Boston Road railway station
Boston Road | |
---|---|
Auckland Transport urban rail | |
General information | |
Location | Auckland |
Coordinates | 36°51′58″S 174°46′05″E / 36.866163°S 174.767954°E |
Owned by | KiwiRail |
Line(s) | Western Line |
Platforms | Side platforms |
Tracks | Mainline (2) |
Construction | |
Platform levels | 1 |
Parking | No |
Bicycle facilities | No |
History | |
Opened | 1964 |
Closed | 10 April 2010 |
Rebuilt | 1993 |
Electrified | Yes |
Boston Road railway station was a station on the Western Line of the Auckland rail network, near St Peter's College and Auckland Grammar School. It was beneath an overbridge of State Highway 1, one of the busiest motorways in New Zealand. At the southern end of the station is the north western wall of Mt Eden Prison. The station closed on 10 April 2010, the day after the opening of the new Grafton station, and has since been largely demolished.
Until double-tracking between the station and Mt Eden in 2005, eastbound morning trains ran on the westbound track through the loop, avoiding the need for the school pupils to cross the line.
History
[edit]The line played an important part in the history of St Peter's College. From the time the school opened in 1939 many students came from the western suburbs of Auckland using the train service (known at that time at St Peter's College as the "North train") to attend the school. Until 1964 the nearest station was Mt Eden station, a ten-minute walk to or from the school. By 1964 about 250 St Peter's boys[1] were using the train and walking between Mt Eden station and the school.
Brother T. A. Monagle, who supervised the train boys and who travelled on the train each day for that purpose, approached the Railways Department to request that the train stop at the school. The college had several reasons for asking that the trains should stop there. "The traffic in Mt Eden Road had become very heavy, and was a constant danger to the younger and more thoughtless of our pupils, and another source of considerable danger existed at Mt Eden station where supervision was necessary to prevent accidents when the boys were boarding the train. Again, the train would disgorge its pupils at Mt Eden and then chug merrily past the school almost empty, leaving the boys to walk half a mile, often in heavy rain."[2] Brother Monagle persuaded the Minister of Railways, Mr John McAlpine, to come and see for himself. In fact the Minister volunteered to walk up to the Mt Eden station from the school. "Well, somebody must have been pulling some strings up above, because on the day of the Minister's visit it rained cats and dogs, and even the odd pink elephant ..."[3] and Brother Monagle's request was granted.[3] The North train stopped at the St Peter's College station for the first time at 8.30am on Tuesday 15 September 1964 for the 250 St Peter's College boys and a dozen from Auckland Grammar.[1][4] Initially the station was just a metalled strip parallel to the tracks.[5]
Another noteworthy event occurred in November 1965, when, for the last time, the North train was pulled by a steam engine. It was the last passenger train in the North Island to be pulled by a steam locomotive.[3]
In relation to Brother Monagle, " ... it is generally agreed that he deserved the rank of Railway Employee. Surely no single person has ever held down so many positions at once - stationmaster, signalman, ticket inspector and guard, not to mention construction engineer, traffic officer and the occasional shot at engine-driving! During the many years that he was associated with the train, Brother Monagle became friends with most of the railway employees along the line as he made his trip each afternoon as far as Mt Albert".[3] Initially, only the "school" trains stopped at St Peter's College, once in the morning and once in the afternoon.[1] The St Peter's College station attained full public station status with all trains stopping there from 1993 and was named the Boston Road Station.[6]
Station move
[edit]ONTRACK reconstructed two road bridges just to the east of the station to allow double-tracking in the section towards Newmarket station and to prepare for electrification. As part of the project, boardings and alightings were shifted several hundred metres to the northeast, between Park Road and Khyber Pass Road, where a new station and bus interchange was built. This station was named Grafton station. It is able to better serve the Central Connector and sites such as the Auckland Hospital and the university development on the former Lion Brewery site while still preserving direct access to their school for the hundreds of St Peter's College students who commute daily by train.[7][8]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Their Own Station, Auckland Star, Tuesday 15 September 1964, p. 4,
- ^ Our Railway Station, St Peter's College Magazine 1964, St Peter's College, Page 39
- ^ a b c d The School Train, St Peter's Magazine 1968, pages 25 and 26.
- ^ "Travel through time - Grafton Station platform history", Maungwhau/Mount Eden Monthly Update, Link Alliance, 31 october 2022(Retrieved 10 November 2022)
- ^ Eyre, Tony (2023). The Book Collector: Reading and Living with Literature. Dunedin: Mary Egan Publishing. p. 33.
- ^ Sean Millar, Railway Stations of Auckland's Western Line: Boston Road to Waitakere before the 2004 upgrade programme, 2nd edition, Sean Millar, Huia, 2007, p. 4.
- ^ Newmarket's Western Line - Kingdon St to Boston Rd Archived 14 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine (from the 'ProjectDart.org.nz' website of ONTRACK. Accessed 2008-12-29.)
- ^ Newmarket Western Line Redevelopment (DART 2) Kingdon Street to Boston Road (September 2008 timeline flyer)[permanent dead link ] (from the 'ProjectDart.org.nz' website of ONTRACK. Accessed 2008-12-29.)
- Grafton, New Zealand
- Rail transport in Auckland
- Defunct railway stations in New Zealand
- Railway stations in New Zealand opened in 1964
- Railway stations in New Zealand closed in 2010
- St Peter's College, Auckland
- Railway stations in New Zealand opened in the 1960s
- Railway stations in New Zealand closed in the 21st century