Scheduled trains Scheduled passenger trains were discontinued in the 1940s, although limited space was available on scheduled freight trains until the mid-1970s.
Walmer Branch From 1906 to 1928 a passenger only branch line, from Valley junction near Port Elizabeth, to the suburb of Walmer, serviced up to 22 trains a day between Port Elizabeth and the terminus at 14th Avenue in Walmer. It was closed as a result from competition from a bus service.
Apple Express The line was best known for its tourist train, the
Apple Express, which commenced operations in 1965 to Loerie, later to Thornhill or Van Stadens River, the highest two-foot narrow-gauge railway bridge in the world. The motive power for the Apple Express was retained as steam, normally a
SAR NGG16 Class Garratt. The Apple Express ceased operations in 2011. Today, there is a new effort to restore a partial, limited, service in 2016 / 2017 from Port Elizabeth to Van Stadens Station – if not Thornhill - with two NG/G15 and one NG/G16 Garratt along with a fleet of passenger cars under restoration inside the former Humewood Road narrow Gauge diesel depot in Port Elizabeth. From 2011 onward a volunteer team undertook the restoration of the
NG15 NG119 steam locomotive, returning the locomotive to running order during 2017. Restoration of the
NG15 NG124 steam locomotive was started in 2016. After running a test Apple Express train on 24 December 2017, using the restored
NG15 NG119 locomotive, the Apple Express started running a summer holiday special service between King's Beach halt and a point near the
Chief Dawid Stuurman International Airport. ==Freight traffic==