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Amiens Branch LinePrint Page
The plaque commemorates the Amiens railway branch line which went from Cottonvale to the Amiens soldier settlement area. It was opened in 1920 by Prince Edward, the Prince of Wales.
The Amiens railway line was a branch railway in the Granite Belt region of Queensland, Australia, branching from the Southern Line at Cottonvale between Warwick and Stanthorpe. The Amiens line was the highest in southern Queensland, with the railway reaching an elevation of 946 metres above sea level at Pozieres.
Construction of a 20-kilometre railway line west of Cottonvale to the village of Amiens was authorised in 1919 to assist returned soldiers who had been granted land in the region. The Amiens branch was designed to serve an agricultural area developed for the settlement of returned servicemen after the First World War. For this reason, all the stations along the line were named after battlegrounds on the Western Front - Fleurbaix, Pozieres, Bullecourt, Passchendaele, Bapaume and Messines. The line was not built to convey passengers but rather to transport fruit from the soldiers' orchards to markets in Brisbane and Sydney. Construction commenced in 1919 and the line was opened on 7 June 1920.
Edward, Prince of Wales travelled the length of the Amiens branch in a royal train to officially open the line on 26 July 1920. The line closed on 28 February 1974.
Location
Address: | 12 High Street, Stanthorpe Heritage Museum, Stanthorpe, 4380 |
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State: | Qld |
Area: | AUS |
GPS Coordinates: | Lat: -28.64551 Long: 151.947079 Note: GPS Coordinates are approximate. |
Details
Monument Type: | Plaque |
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Monument Theme: | Government |
Sub-Theme: | State |
Actual Event Start Date: | 07-June-1920 |
Dedication
Commemorating the Amiens Branch Line to the well known 1914 / 18 Soldier Settlement Area
Opened 1920 by H.R.H. Edward, Prince of Wales
Acquired from Qld Railways, dismantled, removed, painted & re-erected.