The relocation of Brisbane's cattle sales yard from Normanby to Newmarket created a need to provide a railway to Newmarket. With financial guarantees provided by the Windsor Shire Council and the Enoggera Divisional Board, the Queensland Railways built a branch line from Mayne railway station (Bowen Hills) to Newmarket railway station to service the cattle yards and beyond to Enoggera railway station for suburban passenger services. This line opened on 5 February 1899.[2] The suburban service to Enoggera was not very profitable and the Queensland Government resisted any efforts to extend the Brisbane tramway services to Enoggera to avoid further competition.[1]
The line was duplicated to Mitchelton in 1953, and the first automatic level crossingboom gates in Queensland were installed at Wilston Road, Newmarket in 1954.[5]
The line was closed beyond Ferny Grove after 30 June 1955 after the freight traffic was lost to road transport.[6] Ferny Grove was initially known as Ferny Flats, but the railway department changed the name of the railway station because of a Ferny Flats in New South Wales; the surrounding area followed suit.[7]
2008โ2012 upgrades
Between 2008 and 2012 the remaining single track section between Mitchelton and Ferny Grove was duplicated, including an upgraded Ferny Grove station, an additional 1000 car parking spaces and construction of a new bus interchange.
Typical service frequency on the Ferny Grove Line is four trains per hour (every 15 minutes) on weekdays and two trains per hour (every 30 minutes) at night and on weekends, increasing to 8 trains per hour (every 7.5 minutes) during weekday peak times for faster travel times for commuters working in the Brisbane central business district. Most services stop at all stations to Roma Street railway station. The typical travel time between Ferny Grove and Brisbane City is approximately 31 minutes (to Central).
Ferny Grove line services typically continue as Beenleigh line services.
^"RAILWAY DEVELOPMENT". Daily Standard. No. 1933. Queensland, Australia. 3 March 1919. p. 3 (SECOND EDITION). Archived from the original on 5 September 2020. Retrieved 29 August 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
^Kerr, John (1990). Triumph of narrow gauge : a history of Queensland Railways. Boolarong Publications. pp. 93, 224. ISBN978-0-86439-102-5.
^Kerr, J. 'Brunswick St, Bowen Hills & Beyond' ARHS 1988