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Hāwera railway station
Railway station in Hāwera, New Zealand From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Hāwera railway station was the primary rail station in Hāwera, Taranaki, New Zealand. It opened in 1881 and was situated on the Marton-New Plymouth railway. [1]
Regular passenger services ran for 96 years until 1977 while freight services continued until services were centralised at Whareroa and Stratford.[2] Today the former railway yard is largely empty. However, the 1960s-era station building and 1970s-era goods shed both remain, leased to private businesses.
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History
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Construction of the Waitara-Patea railway[3] (as it was then known) began shortly after the completion of Taranaki's first railway line between New Plymouth and the port of Waitara. The new railway quickly worked its way south, opening to Inglewood in 1877 and Stratford in 1879.
The first train to reach Hāwera arrived on the 7th of July 1881, with the first to make the full journey from New Plymouth arriving on the 1st of August.[4] The railway was not yet finished, and the contractor responsible for the line claimed for damages caused by running trains when the line was not yet ballasted.[5]
The line was officially opened on the 20th October 1881, with the day being declared a local public holiday.[2][6] The first official train from New Plymouth had around 200 passengers. The weather was "all that could be wished for", but when the train arrived, "no attempt at any demonstration had been thought of here, and on the first train arriving, there was not even a cheer."[7]
The line south took another four years to open. Although the railway north of Wanganui had reached Manutahi, the roughly 10-mile gap was through rough country and required bridging the Tangahoe and Manawapou rivers. The line south of Hawera finally opened on 23th March 1885.
Facilities
The initial station building was a simple Vogel-era structure, built in 5 months by Mr Walton Pal (who also had the contract for the neighbouring Normanby station). Upon opening, the station consisted of the station building itself, goods shed, engine shed, water services and two station masters' houses. Requests for improvements came thick and fast, including for cattle yards and coal stores (1881), lengthening the engine shed, improving water services and fitting a crane on the goods shed (1884), moving & increasing the size of the goods shed, plus increased siding capacity (1885) and even to raise the height of the station building and platform (1889).[2]
There were also improvements to the passenger amenities. In 1889 and again in 1892, requests were made for a verandah over the platform to shelter passengers from the Taranaki rain, and in 1898, a further request was made to enclose the ends of the verandah for shelter from the wind.
Traffic through the station grew steadily. For example, in the year ended 31 March 1932, the station sold 2,006 first-class and 34,845 second-class tickets, 24,155 cattle, 88,688 sheep & pigs, 15,800 "superficial feet" of timber and 13,753 tons of "other goods".[8] Much of the livestock shipped from Hāwera would be bound for the freezing works in Patea and Waitara, while dairy products (such as cheese) was sent from local dairy factories to the coolstores in Patea and New Plymouth port.[9]
Other Features

Refreshment Rooms
In 1896, refreshment room designed for sit-down meals was opened in a separate building west of the main station building. Initially, running this was contracted out to a private enterprise. This changed on October 26, 1917 when the room was brought under the refreshment branch of the railways.[10] Around the same time, the rooms were adjusted to a counter service instead.
When the station was replaced in 1968, a new cafeteria was included in the design. These continued until services were cancelled in 1977.
Station Gardens
In 1932, handsome flower gardens were created on either side of Hāwera railway station, adjacent to Glover Road. They included flower beds, rockeries, pergolas and a turf walk.[11][12] The gardens were developed by the station master, Robert Allwright, in conjunction with the local beautifying society.[13] One report in 1935 described thee gardens as follows: "flanking the station on either side are two glorious flower gardens which at present are flaming riot of colour resplendent in their summer glory" and later "the bed of pansies and violas was wonderful and showed that even last summer's heat had not killed them all, as in so many places."[14] In 1937 there were again mentioned as "the exquisite Hawera Railway Station gardens, known to passengers from far and near".[15]
After the war, the Hāwera community again contributed to beautifying the station environs. In 1963, trees were donated by the Hawera Rotarians, which were planted "on the small reserve on Glover Road near the station".
Hawera Race Course platform
The Hawera Race Course platform was located 1 mile 30 chains north of Hāwera station. Opening in 1883, it was a simple platform on the left side of the track, adjacent to the Egmont Racing Club's horse track. Trains only stopped there when specially instructed, usually on race days. It closed in 1964.
Modernization
By the late 1950s, the station facilities needed upgrading. Goods traffic had required the enlargement of the goods shed, and steam traction was giving way to diesel. Traffic patterns were also shifting, which had an impact on Hāwera station.
The first change was the closing of the locomotive depot in the early 1960s. This coincided with Ōpunake branch trains changing to operating out of Stratford after the cancellation of passenger services on the line.
In 1968, a contract for the construction of a new station building was let to Madder & Bourne of Wanganui for the price of $84,000. The new station was designed by the New Zealand Railways Chief Architect Ivan M. Clarkson in the fashionable mid-century modern style, with large windows and brick veneer. The structure was 69m long and 10m wide. It included a waiting room at the Eastern end, a cafeteria in the Western end, and station offices in the middle. At the same time, the station's water tower was removed.[2]
In September 1974 another contract was let, with time for a replacement goods shed. The replacement shed (built by Boon Brothers of New Plymouth) was 37m long and 17m wide, and constructed with a steel frame and concrete block walls up to 2.5m above ground level, with aluminium sides above and roof. An office and amenity block was built alongside, at a price of $125,000. It opened in September 1975.
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Services
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The first rail services were mixed services, with one or more passenger carriages attached to the local goods trains. Initial timetables showed two mixed services a day to and from New Plymouth, with a stagecoach connection to the southern railhead (initially at Waverley, then Patea, then Manutahi). Once the line south was completed, mixed services ran the full distance of the line, connecting settlements right along the line.
In December 1886, the first "express" passenger service started with the introduction of the New Plymouth Express, initially on Tuesdays and Fridays only.[citation needed] Services quickly became daily, as the train formed part of the fastest route between Auckland and Wellington (by train and steamship).
Mixed services continued to serve stations bypassed by the express service. In 1914 for example, in addition to the Express, there were mixed services between Hāwera-New Plymouth and Hāwera-Wanganui, as well as the New Plymouth-Wanganui and New Plymouth-Palmerston North mixed trains that stopped at the station.[16]
On 12 July 1926 services from Hawera to Ōpunake were introduced, initially three times a week.[17] Also launched in 1926 was the Taranaki Flyer, a new passenger-only service between New Plymouth and Wanganui that replaced one of the mixed services on the line.[18] In April 1938 another new service was launched, when an evening Wellington-New Plymouth service was started using the newly introduced RM class Standard railcars.
By the 1940s, the railways had started introducing road services to replace slower mixed trains, including one running between Wanganui and New Plymouth, on a similar timetable to the express.[19] This was part of a deliberate move to replace mixed services with road services where possible.[20] This, plus increased road competition, led to reduced passenger services out of Hāwera.
The first to go was service to Ōpunake, which ended on 16 October 1955. Two weeks later (31 October 1955) the Express and Taranaki Flyer services were replaced with Standard (and occasionally 88 seater) railcars, running to a faster timetable. The flyer service was closed just over 3 years later, and by 1972 evening services were down to Fridays and Sundays only. On 18th December 1972 the daytime railcar service was replaced with the Blue Streak railcar service. The service took just 6½ hours, but the mechanical condition of the railcars meant that final passenger service ran on Friday, 30 July 1977.[21] From this point, all passenger traffic was carried on the competing Road Service coaches.[22]
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Decline & Today
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After the cancellation of passenger services, the station remained busy with freight. After transport deregulation in 1986, the railways faced increasing competition. Gradually, general freight traffic disappeared, and with the building of a dedicated yard at Whareroa for dairy traffic, the station closed for goods altogether.
Today, the goods yard is entirely gone, leaving just a single main line beside the station platform. The 1968 building remains alongside a single main track. Occasional excursion trains stop at the platform, while businesses occupy the former station's offices and cafeteria. The former goods shed also still stands (minus railway access) and is currently used as a distribution centre for a local business. The formerly landscaped land alongside Glover Road has also been cleared and new fencing erected, with some land sold and built on.
References
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