Jump to content

Hadera–East railway station: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 32°26′46″N 34°57′00″E / 32.44611°N 34.95000°E / 32.44611; 34.95000
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
 
(25 intermediate revisions by 13 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Short description|Railway station in Israel}}
{{for|the currently open railway station in [[Hadera]]|Hadera West railway station}}
{{for|the currently open railway station in [[Hadera]]|Hadera West railway station}}


{{Infobox Station
{{Infobox Station
| name=Hadera–East
| name=Hadera East railway station<br /><br />תחנת הרכבת חדרה מזרח
| native_name=חדרה – מזרח
| type=
| native_name_lang=he
| style = Israel Railways
| symbol = railw
| symbol_location = il
| image=Hadera East railway station.JPG
| image=Hadera East railway station.JPG
| image_size=
| image_size=
| image_caption=Station grounds in 2017. Visible next to the tracks is the abandoned citrus packing warehouse.
| image_caption=Station grounds in 2017. The level crossing is located on the old alignment of [[Highway 65 (Israel)|Highway 65]]. The abandoned citrus packing warehouse visible next to the tracks was relocated 200&nbsp;m to the south and extensively restored in 2020.
| address= Tzahal Street, [[Hadera]]
| address= Tzahal Street, [[Hadera]]
| coordinates={{coord|32|26|46|N|34|57|00|E|type:railwaystation_region:IL|display=inline,title}}
| coordinates={{coord|32|26|46|N|34|57|00|E|type:railwaystation_region:IL|display=inline,title}}
Line 27: Line 32:
| rebuilt=
| rebuilt=
| electrified=
| electrified=
| ADA=
| accessible=
| code=
| code=
| owned=[[Israel Railways]]
| owned=[[Israel Railways]]
Line 36: Line 41:
}}
}}


'''Hadera East railway station''' is a former railway station in [[Hadera]], [[Israel]]. It originally served as the northern terminus of the [[Eastern Railway (Israel)|Eastern Railway]]. In 1968, the line was closed to passengers and the railway south of the station to [[Kfar Saba]] was abandoned. As of 2017, a short section of the Eastern Railway connecting the station north to the [[Coastal railway line, Israel|Coastal railway line]] is still in operation—being used by freight trains serving the large [[Granot Central Cooperative|Granot]] "Ambar North" feed mill complex near [[Gan Shmuel]] that is located adjacent to Hadera East station.
'''Hadera–East railway station''' is a former railway station in [[Hadera]], [[Israel]]. It originally served as the northern terminus of the [[Eastern Railway (Israel)|Eastern Railway]]. In 1968, the line was closed to passengers and the railway south of the station to [[Kfar Saba]] was abandoned. A short section of the Eastern Railway connecting the station north to the [[Coastal railway line, Israel|Coastal railway line]] was left in operation—being used by freight trains serving the [[Granot Central Cooperative|Granot]] "Ambar North" large feed mill complex near [[Gan Shmuel]] that is located adjacent to Hadera East station.

As of 2022, the station is undergoing extensive construction and restoration in anticipation of being reopened in the late 2020s as part of the re-building effort of the Eastern Railway.


== History ==
== History ==
During the [[Sinai and Palestine Campaign]] of [[World War I]], the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] authorities in [[Palestine (region)|Palestine]] constructed the railway between the [[Jezreel Valley railway]] in [[Afula]] southwards via [[Jenin]] and [[Tulkarm]] to [[Lod railway station|Lydda]], where it connected to the [[Jaffa–Jerusalem railway]] and the [[Railway to Beersheba]]. The northwards extension from Tulkarm to Hadera allowed transporting timber from the forests around Hadera that was used as fuel and for infrastructure. The line was built as [[narrow gauge]] (1050&nbsp;mm) like the rest of the Ottoman railways in the region, and was situated relatively inland to avoid the reach of naval guns from [[Royal Navy]] warships patrolling the [[Mediterranean Sea|Mediterranean]] coast. In the forests of Hadera, the Ottoman railway split into two branches, one ending about a mile south-west from Hadera, the other about 1½ miles north from [[Karkur]];<ref>[[:File:Falls_map_21det1.jpeg|Detail of Falls Map 21 / Official History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Volume 2 Part II Military Operations Egypt & Palestine from June 1917 to the end of the war]]</ref> neither of these branches served any settlement, although they provided a link with the military bases that developed around Hadera.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=sdYUAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA207&lpg=PA207 Ottoman Palestine, 1800-1914: Studies in Economic and Social History / p. 207]</ref>
During the [[Sinai and Palestine Campaign]] of [[World War I]], the [[Ottoman Empire|Ottoman]] authorities in [[Palestine (region)|Palestine]] constructed the railway between the [[Jezreel Valley railway]] in [[Afula]] southwards via [[Jenin]] and [[Tulkarm]] to [[Lod railway station|Lydda]], where it connected to the [[Jaffa–Jerusalem railway]] and the [[Railway to Beersheba]]. The northwards extension from Tulkarm to Hadera allowed transporting timber from the forests around Hadera that was used as fuel and for infrastructure. The line was built as [[narrow gauge]] (1050&nbsp;mm) like the rest of the Ottoman railways in the region, and was situated relatively inland to avoid the reach of naval guns from [[Royal Navy]] warships patrolling the [[Mediterranean Sea|Mediterranean]] coast. In the forests of Hadera, the Ottoman railway split into two branches, one ending about 1.6&nbsp;km south-west from Hadera, the other about 2.5&nbsp;km north from [[Karkur]];<ref>[[:File:Falls_map_21det1.jpeg|Detail of Falls Map 21 / Official History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Volume 2 Part II Military Operations Egypt & Palestine from June 1917 to the end of the war]]</ref> neither of these branches served any settlement, although they provided a link with the military bases that developed around Hadera.<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=sdYUAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA207&lpg=PA207 Ottoman Palestine, 1800-1914: Studies in Economic and Social History / p. 207]</ref>


[[File:Hadera Station1946.jpg|thumb|left|The station building in 1946]] [[File:Hadera East Train Station - Main Building 3 (Large).jpg|thumb|left|The remains of the British station building in 2015]] After the [[British Empire|British]] conquered the area, they converted the [[Eastern Railway (Israel)|Eastern Railway]] to [[standard gauge]] and extended it further northwards, connecting [[Haifa East railway station|Haifa]] with [[Lod railway station|Lydda]] for onward journey west to [[Jaffa railway station|Jaffa]], east to [[Jerusalem railway station|Jerusalem]], or south via [[Gaza City]] to [[El Kantara, Egypt]]. Prior to the construction of this new line, the only southbound connection from Haifa was the [[Jezreel Valley railway]] via [[Afula]]. Hadera East halt was constructed by [[Palestine Railways]] as part of this new line; it opened in 1920 at a location 1½ miles north-east from the town,<ref>{{cite|periodical=דואר היום|issue=00415|date=1921-11-14|title=דין וחשבון קטעי על ההתנפלות על חדרה|url=http://jpress.org.il/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin_TAU.asp?From=Archive&Skin=TAUHe&BaseHref=DHY/1921/11/14&EntityId=Ar00415&ViewMode=HTML}}</ref> and was served by buses from Hadera, [[Pardes Hanna-Karkur|Pardes Hanna and Karkur]]<ref>{{cite|periodical=[[Davar]]|issue=00610|date=1933-02-09|title=חדרה|url=http://jpress.org.il/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin_TAU.asp?From=Archive&Skin=TAUHe&BaseHref=DAV/1933/02/09&EntityId=Ar00610&ViewMode=HTML}}</ref>. Until the 1940s, the halt didn't include any facilities for waiting passengers, not even a canopy.<ref>{{cite|periodical=[[Davar]]|issue=00605|date=1937-03-17|title=תביעת ישובי השומרון|url=http://jpress.org.il/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin_TAU.asp?From=Archive&Skin=TAUHe&BaseHref=DAV/1937/03/17&EntityId=Ar00605&ViewMode=HTML}}</ref><ref>{{cite|periodical=[[Davar]]|issue=00304|date=1937-01-15|title=נדרשת רכבת בוקר מיוחדת לצפון|url=http://jpress.org.il/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin_TAU.asp?From=Archive&Skin=TAUHe&BaseHref=DAV/1937/01/15&EntityId=Ar00304&ViewMode=HTML}}</ref>
[[File:Hadera Station1946.jpg|thumb|left|The station building in 1946]] [[File:Hadera East Train Station - Main Building 3 (Large).jpg|thumb|left|The remains of the British station building in 2015 before undergoing restoration in 2020.]] After the [[British Empire|British]] conquered the area, they converted the [[Eastern Railway (Israel)|Eastern Railway]] to [[standard gauge]] and extended it further northwards, connecting [[Haifa East railway station|Haifa]] with [[Lod railway station|Lydda]] for onward journey west to [[Jaffa railway station|Jaffa]], east to [[Jerusalem–Khan railway station|Jerusalem]], or south via [[Gaza City]] to [[El Kantara, Egypt]]. Prior to the construction of this new line, the only southbound connection from Haifa was the [[Jezreel Valley railway]] via [[Afula]]. Hadera East halt was constructed by [[Palestine Railways]] as part of this new line; it opened in 1920 at a location 2.5&nbsp;km north-east from the town,<ref>{{citation|periodical=דואר היום|issue=415|date=1921-11-14|title=דין וחשבון קטעי על ההתנפלות על חדרה|url=http://jpress.org.il/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin_TAU.asp?From=Archive&Skin=TAUHe&BaseHref=DHY/1921/11/14&EntityId=Ar00415&ViewMode=HTML}}</ref> and was served by buses from Hadera, [[Pardes Hanna-Karkur|Pardes Hanna and Karkur]].<ref>{{citation|periodical=[[Davar]]|issue=610|date=1933-02-09|title=חדרה|url=http://jpress.org.il/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin_TAU.asp?From=Archive&Skin=TAUHe&BaseHref=DAV/1933/02/09&EntityId=Ar00610&ViewMode=HTML}}</ref> Until the 1940s, the halt didn't include any facilities for waiting passengers, not even a canopy.<ref>{{citation|periodical=[[Davar]]|issue=605|date=1937-03-17|title=תביעת ישובי השומרון|url=http://jpress.org.il/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin_TAU.asp?From=Archive&Skin=TAUHe&BaseHref=DAV/1937/03/17&EntityId=Ar00605&ViewMode=HTML}}</ref><ref>{{citation|periodical=[[Davar]]|issue=304|date=1937-01-15|title=נדרשת רכבת בוקר מיוחדת לצפון|url=http://jpress.org.il/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin_TAU.asp?From=Archive&Skin=TAUHe&BaseHref=DAV/1937/01/15&EntityId=Ar00304&ViewMode=HTML}}</ref>


The [[Tehran Children]] — a group of 1,230 Jewish refugees from [[Poland]], mostly children, who escaped in 1939 to the [[USSR]], then in 1942 to [[Iran]], then brought by the [[Jewish Agency for Israel]] by sea to [[Suez]], and from there on a train to the [[Yishuv]] — stopped at Hadera East station on 18 February 1943, and a festive greeting was arranged for the children.
The [[Tehran Children]] — a group of 1,230 Jewish refugees from [[Poland]], mostly children, who escaped in 1939 to the [[USSR]], then in 1942 to [[Iran]], then brought by the [[Jewish Agency for Israel]] by sea to [[Suez]], and from there on a train to the [[Yishuv]] — stopped at Hadera East station on 18 February 1943, and a festive greeting was arranged for the children.
Line 48: Line 55:


== Future plans ==
== Future plans ==
The government of Israel announced plans to revive the [[Eastern Railway (Israel)|Eastern Railway]] at a projected cost of NIS 8 billion (appx. US$ 2.2 billion),<ref name="yed0916">{{cite news|last1=Tischler|first1=Tzvika|title=עולים על המסילה|url=http://www.yediot.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-4854905,00.html|accessdate=16 September 2016|work=[[Yedioth Ahronoth]]|date=15 September 2016|language=Hebrew|trans-title=Eastern Railway On Track}}</ref> reinstating a service from [[Haifa]] via [[Hadera]] and [[Kfar Saba]] to [[Lod]] which would bypass the congested [[Coastal railway line, Israel|Coastal railway]] south of Pardes Hanna. Out of the projected amount, NIS 50 million would fund the creation of a new Hadera East station, which would likely be relocated in order to preserve the historic British buildings. A branch line, dubbed "[[Wadi Ara|Iron]] Railway", would connect the new Hadera East station with the new [[Afula railway station|Afula station]] on the reconstructed [[Jezreel Valley railway]]. However, construction of either the new Eastern Railway or the Iron Railway is not expected to start before 2020.
The government of Israel announced plans to revive the [[Eastern Railway (Israel)|Eastern Railway]] at a projected cost of NIS 10 billion (appx. US$ 2.7 billion in 2018 dollars),<ref name="yed0916">{{cite news|last1=Tischler|first1=Tzvika|title=עולים על המסילה|url=http://www.yediot.co.il/articles/0,7340,L-4854905,00.html|accessdate=16 September 2016|work=[[Yedioth Ahronoth]]|date=15 September 2016|language=Hebrew|trans-title=Eastern Railway On Track}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.globes.co.il/news/article.aspx?did=1001257655|title=הסתיים התכנון של מסילת הרכבת שתעבור לצד כביש 6 &#124; בלעדי|newspaper=Globes|date=23 October 2018|last1=גורודיסקי|first1=סוניה}}</ref> reinstating a service from [[Haifa]] via [[Hadera]] and [[Kfar Saba]] to [[Lod]] which would bypass the congested [[Coastal railway line, Israel|Coastal railway]] south of Pardes Hanna. Out of the projected amount, NIS 50 million would fund the creation of a new Hadera East station, which will be situated within the site in a location that allows for the preservation of the historic British buildings. As part of the project, extensive restoration of some of the station's historic buildings began in early 2020.


==References==
==References==
Line 56: Line 63:
[[Category:Railway stations in Haifa District]]
[[Category:Railway stations in Haifa District]]
[[Category:Hadera]]
[[Category:Hadera]]
[[Category:Railway stations in Israel opened in 1920]]

[[Category:Railway stations in Israel closed in 1968]]
{{Asia-railstation-stub}}
{{Israel-transport-stub}}
{{Israel-struct-stub}}

Latest revision as of 02:41, 29 December 2024

Hadera–East

חדרה – מזרח
Station grounds in 2017. The level crossing is located on the old alignment of Highway 65. The abandoned citrus packing warehouse visible next to the tracks was relocated 200 m to the south and extensively restored in 2020.
General information
LocationTzahal Street, Hadera
Coordinates32°26′46″N 34°57′00″E / 32.44611°N 34.95000°E / 32.44611; 34.95000
Owned byIsrael Railways
Line(s)Eastern Railway
Platforms1
Tracks2
History
Opened1920
Closed1968

Hadera–East railway station is a former railway station in Hadera, Israel. It originally served as the northern terminus of the Eastern Railway. In 1968, the line was closed to passengers and the railway south of the station to Kfar Saba was abandoned. A short section of the Eastern Railway connecting the station north to the Coastal railway line was left in operation—being used by freight trains serving the Granot "Ambar North" large feed mill complex near Gan Shmuel that is located adjacent to Hadera East station.

As of 2022, the station is undergoing extensive construction and restoration in anticipation of being reopened in the late 2020s as part of the re-building effort of the Eastern Railway.

History

[edit]

During the Sinai and Palestine Campaign of World War I, the Ottoman authorities in Palestine constructed the railway between the Jezreel Valley railway in Afula southwards via Jenin and Tulkarm to Lydda, where it connected to the Jaffa–Jerusalem railway and the Railway to Beersheba. The northwards extension from Tulkarm to Hadera allowed transporting timber from the forests around Hadera that was used as fuel and for infrastructure. The line was built as narrow gauge (1050 mm) like the rest of the Ottoman railways in the region, and was situated relatively inland to avoid the reach of naval guns from Royal Navy warships patrolling the Mediterranean coast. In the forests of Hadera, the Ottoman railway split into two branches, one ending about 1.6 km south-west from Hadera, the other about 2.5 km north from Karkur;[1] neither of these branches served any settlement, although they provided a link with the military bases that developed around Hadera.[2]

The station building in 1946
The remains of the British station building in 2015 before undergoing restoration in 2020.

After the British conquered the area, they converted the Eastern Railway to standard gauge and extended it further northwards, connecting Haifa with Lydda for onward journey west to Jaffa, east to Jerusalem, or south via Gaza City to El Kantara, Egypt. Prior to the construction of this new line, the only southbound connection from Haifa was the Jezreel Valley railway via Afula. Hadera East halt was constructed by Palestine Railways as part of this new line; it opened in 1920 at a location 2.5 km north-east from the town,[3] and was served by buses from Hadera, Pardes Hanna and Karkur.[4] Until the 1940s, the halt didn't include any facilities for waiting passengers, not even a canopy.[5][6]

The Tehran Children — a group of 1,230 Jewish refugees from Poland, mostly children, who escaped in 1939 to the USSR, then in 1942 to Iran, then brought by the Jewish Agency for Israel by sea to Suez, and from there on a train to the Yishuv — stopped at Hadera East station on 18 February 1943, and a festive greeting was arranged for the children.

The new Coastal railway line was constructed during the early 1950s, and shortened the rail journey between Haifa and Tel Aviv from 1 hour and 20 minutes to just over 1 hour. The new railway line diverged from the old one at the Remez railway junction near Pardes Hanna, about 2.5 km north of Hadera East, which meant that Hadera East could not be served by the new passenger service between Haifa and Tel Aviv. In order for the new passenger service to include Hadera, the new Hadera West railway station, built 5 km south of Remez junction and 5 km west of the old railway station, opened to passengers in 1957. Nevertheless, some passenger and freight service via Hadera East continued until 1968, when the passenger service between Haifa and Jerusalem ended, the station closed, the railway track south of it abandoned and was later mostly dismantled.

Future plans

[edit]

The government of Israel announced plans to revive the Eastern Railway at a projected cost of NIS 10 billion (appx. US$ 2.7 billion in 2018 dollars),[7][8] reinstating a service from Haifa via Hadera and Kfar Saba to Lod which would bypass the congested Coastal railway south of Pardes Hanna. Out of the projected amount, NIS 50 million would fund the creation of a new Hadera East station, which will be situated within the site in a location that allows for the preservation of the historic British buildings. As part of the project, extensive restoration of some of the station's historic buildings began in early 2020.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Detail of Falls Map 21 / Official History of the Great War Based on Official Documents by Direction of the Historical Section of the Committee of Imperial Defence Volume 2 Part II Military Operations Egypt & Palestine from June 1917 to the end of the war
  2. ^ Ottoman Palestine, 1800-1914: Studies in Economic and Social History / p. 207
  3. ^ "דין וחשבון קטעי על ההתנפלות על חדרה", דואר היום, no. 415, 1921-11-14
  4. ^ "חדרה", Davar, no. 610, 1933-02-09
  5. ^ "תביעת ישובי השומרון", Davar, no. 605, 1937-03-17
  6. ^ "נדרשת רכבת בוקר מיוחדת לצפון", Davar, no. 304, 1937-01-15
  7. ^ Tischler, Tzvika (15 September 2016). "עולים על המסילה" [Eastern Railway On Track]. Yedioth Ahronoth (in Hebrew). Retrieved 16 September 2016.
  8. ^ גורודיסקי, סוניה (23 October 2018). "הסתיים התכנון של מסילת הרכבת שתעבור לצד כביש 6 | בלעדי". Globes.