Murray River road and railway bridge, Tocumwal

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Historic bridge at Tocumwal, New South Wales, Australia

Murray River road and railway bridge, Tocumwal

TocumwalRailBridge.JPG
Coordinates 35°48′48″S 145°33′24″E / 35.813344°S 145.556610°E / -35.813344; 145.556610Coordinates: 35°48′48″S 145°33′24″E / 35.813344°S 145.556610°E / -35.813344; 145.556610
Carries
Crosses Murray River
Locale Tocumwal, New South Wales, Australia
Begins Tocumwal, New South Wales
Ends north of Boomagong, Victoria
Other name(s) Tocumwal road and rail bridge over Murray River
Owner RailCorp
Preceded by Edward Hillson Bridge, Tocumwal
(Goulburn Valley Highway )
Followed by Barmah Bridge, Barmah
Design Truss lift span
Material Cast iron
No. of spans 3
Piers in water 2
Track gauge 4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Constructed by NSW Public Works Department
Opened 1895
Inaugurated Easter 1895 by James Young, NSW Secretary for Public Works and Sir Maurice O’Rorke
Official name Tocumwal road and rail bridge over Murray River
Type State heritage (built)
Designated 2 April 1999
Reference no. 1061
Type Railway Bridge / Viaduct
Category Transport – Rail
Builders NSW Public Works Department
Map

The Murray River road and railway bridge is a heritage-listed railway and former road bridge that carries the Tocumwal railway line across the Murray River at Tocumwal, New South Wales, Australia. It is also known as the Tocumwal Road and Rail Bridge over Murray River. The property is owned by the RailCorp.

History[edit]

The Truss lift span bridge over the Murray River opened in 1895, and was constructed by the NSW Public Works Department. It has three spans, the centre span having an opening lift-span for navigation. Initially provided for road traffic only, it was strengthened for rail traffic in 1908, and was used for both road and rail traffic until November 1987. The Edward Hillson Bridge opened on 9 November 1987,[1] located a short distance upstream, the concrete road bridge carries the Goulburn Valley Highway across the Murray, with the old bridge used for rail traffic only since 1987.[2][3]

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When opened, monthly lifting of the centre span was carried out for testing purposes. When the bridge was made a rail and road bridge, the span was always kept down unless enquired by river traffic. By 1930, river traffic declined, and so by 1944, the monthly lifting was altered to yearly. In 1951, it was proposed to keep the span closed, the last lift for river traffic being in 1933, and no maintenance lifting having been carried out for a decade. In September 1977, both state governments agreed to keep it fixed, and removed requirement for being able to lift it. Easter 1995 celebrations including operation of the lift span.[2]

Heritage listing[edit]

The river bridge was a combined road and rail structure. It is of very high significance because of its technological value and its importance in the history of transport in the State and inter-state rivalries.[4]

Tocumwal road and rail bridge over the Murray River was listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 2 April 1999.[4]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Attribution[edit]

CC BY icon-80x15.png This Wikipedia article was originally based on Tocumwal road and rail bridge over Murray River, entry number 01061 in the New South Wales State Heritage Register published by the State of New South Wales (Department of Planning and Environment) 2018 under CC-BY 4.0 licence, accessed on 2 June 2018.

External links[edit]

Media related to Tocumwal Rail Bridge at Wikimedia Commons

Next crossing upstream Murray River Next crossing downstream
Edward Hillson Bridge Murray River road and railway bridge, Tocumwal Barmah Bridge


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