Crowes railway line

Summary

The Crowes railway line was a 2 ft 6 in (762 mm) narrow gauge railway located in the Otway Ranges in south-western Victoria, Australia, running from the main line to Port Fairy at Colac to Beech Forest and later to Crowes.

Crowes railway
Overview
StatusAbandoned
Stations23
Service
TypeVic
History
Opened1 March 1902 (to Beech Forest)
20 June 1911 (to Crowes)
Closed11 December 1954 (Ferguson to Crowes) (Ferguson-Weeaproinah reopened January 1955)
30 June 1962 (Colac to Weeaproinah)
Technical
Line length44 mi (71 km)
Number of tracksSingle track
Track gauge2 ft 6 in (762 mm)
Route map
File:Crowes railway line.jpg
Cutting and 103 mile (166 km) post on the line
Remnants of an embankment near Barongarook

It was the third of four narrow gauge lines of the Victorian Railways, opening to Beech Forest in March 1902, and extended to Crowes in June 1911. Nearly 44 miles (71 km) long, it was the longest of the narrow gauge lines. It was also the last to close, finally succumbing in June 1962, although the line had been truncated back to Ferguson railway station in December 1954, only to be reopened to Weeaproinah in January 1955.

Sections of the route have been developed as the Old Beechy Rail Trail.

Operation edit

Both the Colac and Crowes lines entered Beech Forest yard from the same end, creating a junction. Trains had to be turned to run down the Crowes branch and a balloon loop was provided at the other end of the yard. A tennis court occupied the land within the loop. Crowes, the terminus of the line, was the most southerly railway station on the Australian mainland.

The primary traffic was sawn timber and firewood, with many sawmills located adjacent to the railway, or accessed by short tramways. Seasonally heavy potato traffic and a lime kiln added to revenue. Traffic grew to require up to seven trains a day each way by the mid-1920s. The introduction of the G class Garratt locomotive allowed a new timetable with two trains each way between Colac and Beech Forest, and a third train each way to Gellibrand. The Crowes branch saw a single mixed train daily. The onset of the Great Depression, and competition from motor vehicles, saw traffic decline to a point where only one train each way operated over the line three days a week. Increased wartime loadings saw traffic increase to two trains each way daily, but that was only temporary. By the time the railway closed, the timetable listed only one train each way a week, and most of the traffic was pulpwood.

The line opened using the staff and ticket method of safeworking. Train section orders were adopted between 1927 and 1939, after which staff and ticket working was resumed.

Planned extensions edit

There were proposals for the line to be further extended as far as Princetown on the Great Ocean Road, with surveys being carried out as far as Wangerrip, or "Colac Tree Station".[1]

Line Guide edit

Crowes railway line
Legend
 
 
 
 
155.39 km
Colac
 
 
Elliminyt
 
Tulloh
 
Coram
 
Barongarook
 
 
Watson & Facy's Siding
 
Birnam
 
 
Kawarren
 
Hitt's Siding
 
 
Lovat
 
Gellibrand
 
Banool
 
 
Wimba
 
McDevitt
 
Dinmont
 
 
McDevitt Bros. Siding
 
Ditchley
 
 
 
 
Beech Forest
 
Buchanan
 
Ferguson
 
 
Weeaproinah
 
Pile Siding
 
J. G. M. Knott Siding
 
Kincaid
 
Wyelangta
 
 
Petitt's Siding
 
Stalker
 
Macknott
 
Lavers Hill
 
 
Crowes

References edit

  • Norman Houghton. "Colac-Beech Forest-Crowes Railway Conservation Management Plan" (PDF). Colac–Otway Shire. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 August 2008. Retrieved 2 November 2008.
  • "Old Beechy Rail Trail – Trail Description". railtrails.org.au. Retrieved 18 May 2015.
  • Bill Russell. "Colac to Crowes Narrow Gauge Railway". Retrieved 2 November 2008.

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Victorian Railways survey diagrams" (PDF).

Further reading edit

  • Houghton, Norman 1992 The Beechy Light Railway Research Society of Australia, Melbourne ISBN 0-909340-29-3

38°41′23″S 143°22′3″E / 38.68972°S 143.36750°E / -38.68972; 143.36750