# John Whitton

> Mediated Wiki article. Canonical URL: https://mediated.wiki/source/John_Whitton
> Markdown URL: https://mediated.wiki/source/John_Whitton.md
> Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Whitton
> Source revision: 1352141635
> License: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/)

{{Short description|Anglo–Australian railway engineer (1820–1898)}}
{{Use Australian English|date=March 2012}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2021}}
{{Infobox person
| name         = John Whitton
| image        = John Whitton State Library NSW CDV.jpg
| alt          = 
| caption      = John Whitton, 1867-1870, by Sydney & Melbourne Photographic Company
| birth_name   = 
| birth_date   = 1820
| birth_place  = near [Wakefield](/source/Wakefield), [Yorkshire](/source/Yorkshire), England
| death_date   = 20 February 1898<ref>{{Cite news |url=http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article108772810 |title=JOHN WHITTON. |newspaper=[The Evening News](/source/The_Evening_News_(Sydney)) |issue=9582 |location=New South Wales, Australia |date=21 February 1898 |page=4}}</ref>
| death_place  = [Mittagong](/source/Mittagong), [New South Wales](/source/New_South_Wales), Australia
| nationality  = 
| other_names  = 
| known_for    = Australian and English [railway engineering](/source/Railway_systems_engineering)
| occupation   = [Civil engineer](/source/Civil_engineer)
| spouse       = {{marriage|Elizabeth {{née|Fowler}}|1856}}
| burial_place = [St Thomas Rest Park](/source/St_Thomas_Rest_Park)
}}
'''John Whitton''' (1820 near [Wakefield](/source/Wakefield), [Yorkshire](/source/Yorkshire), [England](/source/England) – 20 February 1898) was an [Anglo](/source/English_people)–[Australian](/source/Australians) [railway](/source/Railway_systems_engineering) [engineer](/source/civil_engineer), who was the Engineer-in-Charge for the [New South Wales Government Railways](/source/New_South_Wales_Government_Railways), serving between 1856 and 1890, considered the Father of New South Wales Railways.<ref name=ISPuT>{{cite web 
|url=http://isput.com.au/lines/regional-rural/whitton-line 
|title=Whitton Line |work=Improve Sydney Public Transport |publisher=Improve Sydney and Regional Railways 
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140311184327/http://isput.com.au/lines/regional-rural/whitton-line
|archive-date=11 March 2014
|access-date=27 March 2012 }}</ref> Under his supervision, it is estimated that {{convert|2171|mi}} of railway around [New South Wales](/source/New_South_Wales) and [Victoria](/source/Victoria_(Australia)) were completed. Whitton was responsible for the construction of parts of the [Main Western railway line](/source/Main_Western_railway_line), in particular the section over the [Blue Mountains](/source/Blue_Mountains_(New_South_Wales)) and the [Lithgow Zig Zag](/source/Lithgow_Zig_Zag), and much of the [Main Southern railway line](/source/Main_Southern_railway_line).

==Biography==
[[File: John Whitton bust at Central Station.jpg|left|thumb|John Whitton bust at [Central station](/source/Central_railway_station%2C_Sydney)]]
Indentured in England, Whitton gained extensive railway engineering experience prior to his arrival in the Colony of New South Wales in 1856. He was an engineer for the [Manchester, Sheffield and Lincoln railway line](/source/Manchester%2C_Sheffield_and_Lincolnshire_Railway) (1847), and supervised the building of the [Oxford, Worcester and Wolverhampton line](/source/Oxford%2C_Worcester_and_Wolverhampton_Railway) from 1852 to 1856.<ref name=adb/>

Appointed in March 1856 as Engineer-in-Charge, Whitton arrived in [Sydney](/source/Sydney) and found the Colony with {{convert|23|mi}} of {{RailGauge|56.5 in}} [standard gauge](/source/standard_gauge) railway, four locomotives, 12 passenger carriages and 40 trucks. An advocate of the {{RailGauge|63in}} [broad gauge](/source/broad_gauge) adopted by the [South Australian](/source/South_Australian_Railways) and [Victorian Railways](/source/Victorian_Railways), Whitton set about extending the railway into the [city](/source/Sydney_central_business_district) and resisted pushes for {{convert|4000|mi}} of cheaper, light tramways, such as horse-drawn lines with wooden rails, proposed by [Governor](/source/Governor_of_New_South_Wales) [William Denison](/source/William_Denison). Whitton strongly opposed the government's uncritical acceptance of the lowest tenders for railway construction.<ref name=adb>{{cite Australian Dictionary of Biography |author=Singleton, C. C |title=Whitton, John (1820–1898) |id2=whitton-john-4844/text8087 |access-date=27 March 2012 }}</ref>

Whitton did, however, introduce cheaper so-called pioneer lines for use in easier terrain once the mountains had been crossed.  Money was saved by building for lower speeds and the lightest of [axleload](/source/axleload)s, with ash ballast, no fencing, etc.  These pioneer lines retained the same gauge as the main system.

Whitton was accused of fraud, along with his brother-in-law, [Sir John Fowler](/source/Sir_John_Fowler%2C_1st_Baronet), and the charges were proved groundless. Following a select committee on railway extension that recommended the construction of cheap narrow-gauge railways, necessitating a break of gauge within the Colony, as well as at the border; estimates were prepared but Whitton, determined to sabotage the committee's recommendation, suspended all surveys and new work. Whitton overcame the engineering problems and in 1876 completed the Blue Mountains line that included two [zigzags](/source/Zig_zag_(railway)). In 1880-85 the unprecedented growth in railways, {{convert|1000|mi}} of new track and nine million more passengers exposed existing inadequacies in administration of railways. A royal commission into railway bridges exonerated Whitton of the charges of faulty design and of using inferior materials. In 1888 [Henry Parkes](/source/Henry_Parkes)'s Government Railways Act reorganized the department and made Whitton's position easier.<ref name=adb/>

In 1886 and 1887 Whitton submitted drawings for a proposed suspension bridge across [Sydney Harbour](/source/Port_Jackson) from [Dawes Point Battery](/source/Dawes_Point_Battery) to [Milson's Point](/source/Milsons_Point%2C_New_South_Wales). On 1 May 1889 the [Hawkesbury River Railway Bridge](/source/Hawkesbury_River_Railway_Bridge) was opened; it was the final link in the railway system from [Brisbane](/source/Brisbane) through Sydney to [Melbourne](/source/Melbourne) and [Adelaide](/source/Adelaide) and Whitton had fought for adequate finance for it.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Lessons from History - The Contribution of John Whitton |author=Sharp, Stuart |journal=Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin |date=January 1999 |pages=19–27 }}</ref>

However, by the end of his long tenure as Engineer-in-Chief, the British wrought-iron [lattice truss bridge](/source/lattice_truss_bridge) designs that Whitton employed had been superseded by lighter [steel truss](/source/Truss_bridge) designs, following more modern American practice. The [first Hawkesbury Railway Bridge](/source/Hawkesbury_River_railway_bridge) was the first major rail bridge for which he had not specified the design. Whitton's successors would use steel truss designs for the other bridges built after he retired.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Gundagai Rail Bridge, Including Timber Viaduct Approaches {{!}} NSW Environment, Energy and Science|url=https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/heritageapp/ViewHeritageItemDetails.aspx?ID=1680073|access-date=2020-07-11|website=www.environment.nsw.gov.au}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|title=Yass Town rail bridge over Yass River {{!}} NSW Environment, Energy and Science|url=https://www.environment.nsw.gov.au/heritageapp/ViewHeritageItemDetails.aspx?ID=5012296|access-date=2020-07-11|website=www.environment.nsw.gov.au}}</ref>

He was a member of the Hunter River floods commission 1869–70, the Sydney, City and Suburban Sewage and Health Board 1875–77, and the Board for Opening Tenders for Public Works 1875–87; he was a New South Wales commissioner for the [Melbourne International Exhibition](/source/Melbourne_International_Exhibition_(1880)) in 1880. Granted a year's leave on 29 May 1889, Whitton retired on 31 May 1890 with a pension of £675 and visited England in 1892. He had supervised the laying of {{convert|2171|mi}} of the track on which no accident had occurred attributable to defective design or construction. Parkes regarded him as 'a man of such rigid and unswerving integrity, a man of such vast grasp, that however, his faults may occasionally project themselves into prominence, it would be difficult to replace him by a man of equal qualifications'.<ref name="adb" />

In international references, Whitton is recognised as one of approximately twenty of the greatest railway civil engineers in the first century of world railway construction.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.heritage.nsw.gov.au/07_subnav_04_2.cfm?itemid=5045513 |title=Great Zig Zag Railway and Reserves |work=NSW State Heritage Register |publisher=Government of New South Wales: Office of Environment and Heritage |date=30 September 1997 |access-date=19 April 2012 }}</ref>

Whitton was survived by his wife, one son and two daughters, he died of cardiac disease on 20 February 1898 at [Mittagong](/source/Mittagong), and was buried in the cemetery of [St Thomas' Anglican Church, North Sydney](/source/St_Thomas'_Anglican_Church%2C_North_Sydney). His estate was valued for probate at £10,396.<ref name=adb/>

==Significant completed works==
Whitton's works in both New South Wales and Victoria are extensive and include railway stations, railway bridges, viaducts, railway yards, and other infrastructure where he has designed projects and/or they have completed under supervision. 25 items of his work are listed on the [NSW Heritage Register](/source/NSW_State_Heritage_Register) as significant under the {{Cite Legislation AU|NSW|act|ha197786|Heritage Act, 1977}}. An additional 37 other works are listed as significant in various local government areas.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.heritage.nsw.gov.au/07_subnav_04_1.cfm |title=Statutory Listed Items |work=NSW Heritage Register |publisher=Government of New South Wales: Office of Heritage and Environment |access-date=27 March 2012 |format=Advanced search 'John Whitton' |archive-date=16 May 2009 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090516071521/http://www.heritage.nsw.gov.au/07_subnav_04_1.cfm |url-status=dead }}</ref>

===Listed on the New South Wales State Heritage Register===
{{col-begin}}
{{col-break}}

====Railway bridges, viaducts and other infrastructure====
{| class="wikitable"
 |-
 !width="320pt" |Bridge / viaduct / infrastructure name
 !width="220pt" |Use(s)
 !width="50pt" |Year completed
 ! Image
 |-
|[Albury-Wodonga Railway Bridge](/source/Albury-Wodonga_Railway_Bridge) over the [Murray River](/source/Murray_River) ||[Main Southern railway line](/source/Main_Southern_railway_line) ||align="center" |1884 ||
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
| [Bathurst rail bridge](/source/Macquarie_River_railway_bridge%2C_Bathurst) over the [Macquarie River](/source/Macquarie_River) || [Main Western railway line](/source/Main_Western_railway_line) ||align="center"|1876||align="center"|120px
|-
|[Bowenfels rail viaducts](/source/Bowenfels_rail_viaducts) ||Main Western railway line||align="center" |1870{{ref|a| a}} ||
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Bredbo River railway bridge](/source/Bredbo_River_railway_bridge) ||[Bombala railway line](/source/Bombala_railway_line) ||align="center" | 1889 ||
|- 
|[Civic Railway Workshops](/source/Honeysuckle_Point_Railway_Workshops), [Newcastle](/source/Newcastle%2C_New_South_Wales) ||[Main Northern railway line](/source/Main_Northern_railway_line) ||align="center" | 1886 ||
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Como railway bridge](/source/Old_Como_railway_bridge), [Oatley](/source/Oatley%2C_New_South_Wales) over the [Georges River](/source/Georges_River) ||Footbridge & sewer main carriage{{ref|b| b}} ||align="center" |1885 ||align="center"|120px
|- 
|[Cowra rail bridge](/source/Lachlan_River_railway_bridge) over the [Lachlan River](/source/Lachlan_River) ||[Blayney–Demondrille railway line](/source/Blayney%E2%80%93Demondrille_railway_line) ||align="center" |1887 ||align="center"|120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Dubbo rail bridge](/source/Macquarie_River_railway_bridge%2C_Dubbo) over the [Macquarie River](/source/Macquarie_River) ||Main Western railway line ||align="center" |1884 ||align="center" |120px
|- 
|[Dundee rail bridge](/source/Severn_River_railway_bridge%2C_Dundee) over the [Severn River](/source/Severn_River_(New_South_Wales)) || Main Northern railway line ||align="center" |1886 ||
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Lithgow Underbridge](/source/Lithgow_Underbridge)||Main Western railway line ||align="center" | 1869  ||align="center" |120px
|- 
|[Lithgow Zig Zag](/source/Lithgow_Zig_Zag) ||Main Western railway line ||align="center" | 1869  ||align="center" |120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Menangle rail viaduct](/source/Nepean_River_railway_bridge%2C_Menangle) over the [Nepean River](/source/Nepean_River) || Main Southern railway line ||align="center" | 1863  ||align="center" |120px
|- 
|[Michelago rail bridge](/source/Ingalara_Creek_railway_bridge%2C_Michelago) over the Ingalara Creek || Bombala railway line ||align="center" | 1889  ||align="center" |
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Narrandera rail bridge](/source/Murrumbidgee_River_railway_bridge%2C_Narrandera) over the [Murrumbidgee River](/source/Murrumbidgee_River) || [Hay railway line](/source/Hay_railway_line) ||align="center" | 1884  ||align="center" |
|- 
|[Picton railway viaduct](/source/Stonequarry_Creek_railway_viaduct%2C_Picton) over Stonequarry Creek || Main Southern railway line ||align="center" | 1867  ||align="center" |120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Sunnyside rail bridge over Tenterfield Creek](/source/Sunnyside_rail_bridge_over_Tenterfield_Creek) || Main Northern railway line ||align="center" | 1888  ||align="center" |
|- 
|[Tamworth rail bridge](/source/Peel_River_railway_bridge%2C_Tamworth) over the [Peel River](/source/Peel_River_(New_South_Wales)) || Main Northern railway line /<br/>[Barraba railway line](/source/Barraba_railway_line)||align="center" | 1882  ||align="center" | 
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Woolbrook rail bridge](/source/Woolbrook_rail_bridge_over_Macdonald_River) over the [Macdonald River](/source/Macdonald_River_(Bendemeer)) ||Main Northern railway line ||align="center" | 1882  ||align="center" | 
|- 
| [Yarraford rail bridge](/source/Yarraford_Rail_Bridge_over_Beardy_Waters) over [Beardy Waters](/source/Beardy_Waters), near [Glen Innes](/source/Glen_Innes%2C_New_South_Wales) ||Main Northern railway line ||align="center" | 1886  ||align="center" | 
|}
{{smalldiv|1=
:{{note|a|a}}A sandstone viaduct built for the original single track line over Farmers Creek. A second viaduct was completed in 1921 after Whitton retired.
:{{note|b|b}}Uses as a railway bridge on the [Illawarra railway line](/source/Illawarra_railway_line) until 1972.
}}
{{col-break}}

====Railway stations====
{| class="wikitable"
 |-
 !width="200pt" |Railway station
 !width="220pt" |Railway line(s)
 !width="50pt" |Year completed
 ! Image
 |-
|[Albury](/source/Albury_railway_station) ||[Main Southern railway line](/source/Main_Southern_railway_line) ||align="center" |1881 ||align="center" |120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Bathurst](/source/Bathurst_railway_station%2C_New_South_Wales) ||[Main Western railway line](/source/Main_Western_railway_line) ||align="center" |1876 ||align="center" |120px
|-
|[Eskbank](/source/Eskbank_railway_station%2C_New_South_Wales){{ref|a| a}} || Main Western railway line ||align="center"|1882 ||align="center" |120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Gundagi](/source/Gundagai_railway_station) ||[Tumut and Kunama railway lines](/source/Tumut_and_Kunama_railway_lines) ||align="center" |1886 ||align="center" |120px
|-
|[Jerilderie](/source/Jerilderie_railway_station) ||[Tocumwal railway line](/source/Tocumwal_railway_line%2C_New_South_Wales) ||align="center" |1885 ||align="center" |120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Mudgee](/source/Mudgee_railway_station)<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.visit.heritage.nsw.gov.au/16_subnav_09_2.cfm?item_id=&itemid=5012115&sort_by=&item_name=&suburb_name=&product_category=&state_theme=&product_region= |title=Mudgee Railway Station, yard and locomotive yard |publisher=Heritage Council of New South Wales |access-date=5 April 2012 |year=2008 }}</ref> || [Gwabegar railway line](/source/Gwabegar_railway_line) ||align="center" |1884 ||align="center" |120px
|-
|[Newcastle](/source/Newcastle_railway_station%2C_New_South_Wales) || [Newcastle railway line](/source/Newcastle_railway_line) ||align="center" |1880 ||align="center" |120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Petersham](/source/Petersham_railway_station){{ref|b| b}}  ||[Main Suburban railway line](/source/Main_Suburban_railway_line) ||align="center" |1885 ||align="center" |120px
|-
|[Redfern](/source/Redfern_railway_station) || Main Suburban railway line  ||align="center" |1884 ||align="center" |120px
|}
:{{small|{{note|a|a}}Now disused as a railway station.}}
:{{small|{{note|b|b}}The heritage listed [Victorian Italianate](/source/Italianate_architecture) station in Terminus Street, [Petersham](/source/Petersham%2C_New_South_Wales) on the north side of the railway line, no longer serves as the main railway station.}}
{{col-break}}
{{col-end}}

===Listed by local government areas ===
{{col-begin}}
{{col-break}}

====Railway bridges, viaducts and other infrastructure====
{| class="wikitable"
 |-
 !width="320pt" |Bridge / viaduct / infrastructure name
 !width="220pt" |Use(s)
 !width="50pt" |Year completed
 ! Image
|-
|[Erskineville](/source/Erskineville) (Macdonald St) Underbridge || [Illawarra railway line](/source/Illawarra_railway_line) ||align="center" |1884 ||
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|Erskineville (Victoria St) Underbridge ||Illawarra railway line ||align="center" |1884 ||
|-
|Gatekeeper's Cottage, [Medlow Bath](/source/Medlow_Bath) ||[Main Western railway line](/source/Main_Western_railway_line) ||align="center" |1867 ||align="center" |
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
| [Knapsack Viaduct](/source/Lapstone_Zig_Zag), [Lapstone](/source/Lapstone) ||Main Western railway line ||align="center" |1865 ||rowspan=2 align="center" |120px
|-
|[Lapstone Zig Zag](/source/Lapstone_Zig_Zag)<ref name=PCC>{{cite web|url=http://www.penrithcity.nsw.gov.au/index.asp?id=259 |title=Bridges around the Penrith Area |publisher=Penrith City Council |date=4 April 2006 |access-date=5 April 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120324235418/http://www.penrithcity.nsw.gov.au/index.asp?id=259 |archive-date=24 March 2012 }}</ref> ||Walking track and Skarratt Park{{ref|a| a}} ||align="center" |1867 
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Lithgow](/source/Lithgow%2C_New_South_Wales) (James St) Underbridge ||Main Western railway line ||align="center" |1869 ||align=center|120px
|-
|[Marrangaroo](/source/Marrangaroo) stone viaduct over the Middle River ||Main Western railway line ||align="center" |{{circa|1870}} ||
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|Munna underbridge over the [Cudgegong River](/source/Cudgegong_River), near [Gulgong](/source/Gulgong) ||[Gwabegar railway line](/source/Gwabegar_railway_line) ||align="center" |{{circa|1882}} ||
|-
|[Sandy Flat](/source/Sandy_Flat%2C_New_South_Wales) underbridge over the Bluff River || Main Northern railway (closed section)||align="center" |1886 ||
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Unanderra](/source/Unanderra) Station Master's residence ||Illawarra railway line ||align="center" |1887 ||
|-
|[Victoria Bridge](/source/Victoria_Bridge_(Penrith)) over the [Nepean River](/source/Nepean_River), [Penrith](/source/Penrith%2C_New_South_Wales)<ref name=PCC/> ||Road and pedestrian use{{ref|b| b}} ||align="center" | 1867 ||align=center|120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Wallerawang](/source/Wallerawang) underbridge over the [Coxs River](/source/Coxs_River) ||Main Western railway line ||align="center" |1870 ||
|-
|[Woy Woy railway tunnel](/source/Woy_Woy_Tunnel) || Main Northern railway line ||align="center" |1888 ||
|}
:<small>{{note|a|a}}Formerly the bottom road of the zig zag on the Main Western railway, the Glenbrook Tunnel Deviation led to the 1892 closure of the Lapstone Zig Zag.</small><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.heritage.nsw.gov.au/07_subnav_04_2.cfm?itemid=1170821 |title=G024 : Lapstone Zig Zag |work=State Heritage Register |publisher=Government of New South Wales: Office of Environment & Heritage |date=6 July 2009 |access-date=5 April 2012 }}</ref>
:<small>{{note|b|b}}The Victoria Bridge was converted from supporting the Main Western railway to road and pedestrian use in 1907.</small>
{{col-break}}

====Railway stations====
{| class="wikitable"
 |-
 !width="200pt" |Railway station
 !width="220pt" |Railway line(s)
 !width="50pt" |Year completed
 ! Image
 |-
|[Bungendore railway station](/source/Bungendore_railway_station) ||[Bombala railway line](/source/Bombala_railway_line) ||align="center" |1885 ||align="center" |120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Capertee](/source/Capertee) railway station ||[Gwabegar railway line](/source/Gwabegar_railway_line) ||align="center" |1882 ||align="center" |
|-
|[Coolamon](/source/Coolamon%2C_New_South_Wales) railway station ||[Hay railway line](/source/Hay_railway_line) ||align="center" |1881 ||align="center" |120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Cooma](/source/Cooma) railway station ||Bombala railway line ||align="center" |1889 ||align="center" |
|-
|[Dubbo railway station](/source/Dubbo_railway_station)<ref name=nswshr-4806342>{{cite NSW SHR|4806342|Dubbo Railway Precinct|access-date=22 June 2018}}</ref> ||[Main Western railway line](/source/Main_Western_railway_line) ||align="center" |1881 ||align="center" |120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Greta railway station](/source/Greta_railway_station) ||[Main Northern railway line](/source/Main_Northern_railway_line) ||align="center" |{{circa|1889}} ||align="center" |120px
|-
|[Gunning railway station](/source/Gunning_railway_station) ||[Main Southern railway line](/source/Main_Southern_railway_line) ||align="center" |1875 ||align="center" |120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Millthorpe railway station](/source/Millthorpe_railway_station) ||Main Western railway line ||align="center" |1886 ||align="center"|120px
|-
|[Mittagong railway station](/source/Mittagong_railway_station) ||Main Southern railway line ||align="center" |1870 ||120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Moss Vale railway station](/source/Moss_Vale_railway_station) ||Main Southern railway line ||align="center" |1867 ||120px
|-
|[Muswellbrook railway station](/source/Muswellbrook_railway_station) ||Main Northern railway line ||align="center" |1869 ||120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Narrandera railway station](/source/Narrandera_railway_station) ||Hay railway line ||align="center" |1891 ||
|-
|[Picton railway station](/source/Picton_railway_station) ||Main Southern railway line ||align="center" |1863 ||120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Scone railway station](/source/Scone_railway_station) ||Main Northern railway line ||align="center" |1871 ||120px
|-
|[Singleton railway station](/source/Singleton_railway_station%2C_New_South_Wales) ||Main Northern railway line ||align="center" |1863 ||120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Uralla railway station](/source/Uralla) ||Main Northern railway line ||align="center" |1883 ||120px
|-
|[Wagga Wagga railway station](/source/Wagga_Wagga_railway_station) ||Main Southern railway line ||align="center" |1879 ||120px
|- bgcolor="#BBBBBBB"
|[Werris Creek railway station](/source/Werris_Creek_railway_station)  ||Main Northern railway line ||align="center" |1880 ||120px
|}
{{col-break}}
{{col-end}}

== Legacy ==
The town of [Whitton](/source/Whitton%2C_New_South_Wales) in [Leeton Shire](/source/Leeton_Shire), where the [Hay extension](/source/Hay_railway_line) of the Great Southern Line reached in 1881, is named in honour. Whitton Park in [Glenbrook](/source/Glenbrook%2C_New_South_Wales) and the May 1980 built [John Whitton Bridge](/source/John_Whitton_Bridge) that carries the [Main Northern line](/source/Main_Northern_railway_line) over the [Parramatta River](/source/Parramatta_River) also bear his name. The bridge at Meadowbank stands next to an earlier iron lattice railway bridge that was constructed under his direction.<ref>"Walkway Plan for Meadowbank Bridge" ''[Railway Digest](/source/Railway_Digest)'' March 1997 page 9</ref> A memorial dedicated to Whitton is located on the [Lapstone Zig Zag](/source/Lapstone_Zig_Zag) walking trail and commemorates his substantial seven-span, sandstone [Lapstone](/source/Lapstone) [Knapsack Viaduct](/source/Knapsack_Viaduct). A plaque bearing his contribution to New South Wales Railways was unveiled on 17 July 1985 at [Central station](/source/Central_railway_station%2C_Sydney),<ref>"John Whitton" ''Railway Digest'' September 1985 page 267</ref> together with a bust on [Chalmers Street](/source/Chalmers_Street), adjacent to the station.<ref name=ISPuT/>

In 2009 a rail activist group proposed the establishment of the Whitton Line, running from [Port Macquarie](/source/Port_Macquarie) to [Albury](/source/Albury) via [Narrabri](/source/Narrabri), [Dubbo](/source/Dubbo), and [Griffith](/source/Griffith%2C_New_South_Wales).<ref name=ISPuT/>

==Gallery==
<gallery>
Image:John_Whitton_Memorial_Place.JPG|Memorial plaque at [Lapstone](/source/Lapstone)
Image:John_Whitton_reserve.JPG|Memorial cairn between [Emu Plains](/source/Emu_Plains) and [Lapstone](/source/Lapstone)
</gallery>

==See also==
{{stack|{{portal|Railways|Biography}}}}
*[Works of John Whitton](/source/%3ACategory%3AWorks_of_John_Whitton)

==References==
{{Reflist}}

==Further reading==
*{{cite web |author=Lee, Robert |url=http://www.zigzagrailway.com.au/history/whitton.html |title=John Whitton: Engineer-in-Chief to the New South Wales Government Railways; Some notes on his life and career |date=16 November 2008 |publisher=Zig Zag Railway |work=Short history |access-date=27 March 2012 }}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Whitton, John}}
Category:Australian railway civil engineers
Category:Australian people in rail transport
Category:English civil engineers
Category:English emigrants to colonial Australia
Category:People from Wakefield
Category:1820 births
Category:1898 deaths

---
Adapted from the Wikipedia article [John Whitton](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Whitton) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Whitton?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
