Werris Creek
The Railway Station at Werris Creek has been a major rail junction in northern NSW for well over a century. Anyone who has ever travelled through NSW to Tamworth or Narrabri will know Werris Creek. It's where the combined train from Central separates to take travellers both north or north-west. Travellers and smokers will know it best as the breathing spot on a long journey where they can witness train shunting in action. Just forty minutes to Tamworth in the North and about twenty minutes from the agricultural centre Quirindi, Werris Creek is situated within the Parry Shire in New England, in the Heart of NSW Big Sky Country.
The decision to build a line from Werris Creek to Gunnedah was made by the New South Wales Parliament on the evening of the 26th April 1877. This decision marked the overturning of long standing policy not to build branch lines before the completion of the three mail lines; the Great Northern, Great Western and Great Southern lines. It signalled a boom in Australian branch lines and in the significant increase in the productivity and popularity of the railway. The line reached Gunnedah (the home of Dorothea McKeller) in September 1879.

At Werris Creek, the former Department of Railways (now StateRail) not only gave rise to the physical fabric of the town, but also provided its psychological framework and instilled a set of moral values that affected everyday life. Werris Creek has the distinction of being both the first and the last railway town in northern NSW and epitomises all aspects of the rail industry, including the sometimes dangerous aspects of railway work in the past. A number of former railway workers, killed through railway operations, are buried at Werris Creek. The railway institutions in Australia helped to form a working class culture and, as a one-industry town, Werris Creek has been identified as a centre where the railway working culture has flourished.
Past, present and future - a timeline
| 1877 | Work on branch line from Werris Creek commenced | ||
| Sept 1879 | Line reaches Gunnedah | ||
| Oct 1879 | Platform finished | ||
| 1884 | Railway Refreshment Room (RRR) tender awarded | ||
| Nov 1884 | RRR Opened | ||
| March 1885 | Adjacent platform built | ||
| Jan 1886 | 'Great Northern Railway Junction' operational | ||
| 1893 | Footbridge built | ||
| 1889 | Gas works operational | ||
| 1892 | Verandah on eastern side extended | ||
| 1896 | Timetable altered | ||
| 1897 | Moree branch line operational | ||
| 1899 | Manila branch line operational | ||
| 1902 | Inverell branch line operational | ||
| 1906 | Pokataroo branch line operational | ||
| 1908 | Walgett branch line operational | ||
| 1911 | Second story added to RRR | ||
| 1917 | Decision to make Werris Creek the Northern Headquarters of Mechanical Branch signals boom years | ||
| 1923 | Binnaway to Werris Creek line opened | ||
| 1923 | Second story added to Station building | ||
| 1939 | Additional sleeping quarters added | ||
| 1958 | Explosion in Single Street kills two people and breaks every window in the Station building | ||
| 1960 | Diesel takes over from steam | ||
| 1972 | RRR closed after 88 years of service | ||
| 2001 | NSW Minister for Transport Carl Scully announces a grant of $1.3 million towards the Australian Railway Monument (ARM) at Werris Creek | ||
| 2002 | Appointment of Project facilitators, commencement of Australian Railway Monument Project. | ||
| 2005 | Monument opens |




