New South Wales
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New South Wales Road Photo Gallery:
Bruxner Highway (Tenterfield to Boggabilla)

The Bruxner Highway starts at the junction with the Pacific Hwy (NR1) at Uralba, near Ballina on the NSW North Coast and ends at the intersection with the Newell Highway (NH39) at Boggabilla. The road travels close to the QLD border. Major towns on or near the route include Lismore, Casino, Tenterfield, Texas & Yetman.

Only part of the route is National Route 44. The non-numbered section travels from Tenterfield to Boggabilla.

The Bruxner Highway is named after Michael Bruxner, member for Northern Tablelands and Tenterfield from 1920 to 1962, leader of the New South Wales Country Party for almost all that period and Deputy Premier and Minister for Transport from 1932 to 1941. Mr Bruxner grew up in the Tenterfield area.

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History:

1859, a route, running in approximation to current Bruxner Highway was established to connect the New England (Tenterfield) to the Clarence port of Grafton.

The Bruxner Highway west of Tenterfield developed as virtually a separate road from the Ballina-Tenterfield road to the east. However, like the latter, it did not evolve as a single, complete entity, but by a slow process of joining up lengths of different roads into the route of the highway as it is today.

Unlike the districts nearer the coast which required good roads for the transportation of the wool clip and attracted many settlers, the western areas remained backward by comparison. The great distances involved in taking wool or farming produce to market set somewhat of a limitation on the distance at which this was profitable. Although some sheep runs were established in the Ashford district and on the lower Macintyre, it became more economical to run cattle which were then driven overland to markets in Brisbane, Maitland and Sydney. The distances were not prohibitive as long as adequate feed and water could be obtained along the way.

The first road to the west of Tenterfield appears to be the one included on a map prepared by the Surveyor General's Office for the Post Office Department in 1858. It follows a gradual curving arc from Tenterfield to Ashford and thence to the south. It is likely that from a very early period this road was used to transport the wool clip from the Ashford district which, during the 1850s and 1860s, was the focal point for all the neighbouring stations from as far away as Texas.

Bonshaw, and quite likely Texas, had established tracks to Ashford by 1851, as indicated by a map of the Ashford district by Surveyor Galloway. Maidenhead and Mingoola Stations, which in the early days had established headquarters on the Queensland side of the Dumaresq, were quite likely to have been linked by a track which joined the Bonshaw-Ashford track.

It is not known exactly when the track from Tenterfield to Mingoola was formed or who formed it, although it is quite likely that since Tenterfield, Clifton and Mingoola Stations were all taken up by S.A. Donaldson and R.R. Mackenzie, they would have played a part in its early development. In 1878 the Government provided 750 pounds for expenditure on the road from "Tenterfield towards Bonshaw" giving the road a rather high Class 3 status (The leading thoroughfares for country districts. Initially the earth or gravel pavement without foundations was favoured. However, by 1878 the roads in this classification had been upgraded to the level of the macadam pavement.) and recording the length of the road as 50 miles. The considerable expense of the road can be attributed to the labour intensive process of breaking up granite blocks to the required size and the cartage of water that was necessary for the cementing action that takes place with the macadam pavement. Granite, while durable and resistant to weathering, was not widely used for this purpose as it is brittle and when crushed does not form shapes that are ideal for mechanical interlock.

The Tenterfield-Bonshaw Road carried a small amount of traffic and received little government assistance after completion. Funding for roads came from the government in Sydney up until 1906, with local contributions where possible, which was then distributed by the regional municipal body. It appears likely that the road was constructed to reinvigorate the area, with a view to the arrival of the railway at Tenterfield in 1886, by providing a durable transport route to shift produce to the railhead. However, it was many years before the road came to be used on a regular basis. A plan from 1897 gives a detailed recording of the road reserve and the immediate surrounds. The section of road still existing runs from just south of the bridge marked on the plan to the western boundary shown.

Texas and Bonshaw were on the main road to Ashford, the road consisting only of a track. This was one of the main stock routes from the Darling Downs but it is probable that a large amount of traffic went from New South Wales via Texas to Warwick and Brisbane.

The present route of the Bruxner Highway closely follows the formation as it existed in the 1880s although it has been reconstructed and realigned in many places to satisfy modern traffic requirements. The road reserve was bypassed when the highway was realigned in 1912. During the 1950s the highway was rerouted between Main Road No.382 south of Bonshaw and the Beardy River near Maidenhead (Harrison, 1967:59).

The Bruxner Hwy was proclaimed State Highway No.16 in 1938. It is the State's most northerly highway from the coast to the interior plains.

  • 20 September 1971: opening to traffic of 13 mile flood free deviation of the highway between Mingoola and Texas, west of Bonshaw, along with 2 mile connection from the highway to the Queensland Border town of Texas. The project cost over $1 million.
Length (Total):
435 km
Length (Tenterfield to Boggabilla) 236 km
Route Numbers: Not Classified
RTA Internal Classification: State Highway 16 (Formerly Trunk Road 64)
Information courtesy of the NSW Roads and Traffic Authority, Sydney Morning Herald and DMR's The Roadmakers

ID Sign
Northbound intersection directional sign on the New England Highway (NH15) as the Bruxner Highway stops sharing the NH15 route through Tenterfield, April 2007.

Image © Michael Gill

Distance Sign
Westbound RD sign at Tenterfield, near the New England Hwy junction, April 2007.

Image © Michael Gill

Typical non-descript signage along highway
These signs are typical of what faces side roads along the route. They are council "upgrades" of older DMR signage. This is on the Texas turn-off intersection.

Image © Paul Rands

Services Signage
Old 1970s services sign a few kilometres west of the Texas turn-off. The first sign of civilisation for 40 minutes heading eastbound from Yetman.

Image © Paul Rands

Black Signage
These signs were taken during January 2005 and are in both directions, around half an hour West of the Texas turn-off.

Image © Paul Rands

Rural Highway Kerb & Guttering
Kerb & guttering is a rare sight along a road that doesn't have much in the way of civilisation, but it's common on many crests of the Bruxner Highway.

Image © Paul Rands

Yellow Road Markings
About 30 minutes West of the Texas QLD turn-off, double and single yellow lines, a remnant of days past still control sections of the Bruxner Highway in fair condition.

Image © Paul Rands

Bruxner Highway at Yetman
Eastbound on the Bruxner Highway, east of Yetman. A very isolated road with a few properties dotted along the route. There is no towns between Yetman and Texas (QLD).

Image © Paul Rands

Bruxner Highway at Yetman
Eastbound on the Bruxner Highway, east of Yetman.

Image © Paul Rands

Bruxner Highway through Yetman (Westbound)
Westbound shot of the Bruxner Highway through the "town centre" at Yetman, January 2005.

Image © Paul Rands

Bruxner Highway through Yetman
This is the main "street: of Yetman heading eastbound on the Bruxner Highway.

Image © Paul Rands

Bruxner Highway through Yetman
This is the main "street: of Yetman heading eastbound on the Bruxner Highway.

Image © Paul Rands

Sign Goof
This photo from January 2005 is on the Bruxner Highway Westbound at Yetman and shows an incorrect sheild. It should be a blue State Route sheild but is instead a white National Route sheild.

Image © Paul Rands

Signage Goof
This photo from January 2005 is on the Bruxner Highway Westbound at Yetman at the SR95 intersection and shows an incorrect sheild. It should be a blue State Route sheild but it's instead a white National Route sheild.

Image © Paul Rands

Bruxner Highway & Fossickers Way Intersection at Yetman
This photo from January 2005 shows the Bruxner Highway Westbound at Yetman at the SR95 intersection.

Image © Paul Rands

Intersection Directional Sign
One very knocked about ID sign assembly on the corner of the Bruxner Highway and Boggabilla-North Star Road at Boggabilla. August 2006.

Image © Michael Gill

Advance Directional Sign
Eastbound AD sign approach Boggabilla-North Star Road at Boggabilla. August 2006.

Image © Michael Gill

Black Distance Sign
Nice old black RD sign near the western end of the Bruxner Hwy at Boggabilla. August 2006. This sign is just after the junction where the old and current alignments of Bruxner Hwy split for the trip between the towns of Yetman and Boggabilla.

Image © Michael Gill

Distance Sign
RD sign located eastbound on Bruxner Hwy approaching the intersection with its old alignment. August 2006.

Image © Michael Gill

For the continuation of the Bruxner Highway between Tenterfield and Ballina, click here.