Macquarie Heads breakwater railway

The Macquarie Heads Breakwater was a project of the Strahan Marine Board in Western Tasmania to sustain a reasonable depth to the Hells Gates and Macquarie Heads of the Macquarie Harbour area to allow for shipping of limited tonnage to serve Regatta Point while the Mount Lyell Mining and Railway Company was exporting its mineral products by sea. The heads were notoriously difficult to navigate in good weather, and even more difficult in bad weather.

The SS Kaiwatiri was wrecked at Macquarie Heads between 1907-1910,[1] and the shoal to the east of the main entrance channel is now known as the Kaiwatiri Shoal.

Breakwater

The breakwater lay on the west side of the entrance. In the 1905 cartographic map of the Heads (also designated 'West Coast Entrance to Macquarie Harbour'), evidence of a proposed or planned 'East Breakwater' is shown, with the existing named as the 'West Breakwater' [2] the name 'West Breakwater' still carried on in later surveys in 1930 and the 1964 map, but with no sign of the planned 'East Breakwater'.

The breakwater was regularly in need of maintenance [3] The maps for Macquarie Entrance as it was also known show the breakwater's position clearly [4][5]

Horse drawn tram

Between 1900 and 1946 there was a horse drawn wooden rail tramline that was utilised to provide access between locations on the Cape Sorell headland between the Cape Sorell Lighthouse and the jetty and wharf locations - as well as to move rock from quarries to the construction and maintenance of the Macquarie Heads breakwater.[6]

The named locations on the wooden rail system - were

Notes

  1. https://stors.tas.gov.au/PH30-1-2481
  2. Great Britain. Hydrographic Department (1905), Tasmania - West Coast Entrance to Macquarie Harbour (1905 ed.), Great Britain. Hydrographic Office, retrieved 13 May 2016
  3. "Macquarie Heads Breakwater Damaged.". Zeehan and Dundas Herald (Tas. : 1890 - 1922). Tas.: National Library of Australia. 24 June 1919. p. 1. Retrieved 29 June 2015.
  4. Great Britain. Hydrographic Department (1964), Tasmania - West Coast Entrance to Macquarie Harbour (1905, new eds. 1908, 1920, 1964 ed.), Great Britain. Hydrographic Office, retrieved 13 May 2016
  5. Great Britain. Hydrographic Department (1980), Tasmania - West Coast Entrance to Macquarie Harbour (1905, new eds. 1908, 1920, 1964, 1980 ed.), Great Britain. Hydrographic Office, retrieved 13 May 2016
  6. Searle, Garry. "Cape Sorell". Lighthouses of Tasmania. SeaSide Lights.

See also

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