Info Blue Mountains Railway Pages
Proposed Railway Routes
3 Sisters, Blue Mountains, Australia.
Many different routes have been proposed, and surveyed, over the years.

Blue Mountains Australia

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Symbols: ± Survey track built; > Railway built; >> Railway still in use.

The Original Railway

These are routes proposed for the first crossing of the Blue Mountains by rail. Martindale & Whitton assigned the young Edwin Barton, Assistant Engineer in charge of trial surveys, to explore & survey alternative routes. Experienced people were few & far between; Barton was only 25 years old & had been in the colony for a year.

Coxs River

Tunnel from Camden or Picton to Burragorang Valley, then up the Coxs River.

Burralow Creek & Bells Line, 1857

West from Kurrajong via Little Wheeney & Devils Hole Creeks, cross Burralow Creek west of Bowen Mountain, along Paterson Range to Bilpin, then more or less along Bells Line of Road. Barton abandoned this route after a 10 day reconnaissance in December 1857, later citing the extreme ruggedness of the Mt Tomah area, & the need for steep grades.

± Grose River, 1858-1860   

Up the Grose Valley, then tunnel under Darling Causeway to Hartley. Much time & money was spent building a track & surveying this route, Barton's favourite. Whilst admitting to the parliamentary committee, in August 1858, that the route was rugged, the only difficulty he could see was some of the river bends being too sharp, necessitating tunnels or viaducts.
More info...
 


A Better Route?

± Colo River, c1880  

An ambitious line from Emu Plains to Rylstone via the formidable Colo River Gorge was surveyed. The parliamentary committee described it as "mad", but it did have it's benefits. 
More info...  

Burralow Creek & Bells Line  #2 & 3, 1888 & 1898

Revived by Hawkesbury residents, to bypass the zig-zags & provide a generally better route, it included a tunnel under Mt Tomah. The proposal was never taken seriously by government. The route popped up again recently in a super-highway proposal which was to follow Burralow Creek up from the Grose & tunnel under Mt Tomah. Just remember that trucks carrying flammable goods can't use tunnels.

> Glenbrook Tunnel Deviation, Opened 1892

Work on the Lapstone Zig-Zag bypass commenced in 1891, opened in 1892. More info... 

Lithgow Valley Deviation #1, 1908

Proposal to reduce gradient below Zig Zag Signal Box.

Coxs River #2, c1908

Via Warragamba Slot, Coxs River valley, Scotts Main Range, then west along the Oberon - Colong stock route. It was intended to exploit the cedar forests of the Coxs valley, & a gold discovery near the Great Divide. The gold was a non-event, the cedar not economically viable. Instead, the existing line was duplicated.

>> "Ten Tunnels" Deviation, Opened 1910

Bypassed Lithgow Zig-Zag, remains in use today.

>> Glenbrook Gorge Deviation, Opened 1911 

Bypassed the problematical tunnel, still in use today. More info... 

Grose River #2, 1932

Up Grose & Govetts Gorges, tunnel under Blackheath from Junction Rock to the Kanimbla Valley, & on to Lithgow. Avoids the steep ascent of the upper Grose. 

Lithgow Valley Deviation #2, 1952

Spiral proposal to reduce gradient below Zig Zag Signal Box.

 


Who's Who... A guide to the people.

Parish Map Preservation Project View historic maps online. Includes property boundaries, rail & tram routes, etc. You need to know parish, it helps to know county as well.

 

 

 
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