Kingston, New Zealand

Kingston is a small town at the southernmost end of Lake Wakatipu, just north of the border of Otago and Southland, in New Zealand's South Island. It is 47 kilometres south of Queenstown by a road, "The Devil's Staircase", which winds between the lake to the west and The Remarkables mountains to the east. It is 70 kilometres north of Lumsden, and close to the headwaters of the Mataura River.

Kingston
Kingston, New Zealand

History

Kingston was originally named 'St Johns' after police commissioner St. John Branigan. [1]

Transport

The Kingston Flyer historic railway service is closely associated with the town. It operated over a 14 kilometre long preserved section of the former Kingston Branch, which provided a rail link from the city of Invercargill to Kingston for over a century, opening in 1878 and closing in 1979 after a section of track between Garston and Athol was washed out in a storm.

gollark: Also, are 2G coppers worth much? I want to get some more CB xenos.
gollark: Are 3Gs worth much?
gollark: I know it's due to rarity. But completely random chance is stupid for this incredibly valuable thingy.
gollark: AAAARGH TJ09 WHY
gollark: Dragons which can produce, conservatively, 1 every few months, worth an IOU of 40 hatchlings?!??!

References

  1. Miller, Frederick Walter Gascoyne (1949). Golden days of Lake County : the history of Lake County and the boroughs of Queenstown and Arrowtown. Christchurch, NZ: Whitcombe & Tombs. p. 62.

Media related to Kingston, New Zealand at Wikimedia Commons


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.