Nannup Branch Railway

Former branch railway line in Western Australia

  • Wonnerup
  • Nannup
ServiceTypeHeavy railHistoryOpenedJune 1871 (as Ballaarat Tramway)
then in stages until
31 March 1909 (Jarrahwood-Nannup)TechnicalLine length62 km (39 mi)Track gauge1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Route map

Legend
mi-ch
km
Ballaarat Tramway
 0-00
0.0
Wonnerup
 4-22
6.9
Ruabon
 7-62
12.5
Tutunup
10- 5
16.2
Cartis
10-45
17.0
Yoganup
15-20
24.5
Maryvale
Ballaarat
Tramway
(end)
16-35
26.5
Claymore
19-36
31.3
Quilergup
21-72
35.2
Jarrahwood
28-32
45.7
Cambray
Kauri Timber
Company Tramway
30-34
49.0
Dellerton
33-31
53.7
Bibilup
38- 8
61.3
Nannup Township
00-00
62.4
Nannup
38-64
62.4
Nannup
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The Nannup Branch Railway, also known as the Wonnerup to Nannup Railway, was a branch line of the Western Australian Government Railways (WAGR) between Wonnerup and Nannup.

History

In 1897 the Jarrah Wood and Saw Mills Company leased the W.A. Timber Company's former timber concession in the South West of Western Australia. The section of the W.A. Timber Company's Ballaarat Tramway route south of the Bunbury-Busselton railway was reused by the Jarrah Wood and Saw Mills Company for the construction of a railway between Wonnerup and Jarrahwood[1] in 1898–99.

The line operated until 1903, and was bought by the WAGR in 1907.[2] Residents in the Nannup region were advocating for the extension to the railway in 1905[3][4][5] and in 1909 the Jarrahwood to Nannup line was completed and opened.[6]

As operated by the WAGR, the line was 38 miles 64 chains (38.80 miles, 62.44 km) from Wonnerup to Nannup and saw three trains per week in each direction during the 1940s.[7]

The line was closed in 1984.[8] A re-commissioning study was conducted in 1989[9] but did not result in the reinstatement of the railway.

Rail Trail

While the rails have been lifted, the rail corridor is still owned by the Government, through the Public Transport Authority.[10]
The section between Jarrahwood and Nannup has been converted to the Sidings Rail Trail and forms part of the Munda Biddi Trail.[11][12]

Notes

  1. ^ "Ballaarat Tramline". Monument Australia. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
  2. ^ page 66 – Quinlan, Howard; Newland, John R; Australian Railway Historical Society. New South Wales Division (2000), Australian railway routes 1854 to 2000, Australian Railway Historical Society – New South Wales Division, ISBN 978-0-909650-49-0
  3. ^ Even earlier (1900) for the first section [Petition to the Hon. the Premier from the residents of the Sussex district re the construction of the Wonnerup – Jarrahwood Railway southwards to the Lower Blackwood], [19--], 1900, retrieved 8 February 2014
  4. ^ In 1905 – "THE PREMIER IN THE SUSSEX ELECTORATE". The West Australian. Perth: National Library of Australia. 13 June 1905. p. 5. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  5. ^ "THE PREMIER IN THE SUSSEX ELECTORATE". Western Mail. Perth: National Library of Australia. 17 June 1905. p. 18. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  6. ^ "THE NANNUP RAILWAY". Western Mail. Perth: National Library of Australia. 1 May 1909. p. 28. Retrieved 8 February 2014.
  7. ^ Western Australian Government Railways (1946). Time Table for passenger, mixed, and goods trains over all lines. Perth: Western Australian Government Railways.
  8. ^ McNess, Archibald E. J (2005), Original railways of the southwest (Western Australia) : Busselton – Margaret River, Flinders Bay railway construction and Busselton – Wonnerup, Nannup railway line, A.E.J. McNess, retrieved 8 February 2014
  9. ^ MacFarlane, Helen (Helen Mary); Busselton (W.A. : Shire); Western Australia. South West Development Authority; Nannup (W.A. : Shire) (1989), Feasibility study into the recommissioning of the Capel-Busselton and Wonnerup-Nannup railway lines, MacFarlane Research, retrieved 8 February 2014
  10. ^ Public Transport Authority Network Map Public Transport Authority
  11. ^ Western Australia Dept. of Environment and Conservation (2007), Sidings rail trail : Jarrahwood to Nannup, Dept. of Environment & Conservation, retrieved 17 July 2024
  12. ^ "Sidings Rail Trail". Rail Trails Australia. Retrieved 28 August 2020.
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