and Bruce Rock to Shackleton. In October 1990, the haulage of superphosphate ceased with the line exclusively used by grain trains. it was cut back to Quairading in the 1990s and closed entirely in October 2013.

References

York–Bruce Rock railway line Wikipedia


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