This series of postcards and photographs record the McCallums Creek accident. On the 19th August, 1909, a bridge collapsed due to flooding. The train involved in the crash was the night service from Ballarat.
Myths surround Maryborough Railway Station, built as part of the vision of a rail-connected Victoria in the pre-motor era. Locals still hear that the station was a mistake, but its grandeur reflects the position Maryborough was to hold as a junction in Victorian rail routes.
The 1890-1 building is Queen Anne style red brick that displays hallmarks of the Anglo-Dutch style. The outside roof consists of different types of Dutch gables with faceted chimneys. Cement renderings decorate the building and echo the style of the wooden details of the windows and doors. Tuscan order columns support a wide but similarly profiled lintel and large bluestone steps form the entrance to the base.
The long platform is covered by a spectacular veranda. It has a hipped roof, part of which is glass. The veranda cast-iron columns also act as down pipes for storm water, which is stored in large underground tanks. The foyer’s tessellated floor was laid by Cawkwell's of Malvern, whose work can also be seen at Parliament House in Melbourne. The Station’s interior features carved ticket box windows and an elaborate English Oak or Australian Mountain Ash ceiling.
(Information courtesy Glenda James)
Further Information
This postcard, with the inscription "Mixed Evening Train from Ballarat" gives the salient points of the accident:
McCallum's Creek Bridge, Collapsed a/c floods, Aug. 19. 1909.
Driver J. Wright
Fireman J. McInery (McInerny)
Guard P. O'Connor