Wellington - Manawatu Line

Wellington - Manawatu Line

The Wellington and Manawatu Line is an unofficial name for the section of New Zealand's North Island Main Trunk Railway between Wellington and Palmerston North. Originally a government project, the line was constructed by the private Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company, and bought by the government in December 1908.

Proposals

Proposals for a railway line on the west coast of the North Island predated proposals for a railway line from Wellington to the Wairarapa regioncite book|title=Uncommon Carrier|author=Ken R Cassells|publisher=NZRLS|date=1994|] . However, land owning interests in the Wairarapa saw that the railway line from Wellington to the Wairarapa was given higher priority. As a result, proposals for a line along the west coast did not resurface until 1878 (following the completion of the Palmerston North - Foxton Line in 1876). Proposals for this line were based on the line from the Hutt Valley. The Public Works Department conducted a number of surveys a concluded there were three possible routes: the first was to build a line from Upper Hutt via the Akatarawa Valley to Waikanae, the second a line from Paekakariki via Haywards to Taita in the Hutt Valley, and the third via Porirua, through to Johnsonville and then to Wellington. The final option was settled on, as the first two required significant tunneling then not possible (Wellington had a population of just 22,000 in 1878).

Construction

The government of Sir George Grey approved the construction of the line, which was included in the Public Works Estimates, reported to the House of Representatives on 27 August 1878. The final details of the survey were completed, and the first workers were hired for the construction of the line on 21 August 1879. However, Grey's government was defeated in October 1879, and the government of Sir John Hall elected in its place. Hall had the line removed from the Public Works Estimates, and then created a Royal Commission to review the government's public works programme, with a view to reducing government expenditure. The Commission reviewed the Wellington - Manawatu Line in March 1880, and concluded that work should be abandoned.

In response, John Plimmer, considered the "father of Wellington", proposed the formation of a private company to build and operate the line. The Wellington Chamber of Commerce supported the move, and the Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company was formed in May 1881. That same year the government passed the Railway Construction and Land Act, which allowed joint stock companies to build and run private railways, so long as they were built to the government's standard gauge and connected with a government line. The company signed a contract to construct the line in 1882, acquiring the land on which the line was to built and materials used in the abandoned section of the line. Only one change was made to the Public Works surveys - the line was to connect with the government's line at Longburn, instead of Foxton, leaving the Palmerston North - Foxton Line a branch line.

The company immediately let contracts for the construction of the line from Wellington to Wadestown, now part of the Johnsonville Line. They hired Harry Higginson, a distinguished engineer from Dunedin, to oversee construction. Higginson brought with him Arthur and James Fulton. Arthur Fulton was given responsibility for the Longburn to Waikanae section, and James the Waikanae to Wellington section. A contract was let in April 1882 for the construction of the Longburn - Manawatu River section, which included the Manawatu River bridge, the longest on the line. Higginson had a special wharf built on the Manawatu River near the bridge site, to allow steamers to offload construction materials for the bridge. In August the Wadestown - Crofton section contract was let, with construction of two tunnels. The next contract let was for Johnsonville to Porirua, including the Belmont Viaduct, the highest on the line. The formation reached Paremata by mid-January 1885, with rails being laid over this section six months later.

The next section, Paremata to Paekakariki, proved difficult - it included six tunnels built against a steep cliff face, and a large swamp outside a township to be known as Plimmerton. Rails reached Pukerua Bay in 1885, where a temporary tramway was constructed below the No. 13 tunnel to allow goods and passengers to be transshipped to a stagecoach to Foxton. Material for the construction of the tunnels between Paekakariki and Pukerua Bay were unloaded at a makeshift wharf constructed in Brendan's Bay. Meanwhile, rails were within two miles of Waikanae in the north by 25 September, with a service from Otaki connecting the two railheads. The laying of the line from Pukerua Bay to Paekakariki was completed on 4 October 1886, and on 27 October the lines from Waikanae and Paekakariki met at Otaihanga. The section was officially opened on 3 November 1886, when the last spike was driven at a public ceremony by the Governor of New Zealand, Sir William Jervois.Geoffrey B. Churchman and Tony Hurst, "The Railways of New Zealand: A Journey Through History" (Auckland: HarperCollins, 1991), 165.]

ee also

* Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company

References


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