Ohotu railway station
Ohotu railway station was a station on the North Island Main Trunk in New Zealand. When the station closed to all traffic, on 10 August 1959, it had a shelter shed and passenger platform. It was part of the Mangaweka to Taihape section, opened by the Prime Minister, Richard Seddon, on 21 November 1904. The station was across the Hautapu River from Torere village, which had been surveyed in 1896.
Only a single track remains through the station site and there is little sign that there was ever a station there.
The New Zealand Ministry for Culture and Heritage gives a translation of "place of fifteenth night of the moon" for Ōhotu.
Name
From 1908 Egmont Box Co had a sawmill at Ohutu, sometimes called Utiku, or Torere. When the track laying reached Ohotu in April 1904, it was described as Torere Junction. From 5 January 1915 Egmont Box Co's siding, was renamed Ohotu and it then became a booking station handling passengers and parcels. The name of the post office changed from Ohutu to Ohotu in 1925.
Timber
From 1908 until its closure in 1926, Egmont Box Co's mill cut roughly of kahikatea, mainly for butter boxes, in addition to some rimu. Its tramway was extended as the bush was cut, until it was cut out in 1921 and the mill closed. The centre span of the Howe Truss bridge, above the river, built of timbers up to thick, which had been built by Sykes the & Shaw in 1911, developed a crack which made it dangerous to run their Climax locomotive over it, so trucks were pulled over with a winch. When the bush was cut out the bridge was sold for scrap. During demolition in 1923 it collapsed, killing one man and injuring another.