The Dargaville Branch is a
branch line railway that leaves the
North Auckland Line not far south of
Whangarei and runs westward to
Dargaville. Construction of this relatively short line took approximately two decades, and when it was completed, it linked the now closed
Donnellys Crossing Section with the
national rail network. The branch has been closed to all traffic since 2014 and is currently used by a tourist railcart operation.
Construction

The Dargaville Branch was built relatively late in comparison to most railway lines in New Zealand. Construction from
Waiotira
Waiotira is a locality in Northland, New Zealand. Whangārei is to the northeast. Tauraroa is about 9 km northeast, and the Waiotira Stream flows southwest to join with the Omaru River.
Transport
Waiotira is on the North Auckland Line ...
on the North Auckland Line commenced in 1922. Dargaville, however, was not reached for another eighteen years. The first twenty-two kilometres through unstable country took six years to build, with the line not opened to
Kirikopuni until 15 May 1928. In January 1931, the line was open to
Tangowahine
Tangowahine is a community on the northern Kaipara Harbour in Northland, New Zealand. The Tangowahine Stream flows from the Tutamoe Range east and then south to join the Wairoa River at Tangowahine. State Highway 14 passes through Tangowahine ...
, sixteen kilometres from Dargaville, but construction ceased for five years due to the
Great Depression
The Great Depression (19291939) was an economic shock that impacted most countries across the world. It was a period of economic depression that became evident after a major fall in stock prices in the United States. The economic contagio ...
. In 1940, trains commenced running to Dargaville, but the old railway station (used by the Donnellys Crossing Section) was closed and a new station built at a different location, delaying the formal opening of the Dargaville Branch until 15 March 1943, over twenty years after construction began.
Initially, a railway from Kirikopuni north to
Kaikohe was proposed, but by 1928 when there was a line from Whangarei this proposal was discarded. However the line was initially constructed with a
balloon loop into the town of Kirikopuni, two kilometres north of the direct line to Dargaville, as a result of pressure from the local MP and Prime Minister
Gordon Coates. A bypass eliminated the loop in 1943.
Operation
From its opening until March 1967,
mixed trains carrying both passengers and freight ran to connect with passenger services on the North Auckland Line - the
Northland Express (
Auckland-
Opua
Opua is a locality in the Bay of Islands, in the sub-tropical Northland Region of New Zealand. It is notable as the first port for overseas yachts arriving in the country after crossing the Pacific Ocean. In the original 1870s plans for ...
and return) until November 1956, and then the
88 seater railcars (Auckland-
Okaihau and return). After March 1967, the line carried freight only.
In December 1998, a major derailment damaged a major section of the track and closed the line. For the first six months of 1999 the line remained closed while Tranz Rail reviewed the line, as one of the biggest customers (Northland Dairy Company's dairy factory in Dargaville) was also due to close in 2000. Tranz Rail reopened the line in June 1999 with logs being the primary business.
A daily return train was scheduled from Monday to Friday but it only ran when required. It takes roughly three hours both ways; the service to Dargaville arrived in the mid-morning and departed before lunch, arriving in Whangarei in the mid-afternoon.
October 2014 closure

In late October 2014 KiwiRail staff were told the line was closed until further notice. The loading contractor responsible for the loading of rail wagons, Forest Loaders, were also informed and all remaining wood stock will be removed by road. Earlier the line was shut for a number of months due to a washout, the line was repaired but the only activity after the repair was the removal of all stranded rail wagons.
In 2015, a tourist railcart service began using the branch line.
Motive power
Typical motive power on the Dargaville Branch from its opening until the mid-1960s were
steam locomotive
A steam locomotive is a locomotive that provides the force to move itself and other vehicles by means of the expansion of steam. It is fuelled by burning combustible material (usually coal, oil or, rarely, wood) to heat water in the locomot ...
s of the
AB and
J classes. When the line was dieselised,
DA class diesel-electrics took over and worked the line until 1988. In 2000 the sole remaining
DJ class
Daniel Woodis, better known by his stage name DJ Class, is an American DJ from Baltimore, Maryland. A veteran of the Baltimore club scene, he started his career in the early 1990s and gained attention with his Unruly Records releases, including ...
locomotive was allocated to Whangarei to work the line. The
DBR class and
DC class locomotives comprised the typical motive power from then until the closure of the line in 2014.
See also
*''
North Auckland Line''
*''
Donnellys Crossing Section/Branch''
*''
Marsden Point Branch''
*''
Ōkaihau Branch''
*''
Onerahi Branch''
*''
Opua Branch''
References
Citations
Bibliography
*
*
*
*
External links
Photos -
First train and Pukehuia station in 1927*
ttps://collection.motat.org.nz/objects/87372 Pukehuia station in 1973*
ttps://collection.motat.org.nz/objects/87370 Kirikopuni station in 1973br>
Tangowahine station in 1973
{{NZR Lines
Railway lines in New Zealand
Kaipara District
Railway lines opened in 1943
Rail transport in the Northland Region
Dargaville