- Taneatua Express
The Taneatua Express was an express passenger
train operated by theNew Zealand Railways Department that ran betweenAuckland andTaneatua in theBay of Plenty , serving centres such asTauranga andTe Puke . It commenced in 1929 and operated until 1959.Introduction
The immediate precursor to the Taneatua Express, and victim of its introduction, was the
Thames Express , which operated from Auckland to Thames. TheEast Coast Main Trunk Railway , in its first incarnation, diverged from theThames Branch inPaeroa (this later becameMorrinsville with the opening of the Kaimai Tunnel deviation), and when it opened in 1928, Thames swiftly declined in status as a railway terminus as services began operating through to the Bay of Plenty. A direct passenger service between Auckland and the Bay of Plenty terminus in Taneatua commenced upon the East Coast Main Trunk's opening, renderring the Thames Express superfluous as the Taneatua service ran all of the Thames Express's route except the final leg between Paeroa and Thames. Accordingly, the Thames Express ceased to operate and the Taneatua train was upgraded.Operation
When the East Coast Main Trunk opened in 1928, track conditions were not optimal and the train took 12 hours to complete its journey from Auckland to Taneatua. Over the next year, the trackage was upgraded and the Taneatua Express commenced operating. It took 10.5 hours to run between Taneatua and Auckland via a circuitous route. It was nonetheless one of the quicker forms of transport for its era, although the rise of the private car began to impact upon traffic. Proposals were made to build a direct line from Paeroa to
Pokeno on theNorth Island Main Trunk Railway to facilitate a much quicker service, and while construction did begin with some earthworks carried out, the project was stopped by the outbreak of World War II and was never completed.Initially, the Taneatua Express operated daily, but the economic impacts of the
Great Depression andWorld War II as well as post-war coal shortages meant that its services were often cut back to operate just twice or thrice weekly in each direction. Motive power was first provided bysteam locomotive s of the AB class, but during the 1940s, J class engines took over.Replacement
By the 1950s, the lack of frequent, daily operation began to prove a significant discouragement to prospective travellers. Nonetheless, the Taneatua Express survived to be the second-last steam-hauled provincial express in New Zealand. The final service operated from Taneatua to Auckland on
7 February 1959 and consisted of three passenger carriages and a guard's van hauled by J 1217. A wreath was placed on the front of the locomotive to signify the occasion. The very next day, New Zealand's final steam-hauled provincial express, theRotorua Express , ceased operating. Both expresses were replaced byrailcar services operated by RM class 88 seaters, but the Taneatua Express's replacement terminated in Te Puke, permanently ending regular passenger service to destinations beyond that town. The railcar itself did not last long; it was cancelled in 1967, and this was as much due to mechanical problems with the railcars as with patronage numbers. Passenger services to the Bay of Plenty were not reinstated until the 1991 introduction of theKaimai Express from Auckland to Tauranga.
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