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Talk:Wallangarra railway station

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WikiProject iconAustralia: New South Wales / Queensland / Transport B‑class Low‑importance
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When did NSW commit to a standard gauge line from Tenterfield to Wallangarra?

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I find the sequence of events as presented in the Queensland Heritage Register (QHR) is somewhat confusing. It is pretty clear that the Qld Govt wanted the break-of-gauge at Wallangarra and pushed along with that intention in terms of land sales at Wallangarra and construction of facilities there regardless of what NSW thought. However, what is not clear to me is when the NSW Govt accepted that the break-of-gauge was in Wallangarra and not Tenterfield. If the QHR is to be believed, the NSW government was contracting to have the line from Tenterfield to Wallangarra built while they were still in dispute over the break-of-gauge location. This seems unrealistic. Surely they had to tell the contractors whether they wanted a standard gauge (if the break-of-gauge was at Wallangarra) or a narrow gauge (if the break-of-gauge was at Tenterfield) and hence could not have contracted until after that decision was finalised? Kerry (talk) 14:31, 11 May 2017 (UTC)[reply]

The Queensland Heritage Register is not correct in many instances. A review of primary sources indicates that the NSW government never held a consistent position other than that the break of guage was to be at the border. You need to go to each colony's Parliamentary Votes and Proceedings. My Bachelor of Arts Honours Thesis " 'A National Project', The Construction of the Queensland Railway from Stanthorpe to Wallangarra 1878 - 1887" contains the relevant source material. My thesis was awarded the Universities Most Outstanding History Honours Thesis for 2010. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 137.219.203.117 (talk) 01:37, 11 October 2018 (UTC)[reply]

I'm open to the QHR not being correct. I have found errors in other entries myself. But if you are going to change things, then you need to cite your sources as part of Wikipedia's policy on WP:VERIFY. Obviously with arbitrary contributors, I can't guess their knowledge of citing but your Honours degree suggests you will understand this. Can you point me at the online copy of your thesis please? Being relatively recent, it would probably be in your university's digital collection. A google search and a Trove search failed to find it. If it's not online, could you email me a copy at [email protected] please? Thanks Kerry (talk) 01:57, 11 October 2018 (UTC)[reply]