Robertstown railway station

Coordinates: 33°59′S 139°05′E / 33.99°S 139.08°E / -33.99; 139.08
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Robertstown
The original Robertstown station sign, displayed in the Goyder Interpretive Gardens located in the former station yard in June 2021.
General information
Coordinates33°59′S 139°05′E / 33.99°S 139.08°E / -33.99; 139.08
Operated bySouth Australian Railways 1914–1975
Australian National 1975–1990
Line(s)Robertstown railway line
Distance134 kilometres from Adelaide
Platforms1
Construction
Structure typeGround
Other information
StatusClosed and demolished
History
Opened9 December 1914; 109 years ago (1914-12-09)
Closed25 September 1990; 33 years ago (1990-09-25)
Services
Preceding station South Australian Railways Following station
Point Pass
towards Adelaide
Robertstown railway line Terminus

Robertstown was the terminus of the Robertstown railway line serving the South Australian Mid North town of Robertstown.

History[edit]

Robertstown railway station opened on 9 December 1914 after a railway line was built from Eudunda on the Morgan railway line.[1] The goods crane at Robertstown is unique in the fact that it is the only railway crane in South Australia that was of a Scotch Derrick design.[2] Robertstown served passengers and freight, with grain being the primary form of traffic in its later years as regular passenger services had ceased on 23 September 1962. With traffic on the line dwindling, the last passenger train to Robertstown was run by Train Tour Promotions using locomotive 804 to farewell the line on 20 May 1989.[3] Less than a year later, the final train on the line, a grain train departed Robertstown on 21 February 1990. AN formally closed the line on 25 February 1990. Robertstown station was demolished, and the line was removed not long after.

Present Day[edit]

Today, the collapsed goods crane and the former station sign are all that remain of Robertstown station.[2] The Goyder Interpretive Garden was built on a small portion of the former yard adjacent to Commercial Street, with a small piece of track preserved.[4] The community plans to restore the goods crane eventually.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ The Advertiser (10 December 1914). "ROBERTSTOWN RAILWAY. THE OPENING CEREMONY. A RED-LETTER DAY IN THE DISTRICT". Advertiser. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Robertstown Community Management Inc. "2 Tonne Scotch Derrick Crane in the Railway Yards at Robertstown" (PDF). Robertstown Info. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
  3. ^ Allen Tiller (18 February 2014). "Kapunda's Railways: Part 2 "The Line Opens"". The Haunts of Adelaide: History, Mystery and the Paranormal. Retrieved 21 June 2021.
  4. ^ Robertstown Community Management Inc. "Goyder Interpretive Gardens". Robertstown Info. Retrieved 21 June 2021.