Waimangaroa

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Waimangaroa viewed from the Denniston road
Waimangaroa viewed from the Denniston road

Waimangaroa is a small town located on the West Coast of New Zealand.

The township lies on the south-west bank of the Waimangaroa River, at the western foot of the Mt William Range. It is 17 kilometres to the north east of Westport. The Bridle Track, a scenic bush track leads south-east along the Denniston Incline into the foothills of the Mt William Range, to the abandoned coaltown of Denniston [1][2]. The Stockton mine, a large open cast coal mine, is operated in the vicinity by Solid Energy [3].

The Ngakawau Branch, a branch line railway, runs through the town. It opened to Waimangaroa on 5 August 1876; it formerly ran to Seddonville but now terminates in Ngakawau. From 1877 until 1967, Waimangaroa was also the junction for the Conns Creek Branch, which ran east alongside the Waimangaroa River to the foot of the Denniston Incline. Passenger services ceased on the Conns Creek Branch in 1931 and Ngakawau Branch on 14 October 1946. Since this time, the railway through Waimangaroa has almost solely conveyed coal.

Waimangaroa has its own primary school with a fluctuating roll of 40-50 pupils.[citation needed]

Coordinates: 41°43′S, 171°46′E