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Mercer Railway Station

Mercer Railway Station
Mercer Railway station.jpg
Location Mercer
New Zealand
Coordinates 37°16′39″S 175°02′52″E / 37.27750°S 175.04778°E / -37.27750; 175.04778Coordinates: 37°16′39″S 175°02′52″E / 37.27750°S 175.04778°E / -37.27750; 175.04778
Owned by KiwiRail Network
Line(s) North Island Main Trunk
Tracks double track from 11 November 1951
History
Opened 20 May 1875
Closed 1986

Mercer railway station in Mercer, New Zealand, is 72 km from Auckland and 609 km from Wellington on the North Island Main Trunk line. It opened on 20 May 1875 and was closed to passengers about 1970 and to goods in the 1990s. It burnt down in 1879 and also in 1900. Until 1958 it was the first refreshment stop south of Auckland.

The line was extended to Mercer on 20 May 1875, though the pioneer British contractors, John Brogden & Sons, ran an excursion train the day before. The New Zealand Herald said, "This will be a busy station for some time to come, it being the terminus." It described the route as crossing Mangatawhiri swamp, then running beside the South Road, with a short branch line being constructed to connect with the Waikato Steam Navigation Company's boats. It said the station and other buildings were still being built. 'Some time to come' ended just over 2 years later, when the line was extended to Ngaruawahia on 13 August 1877. The refreshment room was built in 1876/77 for £245.

The service began with two trains per day each way between Auckland and Mercer taking 2hrs 50mins. The station was unfinished when the railway opened.

An 1880 advert for reopening of the refreshment rooms said trains waited 20 minutes.

In 1902 the newly rebuilt station was described as, "a long wood and iron building, which contains a large refreshment room and bar, ladies' room, public room, booking office, stationmaster's room, and post and telegraph department. There is also a large engine shed, besides a pump house and coalshed, and there are eight cottages in the immediate vicinity", with 9 staff - stationmaster, porter, cadet, 2 engine drivers, 2 firemen, and 2 greasers.

Until New Zealand Railways took over in 1917, the refreshment rooms were managed by the Mercer Railway Hotel, opposite the station. The hotel was rebuilt in 1898, with 15 bedrooms, 3 sitting rooms and a 50-seat dining room. The refreshment rooms gained importance when dining cars on main trunk expresses were removed as a wartime measure.

The refreshment rooms became the target of poet A.R.D Fairburn's witty tongue with this very famous quip.

"The thought occurs to those who are entrained: The squalid tea of Mercer is not strained."

An engine cleaner died in 1899 after trying to jump onto a moving engine.

A Wellington to Auckland "Limited" express derailed on 28 October 1940 killing the driver and fireman and injuring 12 passengers. An estimate put the speed at 75 mph (though some at the inquiry gave evidence of normal speed) on the 30 mph 8-chain radius curve, just south of the station, near the former 304m tunnel opened out in 1936. The engine, K900, tipped on its side and was overrun by six carriages. The curve has been greatly eased in the 2006 Mercer to Long Swamp Expressway 4-laning of 12 km of SH1, which included this 1 km of rail deviation.


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Wikipedia

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