Prior to the construction of various road projects connecting the outer western suburbs of Newcastle and crossing the Hunter River, including the Stockton Bridge, numerous ferry services, both privately run and publicly operated, shuttled across the Hunter River to link the locality of Stockton with the rest of Newcastle during the 19th and 20th centuries,[1] including a car ferry service from the former Market Street Wharf and Stockton.[2] This relatively vast network of wharves and services on the river included many wharves on the Newcastle foreshore, Bullock Island, the Stockton foreshore, and Port Waratah.[3]
The passenger ferry service that operated between Queens Wharf and Stockton, which runs in an area further downstream of the river from the bridge, is the only ferry service in Newcastle that still operates, surviving a wave of service decommissions prompted by the opening of the Stockton Bridge in 1971.[2] Having become unprofitable, it was discontinued in July 1982.[4] It was revived in February 1983 by the Government of New South Wales owned Newcastle Buses & Ferries.[5] Initially the Edith Walter and West Head, two ferries previously used by the former operator, were chartered to operate the service until two new vessels were delivered in 1986.[6][7]
In July 2017, it was included in the transfer of Newcastle Buses & Ferries' operations to Newcastle Transport.[8][9][10]
Services
Ferries operate every 15 minutes during peak periods and every 20-30 minutes outside peak periods. No services operate during a period varying from 50 to 60 minutes at noon depending on the day of the week. The journey time between the two wharves is five minutes.[11]
^EJE Heritage (November 2014). "Heritage and Conservation Register"(PDF). Port of Newcastle. p. 31. Archived from the original(PDF) on 1 July 2017. Retrieved 1 July 2017. ...as well as stairs for the various ferry-steamers travelling to Stockton, Bullock Island, Waratah and Raymond Terrace.
^ abAndrews, Graeme (April 2008). "Crossing the Hunter". Afloat Magazine. Afloat Publications. Archived from the original on 1 July 2017. Retrieved 1 July 2017.