Page 15 - 1978 NAB Calendar Early Australian Maritime Life Part Two
P. 15

A RAILWAY PIER IN MELBOURNE


 JUNE   The pier reached its greatest length of 2,171 feet in 1861 and functioned

 This  engraving  of  Sandridge  Pier  in  Hobson’s  Bay,  Victoria,  illustrates   with remarkable efficiency until the 1880’s, considering that it had ’been
 Melbourne’s growth and prosperity in the 1880’s. However, it appears to   designed for ships of only 1.000 to 2.000 tons.
 be  based  on  similar  earlier  works  showing  the  pier  in  the  1860’s  and   By the 1870’s neither Sandridge nor Williamstown, the alternative port
 1870’s.  area, could handle Melbourne’s shipping. The Melbourne Harbour Trust

 During the boom period in these decades the pier would often have been   decided to develop modern facilities on the Yarra River rather than on the
 crowded with people and shipping; it was a popular meeting place as well   shores  of  Hobson’s  Bay,  and  Sand-  ridge’s  significance  as  a  port
 as a vital part of the colony’s transport system.  diminished.  However,  it  was  to  come  into  its  own  as  a  passenger
        terminal; Station Pier, which replaced the Railway Pier in 1922, was the
 The Railway Pier was constructed by the Melbourne and Hobson’s Bay   first experience of Australia for many immigrants in the period after World
 Railway Company in the early 1850's to alleviate shipping congestion in   War II.
 Hobson’s Bay. The railway line on the pier was connected to the main
 Melbourne to Sandridge line.  Nothing is known of the engraver.





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