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From Heritage New Zealand, Spring 2008The Rail Thingby Heather RamsayNo matter who owns which bit of what, one part of our rail system has been central to the nation
At 10pm on 7 August 1908, a locomotive let forth an earsplitting whistle and belched steam into Wellingtons dark midwinter sky. To the cheers of passengers and onlookers, it hissed slowly away from the station, hauling a string of carriages out of the capital and, ultimately, into New Zealand history. The train was the Parliamentary Special, and, when it rumbled into Auckland
20 hours and 30 minutes later, it had become the first train to travel
the full length of the North Island Main Trunk Line. On board were parliamentarians and dignitaries on their way
Those on the parliamentary junket no doubt relished the chance to be
part of such a formative event, but there must have been moments when
they lamented their participation. Conditions in the carriages were basic.
Passengers slept upright in hard seats; there was little heating to mitigate
the frigid conditions; and several changes of locomotive were needed to
deal with the variance in tracks and terrain. However, by the time Premier
Sir Joseph Ward symbolically drove in the last spike, at Manganui-o-te-ao
near Horopito, on 6 November 1908, the Railways Department was ready to
carry long-haul passengers in a far more comfortable style. The notion of a railway line linking Wellington and Auckland
When he presented his ambitious scheme to the House of Representatives,
it was greeted with a mixture of astonishment, ridicule and cautious support;
nevertheless, the Public Works and Immigration Act was passed, paving
the way for accelerated construction of railways to begin. By the end of the decade, more than 1700 kilometres had been added to the paltry 74 kilometres of existing public railway track, but it could hardly be described as a network. The piecemeal lines were an indication of the non-unified state of the nation, which was essentially a series of provinces, each looking after its own interests. Most railway lines merely ran inland from points on the coast,
By the early 1880s, a network of sorts was taking shape in the After the bloodshed and land confiscations of the 1860s, Maori living in the King Country were wary of Government approaches to build a railway through its heart. But, in 1882, progressive Maniapoto chiefs Rewi Maniapoto and Wahanui Huatere softened their stance, paving the way for surveyors to find the most suitable rail route.
In June 1883, civil engineer and surveyor John Rochfort set out to explore the isolated country between Marton and Te Awamutu. Basic surveys of the land as far north as present-day Waiouru existed, and triangulation of the northern sector was just beginning. That was no help to Rochfort, who faced a formidable task. The terrain was physically challenging, with vast tracts of dense native forest, swamps, bluffs, deep gorges and valleys carved out by swift rivers, an inhospitable volcanic plateau and seemingly impassable gradients. With no existing points of reference, Rochfort could use only the highest peaks, which themselves had not been accurately plotted on any map, as markers. And, as well as making a general survey of the route, he was obliged to make detailed observations of the regions geology and topography, make judgments on whether the land was suitable for economic development, estimate the routes length accurately, note possible construction difficulties, and estimate costs.
There were also Maori who disagreed with the decision to open up the region. Several times during the 16-month exploration, Rochforts party was threatened, turned back or detained. Finally, the combined efforts of various politicians, respected Whanganui chief and police officer Te Keepa Te Rangihiwinui (Major Kemp) and chiefs Rewi Maniapoto and Wahanui Huatere peacefully allayed the remaining opposition, and Rochfort was able to complete his work. At the same time as Rochforts expedition, reconnaissance teams
were sent east and west to ascertain whether there were viable routes
through Hawkes Bay or Taranaki. Reports on all possibilities were
presented to a select committee, which recommended Rochforts central
route. The decision meant that conditions required to bring the North
Island Main Trunk Loan Act into action were fulfilled, and On 15 April 1885, hundreds of people travelled by train from In the same month, construction contracts were granted for Still, while governments, ministers and world events came and Foremost was the ingenious Raurimu Spiral, which was designed in 1898
by engineer Robert West Holmes to mitigate a sudden 218-metre drop in
elevation from the Central Plateau to Raurimu. The 11 kilometres of track took 10 years to complete and includes two tunnels, three horseshoe curves and a complete circle. An oft-repeated railway story tells of a goods train driver who applied his emergency brake when he spied red tail lights on the track ahead. However, it turned out that his engine had caught up with the tail end of his own long train and the lights were those of his guards van. Magnificent viaducts also form an integral part of the main trunk line,
and engineer Peter Seton Hay is credited with the design of the structures
at Makohine, Mangaweka, Hapuawhenua, Taonui, Manganui-a-te-ao and Makatote. While Holmes, Hay and other engineers deserve every accolade, tribute
should also be paid to the nameless navvies who toiled with little more
than pick, shovel, horse, bullock and dray to tame unstable pumice fields
and hard volcanic rock to bridge deep ravines and conquer steep hillsides.
Most workers, and often their families, lived in government-issue tents,
which had the luxury of wooden floors but little else in the way of home
comforts. Since work was long-term, many boarded up the tents with timber
milled from the expansive It was a hard life and, considering the conditions and time span, its surprising that there were no multiple fatalities during construction, although a small number of individuals lost their lives in accidents. The behaviour of the railway gangs was also generally commended, possibly
aided by the prohibition of alcohol in the King Country, which endured
until 1954. There were incidents of sly-grogging, illegal two-up schools,
and rowdiness but, as a rule, hard work took precedence over high times. As the railway progressed, so did settlement of the interior. For many towns, the railway was the reason for their existence, with schools, shops, boarding houses, ironworks, brickworks and machine shops established to service the rail industry. Soon, such settlements also began to service sawmilling and farming communities that followed the advance of the railway. Even before the line was officially opened, passengers could Three days after Ward drove in the ceremonial silver spike (which is now held at Te Papa), the line was officially open. But, while the Parliamentary Special made a through trip, the first public passengers still had to make one overnight stop. Northbound travellers stayed the night in Ohakune, and those heading south stayed in Taumarunui. Passengers also changed trains twice, connecting with the Rotorua express at Frankton, and the New Plymouth-Wellington mail train at Marton. Limitations such as a lack of beds in the towns and insufficient seating on connecting trains led to the introduction of through trains for the peak Christmas holiday period of 1908. These were a precursor to the inaugural Main Trunk express trains, the first of which left Auckland on 14 February 1909. By then, the Railways Department had installed the necessary instrumentation along the route, and its busy workshops rolled out shiny new locomotives and day, sleeper and dining cars for the new services. Thousands turned out to inspect the new trains and watch New Zealanders took to train travel with gusto, whether for recreational or business purposes. The ensuing decades on the line saw various new structures built, as well as changes to existing structures, deviations and realignments, with the most significant changes happening during electrification in the 1980s. The trains themselves were also subject to technological advances, with
diesel locomotives replacing steam in the In 1962, the connection between North and South Islands was streamlined
with the introduction of the Aramoana, the first road/rail ferry to operate
between Wellington and Picton. The importance of the line to our built heritage is evident in the number
of North Island Main Trunk line structures on the NZHPT Register, and
the trains themselves are also treasured, with many railway societies
helping preserve and Settlement also changed the physical landscape, with vast areas of native
forest cleared and farms established. More nebulous is the lines contribution to our social fabric, but
nostalgic tales of rail journeys contribute much to our Railway pies and fruitcakes became part of folklore, as did the unseemly
scramble to get to the much-maligned, but now The North Island Main Trunk Line wasnt just for long-haul passengers.
Locals could jump aboard a train heading north or Schools and sports teams used the same process, promoting a sense of
a wider community. Families travelled together for Sunday picnics, and
the Railways Department put on regular excursion trains for special events. Not everything ran smoothly. The climate and unstable terrain meant frequent
washouts, floods and slips, resulting in Christmas Eve 1953 marked a black day in New Zealand history. Unbeknown
to the driver of the northbound During its first 100 years, the line has been subject to political inspiration
and apathy, serious energy crises, whether coal or oil; varying forms
of public/private ownership, protection and deregulation, and recessions,
scandals and financial woes. On 6 August 2008, when a gleaming steam locomotive hauls a commemorative
Parliamentary Special out of Wellington, Heather Ramsay is a freelance writer based in
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