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・ Southern Railway 542
・ Southern Railway 630
・ Southern Railway 722
・ Southern Railway Co. v. United States
・ Southern Railway Company Overhead Bridge
・ Southern Railway Depot
・ Southern Railway Depot (Batesburg-Leesville, South Carolina)
・ Southern Railway Depot (Decatur, Alabama)
・ Southern Railway Depot (Ninety Six, South Carolina)
・ Southern Railway Depot (North Wilkesboro, North Carolina)
・ Southern Railway Depot (Piedmont, Alabama)
・ Southern Railway diesels
・ Southern Railway Freight Office (New Orleans, Louisiana)
・ Southern Railway Headquarters Hospital, Chennai
・ Southern Railway Headquarters, Chennai
Southern railway line
・ Southern Railway multiple unit numbering and classification
・ Southern Railway North Avenue Yards Historic District
・ Southern Railway of British Columbia
・ Southern Railway of Vancouver Island
・ Southern Railway Passenger Depot (Asheville, North Carolina)
・ Southern Railway Passenger Depot (Branchville, South Carolina)
・ Southern Railway Passenger Station (Burlington, North Carolina)
・ Southern Railway Passenger Station (Westminster, South Carolina)
・ Southern Railway Ps-4 class
・ Southern Railway routes west of Salisbury
・ Southern Railway Terminal (New Orleans)
・ Southern Railway zone
・ Southern Railway – Carolina Division
・ Southern Railway's Spencer Shops


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Southern railway line : ウィキペディア英語版
Southern railway line

The Southern railway line serves the Darling Downs region of Queensland, Australia. The 197 kilometre long line branches from the Western line at Toowoomba, 161 kilometres west of Brisbane, and proceeds south through Warwick and Stanthorpe to the New South Wales/Queensland state border at Wallangarra.〔(【引用サイトリンク】author=QR Limited (Network Access division) )〕
==History==

The first section of the Southern railway opened from the end of the Main Line railway at Toowoomba to Millhill, a northern suburb of Warwick, on 9 January 1871, the line terminating there to save the cost of a bridge over the Condamine River.〔Keer, J. 'Triumph of Narrow Gauge' Boolarong Publications 1990〕
In 1872, tin was discovered at Stanthorpe, but disagreement over the route to be taken through Warwick resulted in the approval to extend the line not being given until 1877. The difficult terrain south of Warwick required two tunnels, one through solid rock which took two years to excavate, and the line opened to Stanthorpe on 3 May 1881.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=QR Corporate - QR History - Building to the bush )〕 The Dalveen Tunnel was added to the Queensland Heritage Register on 28 July 2000.
The Southern line was completed to Wallangarra on 14 February 1887. The first passenger trains between Brisbane and Sydney ran on 16 January 1888, when the New South Wales Main Northern line opened.〔(【引用サイトリンク】author=QR Limited )〕 Trains operated via Gowrie Junction on the Western line until 1915 when the Drayton Deviation opened, shaving 30 minutes off journey times.
As all trains from Brisbane to Warwick and beyond had to travel via Toowoomba, a proposal to provide a direct line to Warwick, known as the Via Recta, was developed. That would have involved another crossing of the Main Range through Spicers Gap, involving a spiral loop with uncompensated 1 in 33 grades and radius curves, giving a ruling grade equivalent of 1 in 27. The Via Recta proposal would have involved very significant construction costs, and once it was agreed to extend the standard gauge line from Casino to South Brisbane, the need for the Via Recta disappeared.
In 1904, the South Western railway line was opened. It left the Southern railway just south of Warwick station to initially reach Thane and then Dirranbandi more than 400 km to the west.
Prior to the completion of the New South Wales North Coast line in 1930, the Southern line formed part of the main interstate rail link between Brisbane and Sydney via the New South Wales Main Northern line. The railway systems of the two states use different gauges, Queensland uses while New South Wales uses . This necessitated a break of gauge at Wallangarra with the station consisting of an island platform, with Queensland Railways using the west side and the New South Wales Government Railways the east. The state border traverses the station platform at its southern end.〔
A triangle was located to the north of the station to allow locomotives to be turned. The last train to operate on the New South Wales line ran in January 1988.〔"To the Border or Bust" ''Railway Digest'' March 1988 page 99〕 There were various proposals to transfer the New South Wales line to Armidale to Queensland Rail but nothing ever eventuated. 〔"Glen Innes - Wallangarra may go to QR" ''Railway Digest'' April 1990 page 130〕
Queensland Rail ceased freight services to Wallangarra in March 2007.〔"Level Crossing Safety: Warwick to Wallangarra" ''Railway Digest'' April 2013 pages 40-43〕 The Australian Railway Historical Society operated a twice yearly service to Wallangarra as the ''The Winelnder''. It last ran in February 2014 before the withdrawal of the Lander carriage stock.〔"End of an era" ''Railway Digest'' May 2014 pages 34-35〕
The entire length of the line is maintained by Queensland Rail.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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