Railway Construction Act 1884
Encyclopedia
The Victorian Government's Act No. 821, Railway Construction Act 1884, authorised the construction of 59 new railway lines. Created by the Minister for Railways, Thomas Bent
Thomas Bent
Sir Thomas Bent KCMG , Australian politician, was the 22nd Premier of Victoria. He was one of the most colourful and corrupt politicians in Victorian history....

, and passed on 12 December 1884, it became notorious for the excessive number of inner-city railways it created, and received the nickname "the Octopus Act". The depression of the 1890s soon rendered many of these lines unviable.

Implementation

The task of implementing the act fell to Richard Speight
Richard Speight
Richard Speight was an English-born railway commissioner in Victoria, Australia. After a career in railway management in England, he accepted the new post of railway commissioner of the Railways Department of Victoria, in 1883. He was tasked with implementing the Railway Construction Act 1884,...

, Railway Commissioner at the time, a role created by the Victorian Railways Commissioners Act of 1883.

Beneficiaries of the act included construction engineers such as Andrew O'Keefe
Andrew O'Keefe (engineer)
Andrew O'Keefe was a construction engineer in Gippsland, in southeastern Australia. He built several railways and a weir. The O'Keefe Rail Trail is named after him....

, and politicians such as Thomas Bent himself, who reaped the rewards of commissioning construction in their own electorates.

Construction of the lines was complete by April 1890.

By 1892, outrage at the excesses of this construction boom, including a number of "white elephants", led to the sacking of Speight, Richard Ford  and A J Agg, the other commissioners. Then, the Railways Act of 1892, attempted to reverse some of the damage.

Sources

  • http://www.parliament.vic.gov.au/onthisday/decade.cfm?d=1880
  • http://www.vicrailstations.com/Outer_Circle/Outer_Circle.html
  • http://www.vrhistory.com/VRMaps/
  • http://www.northernbullants.com.au/media/Archives/OurTown/1889TheRailway.html



External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
x
OK