Yanderra railway station
Yanderra railway station was a railway station on the Main Southern railway line, serving the village of Yanderra in the Southern Highlands, New South Wales. The station provided passenger services between 1924 and 1975, and was demolished after closure. Yanderra is known for the murder of three railway workers that occurred during an attempted railway robbery in 1941.
History
Yanderra station opened on 2 August 1924, on the to deviation, and was built as an infill station, with both adjacent stations opening with the deviation in 1919. The station consisted of two small concrete side platforms with basic facilities on both sides.The station closed to passenger services on 24 November 1975, and the platforms were subsequently demolished. No part of the station remains extant.
Incidents
On 8 July 1930, a man was killed and his body mutilated on the tracks close to Yanderra station. Authorities determined his cause of death to be from falling out of a train.On 9 March 1930, a car travelling over a nearby railway bridge crashed through the brick and onto the track, resulting in a woman inside the vehicle breaking her back.
On the night of 30 August 1932, 32 year-old Edna Burgess was struck and killed by the Melbourne Express on the south side of the station. The force of the accident mutilated the upper half of her body, whilst severing both her arms and decapitating her. A handbag with a blank cheque form was found near her, allowing for her identification by authorities.
On 24 February 1947, a truck crashed into the parapet of a nearby railway bridge, dislodging three tonnes of bricks onto the tracks and injuring the two young men inside.