There are currently no operational railways in South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands. However, small industrial railways operated on the quayside of certain ports in South Georgia, to support the whaling industries in the early 20th century, and some of their remains are still present.[1] Most of these were cable railways hauled by fixed steam engines or sometimes manpowered. The railway at Ocean Harbour is the only one definitely known to have used locomotives, but there may have been others. The rusting remains of an 0-4-0 narrow gauge locomotive is still present at Ocean Harbour.[2]: 147 A light railway was also provided at the scientific station of Discovery House during its establishment in 1923–1925.[2]: 134–135
Railway use began to decline in South Georgia when tractor imports became common in the 1950s.[2]: 147 The switch from coal to oil as the fuel running the machinery and generators at the stations may also have been significant. Coal was the bulk of the material that needed transportation.[1] Oil, on the other hand, can be piped to its destination. The body of Ernest Shackleton was carried on the Grytviken light railway when it was taken there for burial in 1922.[1]
List of rail systems
editSouth Georgia
editLocation | Operator | Connections | Power | refs |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grytviken | Originally Compania Argentina de Pesca in 1904 but there were many changes of tenant until 1966 when the whaling station closed | Harbour – flensing yards – general settlement A separate line was built to support the building of a dam. |
Mix of manual operation and powered winches. Decauville light railway | [1] |
Godthul | Supply depot for a whaling ship | There is no rail transport in Godthul | [1] | |
Husvik | Tonsberg Whaling Co. | Harbour jetty – extensive rail connections around industrial area – residential areas – tradesmen areas (pig pens, butcher, carpenter) – foundry and boat slipways | Possibly locomotives. What may be an engine shed is located near the foundry. | [3]: 104 [1] |
King Edward Point (administrative centre and scientific station) |
Jetty – Magistrate's house – Discovery House – possibly also the radio station | [2]: 134–135 [1] | ||
Leith Harbour | Christian Salvesen | Manual | [3]: 93 (citing Fraser) [1] | |
Ocean Harbour | AS Ocean of Larvik | Steam locomotives, possibly made by Krauss Locomotive Works | [2]: 147 [1] | |
Prince Olaf Harbour | Southern Whaling and Sealing Company | Piers – whaling factory – tank farm - pig pens. Much of the rails were on elevated tracks. | Stationary steam winches | [1] |
Stromness | Sandefjord Whaling Co. | Pier – Factory buildings (this is a small installation, the company did most of its processing on board a factory ship) | Stromness acquired much of the equipment from the Ocean Harbour station when it closed in 1920. It is not known whether this included the locomotives. | [1] |
South Sandwich Islands
editA survey station in Southern Thule may transport equipment using the round cross-section rails as used for tracking shots in cinematography.[1] There are otherwise no light railways in the South Sandwich Islands. Southern Thule is a long way south at 59°25′S, but even if its track is counted as a proper light railway, it is not the most southerly ever built. That record is held by the Dumont d'Urville Station in Antarctica at 66°40'S where a narrow gauge track is used to unload material at the jetty.[1]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Coombs, Martin (2012-02-16). "Big whales, small engines!". Railways of the Far South.
- ^ a b c d e Robert Headland, The Island of South Georgia, Cambridge University Press, 1992 ISBN 0521424747.
- ^ a b Sally Poncet, Kim Crosbie, A Visitor's Guide to South Georgia, Princeton University Press, 2021 ISBN 0691234426.
Further reading
edit- Fraser, Gibbie, Shetland's Whalers Remembered, Lerwick: Gilbert A. Fraser, 2001 ISBN 0954156404.