On 29 June 1885, Walkinshaw Cowan was invited to give a speech at the extension of the railway line to York. He said:
This is a day of great rejoicing for York, and for the Colony, but for none more than myself. I came to this district in 1848 – 37 years ago this year – as Guardian of Natives, having the police under me. The country was a wilderness of bush, with only a few mud houses in York, and only one or two children, of which Mr Henry Parker, Member for Perth, was one, and who has been such an honor to the district. I had to visit the district from the Williams River to Dundaragan (sic), including Gingin and Bindoon. The settlers’ houses were wretched mud buildings, and I had to sleep in the open air or in a shepherd’s hut. The roads were mere bush tracks, and the settlers, both masters and men, had to cart their produce from 60 to 100 miles, over them, in the dust and heat in summer, and through bogs and ruts in wet winter. A universal gloom seemed to pervade the district. I often said I never heard a ploughman here whistle to his ploughs at home, I only recollect hearing one man whistle, and that was an Irishman. The only road party at the time was a gang of native prisoners. They were clearing along the line marked out by Mr Gregory towards Mr Hoops; I was riding on before through the bush to see the work that had to be done, and when I came to the top of a hill I heard a lively tune being whistled. I pulled up, and presently a pair of kangaroo dogs rushed up, followed by a small man on an active little half-bred Timor pony. It is very pleasant witnessing the gradual clearing and opening up of a new country. I have seen the mud houses give way to good substantial edifices, and have seen York grow into the beautiful town that it is; but I never dreamt of seeing this crowning improvement to the Railway to York.[3]
The single fare from Perth to York was 5 shillings and the return fare was 7 shillings and sixpence.[4]
The initial result of all this railway construction was to throw open the Avon Valley and land to the east to commercial wheat farming on a large scale. The railway brought with it first construction workers, then railway employees and settlers to swell the population of York and the Avon Valley. Next came the gold-seekers. Between 1890 and 1894 they came from Albany and Fremantle to York by train, stocked up with provisions and set off by cart or on foot for the Goldfields, using the track and wells established by Charles Cooke Hunt during 1865/66.[5]
The Bruce Rock line opened east to Greenhills on 1 September 1898, being extended to Quairading on 24 April 1908 and Bruce Rock on 28 March 1913. It was cut back to Quairading in the 1990s and closed entirely in October 2013.[6][7][8]
When the Eastern Railway was extended to Southern Cross in 1894, it was done so via Northam rather than York even though it was the largest inland town in Western Australia at the time. In 1906, the station was extended. In 1977, it was classified by the National Trust.[9][10]
The Albany Progress utilised the station until the service ceased in December 1978.[9]
Railway Station Master’s Quarters
The Railway Station Master’s Quarters were designed by George Temple-Poole and would have been one his first buildings after he was appointed as Principal Architect in June 1885.[11]
The building is possibly the earliest example of Federation Arts and Crafts style in Australia,[12] emulating William Morris, for whom the ideal in house design was to copy the “ageless domestic architecture” of Bibury in Gloucestershire, a Cotswald hamlet.[13] Temple-Poole has designed the Railway Station Quarters like a Cotswald cottage:
small in scale, homely and domestic
using two locally made materials with contrasting colours and textures, stone and brick
high pitched roofs
irregular positioned windows
taller than usual chimneys
protruding eaves
twin gables
The building is now a private residence.
References
^Gunzburg, Adrian (1984). A History of WAGR Steam Locomotives. Perth: Australian Railway Historical Society. p. 14. ISBN0-9599690-3-9.
^Higham, Geoffrey (2007). Marble Bar to Mandurah: A history of passenger rail services in Western Australia. Bassendean: Rail Heritage WA. pp. 13, 14. ISBN978-0-9803922-0-3.
^Wroth, B and Wilson HH: Avon Valley Sketchbook, Rigby Limited, 1977 p.42.
^York WA Heritage Walk Trails, York Visitor Centre, Shire of York (undated) p.29.
^Tilley, Allan (1998). To Greenhills and Beyond. Greenwood: Rail Heritage Publications. pp. 4, 35, 50, 58. ISBN0-646-36007-8.
^Newland, Andrew; Quinlan, Howard (2000). Australian Railway Routes 1854 - 2000. Redfern: Australian Railway Historical Society. p. 67. ISBN0-909650-49-7.
^The fact that Temple-Poole was the architect was not verified by records but by his unmistakable style: Oldham R and J: George Temple-Poole, Architect of the Golden Years 1885-1897, University of Western Australia Press, 1980, p.173.
^Apperly R, Irving R, Reynolds PA: A Pictorial Guide to Identifying Australian Architecture, Styles and Terms from 1788 to the Present, Angus and Robertson, North Ryde, 1989, pp 140-145.
^Davey, P: Arts and Crafts Architecture: The Search for Earthly Paradise, The Architectural Press: London, 1980, p.24.
External links
York Station History of Western Australian Railways & Stations gallery