Temora–Roto railway line
Overview
Termini
StationsGriffith
History
Opened1920s
Completed31 March 1931 (1931-03-31)
Technical
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Route map

From Temora on the Lake Cargelligo Line
Pucawan
Quandary
Ariah Park
Mirrool
Beckom
Ardlethan
Kamarah
Moombooldool
Barellan
Garoolgan
Binya
Yenda
Beelbangera
junction for branch from Yanco
Griffith
Lakeview
Tharbogang
Tabbita
Goolgowi
Merriwagga
Langtree
Hillston
Lowlands
to Roto on the Broken Hill line

The Temora–Roto railway line is a partly closed railway line in the southwest of New South Wales, Australia. It branches from the Lake Cargelligo line at the town of Temora and travels west through the northern part of the Riverina to the towns of Griffith and Hillston. A connection to the Broken Hill line created a cross-country route, although this was never utilised to its full potential, and the line beyond Hillston was built to low grade 'pioneer' standards.

The line opened in stages in the 1920s.[1] The line is now only used for goods haulage, mainly wheat, and is closed beyond Hillston. Passenger services were operated by CPH type railmotors from 1926 until 1974[2] when services were withdrawn between Griffith and Hillston. Services between Temora and Griffith continued until November 1983 when they too were withdrawn and replaced by road coach services (services continued between Griffith and Junee via Narrandera until 1986).[3] Griffith station is the only passenger station that remains open, and although this line via Temora is the shortest connection to Griffith, passenger trains now operate only over the longer route via Narrandera, as this line travels through larger population centres.

See also

References

  1. "Temora- Roto Branch". nswrail.net. Retrieved 23 May 2007.
  2. Pollard, N.Rails to the Margins: The Griffith, Hillston, Roto Line. Australian Railway History, ARHS. Vol 58, no. 836. June 2007.
  3. Pollard, N. From Penfolds to Patricks, Griffith NSW: The study of a unique railway centre, Part 2. Australian Railway History, 59 No. 845. March 2008. ARHS NSW Division.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.