Outeniqua Railroad Pass is a mountain pass carrying railway traffic from George over the Outeniqua Mountains to Oudtshoorn. This part of the range is the only one from which this pass, the Outeniqua Pass, Montagu Pass, and Cradock Pass can be seen from one point. All four passes played a major role in connecting George with points further inland.
History
editConstruction started on the George side of the pass in 1908. Ten tons of explosives were used to break up the hard Table Mountain quartzite, seven tunnels were built into the rock, and a workforce of 2,500 worked on the project. The railway covered a 1:40 grade in some areas of the 34-km pass, completed in 1913. It shortened the route from Port Elizabeth to Cape Town by 267 km.[1]
The route
editThe pass mainly follows the course of the Montagu Pass and crosses both Cradock Peak (1,579 m) and George Peak (1,327 m), the highest points in the Outeniqua. The railroad crosses the Montagu Pass with a bridge.[2]
Locomotives
editGarratt-type locomotives [3] were particularly notable for there use here, including the following classes:
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Whitehead, Marion (August 2011). Passes & Poorts. Getaway. ISBN 978-1-77009-805-3.
- ^ Erasmus, B.P.J. (1995). Op Pad in Suid-Afrika. Jonathan Ball Publishers. ISBN 1-86842-026-4.
- ^ Bourne, David; Paxton, Leith (1985). Locomotives of the South African Railways. C. Struik. ISBN 0-86977-211-2.