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Sulphide Street railway station was the terminus of the Silverton Tramway in New South Wales, Australia. It served the city of Broken Hill.

History

Sulphide Street station opened on 2 January 1889 as the terminus of the Silverton Tramway from Cockburn. In 1905, a new station building was built.[1][2] From 1891 until 1929 Sulphide Street was also served by the Tarrawingee Tramway. The station closed on 9 January 1970 when the Silverton Tramway was replaced with the standard gauge line extended to South Australia via Broken Hill station.[3][4][5][6]

The station reopened in the late 1970s as a museum.[6] Among the exhibits are Silverton Rail locomotives Y1 and W24, South Australian Railways T181 and a Silver City Comet set. The station can be seen in the cult 1971 film Wake in Fright[5][7]

References

  1. ^ The Sulphide Street Station Barrier Miner 14 June 1905
  2. ^ The New Railway Station Barrier Miner 26 August 1905
  3. ^ Sulphide Street Station NSWrail.net
  4. ^ Broken Hill Railway Precinct NSW Environment & Heritage
  5. ^ a b McNicol, Steve (1981). Silverton Tramway Locomotives. Elizabeth Downs: Railmac Publications. p. 6. ISBN 0-959415-30-0.
  6. ^ a b Roberts, Lew (1995). Rails to Wealth. Melbourne: Lew Roberts. ISBN 0-646-26587-3.
  7. ^ Sulphide Street Railway & Historical Museum Discover Broken Hill

External links

Media related to Sulphide Street station at Wikimedia Commons

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