Paeroa Railway Station
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Paeroa railway station is a former railway station in
Paeroa Paeroa is a town in the Hauraki District of the Waikato Region in the North Island of New Zealand. Located at the base of the Coromandel Peninsula, it is close to the junction of the Waihou River and Ohinemuri River, and is approximately 20 kilo ...
; on the
Thames Branch The Thames Branch railway line connected Thames, New Zealand, with Hamilton and was originally part of the East Coast Main Trunk railway. Part of the line between Morrinsville and Waitoa remains open and is in use as the Waitoa Branch line, ...
, and on the
East Coast Main Trunk Railway The East Coast Main Trunk (ECMT) is a railway line in the North Island of New Zealand, originally running between Hamilton and Taneatua via Tauranga, connecting the Waikato with the Bay of Plenty. The ECMT now runs between Hamilton and Kawerau ...
to
Waihi Waihi is a town in Hauraki District in the North Island of New Zealand, especially notable for its history as a gold mine town. The town is at the foot of the Coromandel Peninsula, close to the western end of the Bay of Plenty. The nearby res ...
. Between 1895 and 1991 Paeroa had a station at the north end of the town centre, followed by one further north, another back near the town centre and then another over a mile south of the town.


1895 station

The first station was opened on 20 December 1895 by the local MP and Railways Minister,
Alfred Cadman Sir Alfred Jerome Cadman (17 June 1847 – 23 March 1905) was a New Zealand politician of the Liberal Party. He was the Minister of Railways from 1895 to 1899 in the Liberal Government. Early life Cadman was born in Sydney, Australia, in 1847 ...
, when the line was extended from Te Aroha. It was at the north end of the main street, between Belmont Road and Railway Street. A coal shed and telephone office were added in 1896, when the special station also had a platform, cart approach, x goods shed, loading bank, cattle yards, engine turntable and shed, stationmaster's house, urinals and a
passing loop A passing loop (UK usage) or passing siding (North America) (also called a crossing loop, crossing place, refuge loop or, colloquially, a hole) is a place on a single line railway or tramway, often located at or near a station, where trains or ...
for 44 wagons. The station was improved in 1897, including access to a refreshment room, gas lighting in 1899 and a bookstall in 1910. A new turntable in 1900 allowed use of J Class engines. Ohinemuri County Council asked for the name to be changed from Ohinemuri to Paeroa, which was done on 1 March 1896. Paeroa remained a terminus until 19 December 1898, when the line was extended to Thames North. It also became busier from 17 August 1903, when the line to Waihi opened to goods and from 5 September, when passengers could travel to Waihi. In 1926, after the station closed, a 1908 band rotunda was moved to the railway reserve, where it remains.


Railway wharf

The wharves on the
Ohinemuri River The Ohinemuri River is located in the northern half of New Zealand's North Island, at the base of the Coromandel Peninsula. The river's source is north-east of the town of Waihi, close to the shore of the Bay of Plenty, but flows west rather ...
upstream of the railway bridge had restricted access once the bridge was built. A railway wharf opened just downstream of the bridge at the same time as the station, but charges were set at a level to encourage use of the railway, rather than the sea route from Auckland. Therefore the wharf had limited use, with trade moving to the Junction Wharf, further downstream, where a horse-drawn tramway ran from 1 September 1896 to March 1897, using rolling stock from the Grahamstown and Tararu Tramway. On 11 May 1896 the tramway applied for permission to cross the railway, but it seems not to have been given. Similarly, a Ohinemuri County Council request for control of the railway wharf was refused. By 1909 silt from mine
tailings In mining, tailings are the materials left over after the process of separating the valuable fraction from the uneconomic fraction (gangue) of an ore. Tailings are different to overburden, which is the waste rock or other material that overlie ...
had made the river hard to navigate and the wharf wasn't used after 1916, when the rail connection was lifted to avoid changes needed to accommodate a new flood protection stop bank along the river. In 1918 the Railway Wharf was finally closed.


1925 station

On Tuesday, 1 September 1925 the 1895 station was replaced by one to the north. In 1925/26 the Ohinemuri Bridge was replaced by one higher, as the flood stop bank was being raised, and the new station was clear of the bank needed to climb to the new bridge level. Most of the 1895 station was in too poor a condition to move, but part of the old platform front was used for a new dock platform. In 1928 improvements included electric lighting, moving the old verandah to the new station, a bicycle shed, a loading bank with a concrete front, new pits in the engine shed and a larger refreshment room, which was used until the station closed to passengers in 1959. Another reason for moving the station to an area where it had room to grow was the congested yard, which was causing delays. There were also private sidings for British Imperial Oil Co (1926) and Vacuum Oil Co (1945). The
turntable A phonograph, in its later forms also called a gramophone (as a trademark since 1887, as a generic name in the UK since 1910) or since the 1940s called a record player, or more recently a turntable, is a device for the mechanical and analogu ...
was too short for AB class engines and its foundation was sinking, so it was replaced by a reversing triangle, completed by 8 January 1940 at a cost of £2260. 17 railway houses remain on Aorangi Rd, Ainsley Rd and Porritt St. As well as the stationmaster's house, there was a house for a train examiner in 1910 and houses added in 1945 and 1956. The station closed to passengers on 20 July 1959, and to goods on 28 June 1991 with the closing of the Thames Branch. The station building was then moved to Waikino, for use as a combined western terminus for
Goldfields Railway The Goldfields Railway is a heritage railway that operates between Waihi and Waikino in the Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand's North Island. It operates over a section of track that was part of the East Coast Main Trunk Railway until the Ka ...
and as a shop/cafe for Waikino.


Paeroa–Pokeno Line

In 1938 a temporary office at Paeroa, costing £377 14s 3d, was added for the building of the Paeroa–Pokeno Line. A request for a link was made in 1905 and a route was surveyed in 1926. Proposals were also made to shorten the route by a further , by starting it at
Manurewa Manurewa is a major suburb in South Auckland, New Zealand. It was part of Manukau City before the creation of the Auckland super city in 2010. It is located south of the Manukau, Manukau City Centre, and southeast of Auckland CBD. The subur ...
and serving Hunua. Work started in 1938 on the line, which would have shortened the distance from Auckland to towns on the ECMT by ; Minister of Public Works,
Bob Semple Robert Semple (21 October 1873 – 31 January 1955) was a union leader and later Minister of Public Works for the first Labour Government of New Zealand. He is also known for creating the Bob Semple tank. Early life He was born in Sofala, New ...
, turned the first sod on 27 January 1938 at
Paeroa Paeroa is a town in the Hauraki District of the Waikato Region in the North Island of New Zealand. Located at the base of the Coromandel Peninsula, it is close to the junction of the Waihou River and Ohinemuri River, and is approximately 20 kilo ...
and about of the line had been started when work was abandoned in 1940. Work was still making slow progress in 1950, when a paragraph in the Ministry of Works annual report said 20 private crossings had been formed and metaled and of culverts installed. In 1954 it was noted the major cost would be a £3100, bridge across the Waihou, the abutments already being in place. Most of the work was still in place in the 1960s. The Pokeno link was to be the first part of the East Coast Main Trunk Railway. With the opening of the
Kaimai Tunnel The Kaimai Tunnel is a Rail transport in New Zealand, railway tunnel through the Kaimai Range in the North Island of New Zealand. Since it was opened in 1978, it has held the title of Tunnels in New Zealand#Railway Tunnels, longest tunnel, at , ...
in 1979, the Paeroa to
Katikati Katikati is a town in New Zealand (North Island) located on the Uretara Stream near a tidal inlet towards the northern end of Tauranga Harbour, 28 kilometres south of Waihi and 40 kilometres northwest of Tauranga. State Highway 2 passes through ...
section of the East Coast Main Trunk was closed.


1932 station

From 11 October 1932 Paeroa Township was on the site of the old station, as a stopping place for trains towards Waihi, to allow more convenient access to the town centre. After Mackaytown closed on 28 July 1940 its shelter shed was resited on 3 October to Township station. When the station closed in 1959, the shed was again moved, to Borrell Road, further along the line, near
Te Puna Te Puna is a rural community near Tauranga in the Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand's North Island. It is located on State Highway 2, north of Bethlehem and south of Katikati. The local Te Puna Quarry has been redeveloped by volunteers i ...
.


1959 station

Paeroa South, at the eastern end of the triangle on Rotokohu Road, opened on 20 July 1959 and was served by railcars until closure on 11 March 1979.


Hauraki Rail Trail

Both the Thames Branch and ECMT through Paeroa are now part of the
Hauraki Rail Trail The Hauraki Rail Trail is one of the Great Rides of the New Zealand Cycle Trail system, using parts of the abandoned ECMT and Thames Branch railways in the Hauraki Gulf plains and the Coromandel Peninsula. The trail officially starts from K ...
cycle route, though the railway bridge over the Ohinemuri River has been removed and the Trail uses a footbridge alongside the SH26 bridge.


See also

* Paeroa-Pokeno Line * Pokeno railway station *
Taneatua Express The ''Taneatua Express'' was an express passenger train operated by the New Zealand Railways Department that ran between Auckland and Taneatua in the Bay of Plenty, serving centres such as Tauranga and Te Puke. It commenced in 1929 and operated ...


References

{{reflist Defunct railway stations in New Zealand Rail transport in Waikato Buildings and structures in Waikato