Goolwa railway station

Railway station in South Australia, Australia
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35°30′17″S 138°47′07″E / 35.504604716895955°S 138.78524496558651°E / -35.504604716895955; 138.78524496558651Operated bySteamrangerLine(s)Victor Harbor lineDistance83.8 kilometres from AdelaidePlatforms1Tracks1ConstructionStructure typeGroundHistoryOpened1854Closed1984

Goolwa railway station is a preserved railway station located in the river port of Goolwa, on the broad gauge Victor Harbor line, formerly operated by South Australian Railways and its successor, Australian National.

History

Goolwa railway station opened in 1854 as a one terminus of a line linking the River Murray to the sea at Port Elliot. That railway was soon extended from Port Elliot to Victor Harbor and from Goolwa to Strathalbyn in 1869 and the connection from Adelaide reached that town in 1884 completing the full line. The station was built on the Wharf precinct, alongside the River Murray.[1]

Regular Australian National passenger services ended in 1984.

Present-day use

In 1989, a not-for-profit railway preservation organisation, SteamRanger, was established by the Australian Railway Historical Society to operate its heritage train tours from Adelaide to Victor Harbor through the station. Six years later, as part of the One Nation infrastructure program, the main line between Adelaide and Melbourne was converted to standard gauge, leaving Steamranger's depot at Dry Creek in metropolitan Adelaide isolated. In a major project, all of SteamRanger's locomotives, rolling stock and infrastructure were moved to Mount Barker station and volunteers took full responsibility for maintaining the track from Mount Barker Junction to Victor Harbor.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ "Along the line - Goolwa Station".