Roads Hexham is located at the junction of the
Pacific Highway to
Brisbane via the coastal route, the
New England Highway and is close to the northern end of the
Pacific Motorway. The Hunter Valley Dairy Co-operative took advantage of this key location to establish its first milkbar under the Co-operative's signature dairy brand
Oak to serve locals and longer distance travellers outside its Hexham manufacturing facility. Many years after the closure of the co-operative and the sale of the Oak milk brand Lion to
Parmalat, the Hexham manufacturing site now operated and owned by Brancourts is often referred to as the "old Oak site". Hexham is located just upstream of the
Hunter River delta and its various islands, and as such it was a relatively convenient place for crossing to the north bank of the river. A
punt was established in the 1800s, followed by a steam punt, which eventually carried motor traffic. As traffic levels grew after
World War I, Hexham became a bottleneck for road traffic. A decision was made in the late 1930s to construct a bridge, however construction was delayed by
World War II. Eventually the
first two-lane bridge was opened in December 1952. The first bridge is a steel
truss bridge with a central
lifting span, designed to allow shipping to travel upstream. By the 1970s, this bridge was becoming a bottleneck and the decision was made to increase capacity by building a second bridge for all northbound traffic. This concrete high-level fixed bridge was built just upstream of the original bridge (converted to carry southbound traffic only) and was opened in August 1987.
Railways Hexham has its own
railway station on the
Main Northern railway line, served by an hourly
NSW TrainLink service between
Newcastle,
Maitland and
Telarah for a majority of the day. It was the riverine terminus of the privately owned
Richmond Vale Railway line, an early coal hauling railway from
Minmi and
Stockrington which crossed the Main Northern railway line at right angles. Coal loading at the wharf ended in 1967 and the railway line to the adjoining workshops was closed in October 1973. The remaining section of the Richmond Vale Railway was closed in September 1987.
Shipping Hexham was once a riverport of some importance in the lower Hunter and was known as
Port Hunter, dual named Yohaaba. In the colonial days travellers from Newcastle to Maitland could travel to Hexham by boat and then disembark to travel by road to Maitland via Upper Hexham (
Tarro), Four Mile Creek and Green Hills, the road being more direct than the river which had many bends after
Raymond Terrace. Coal loading at Hexham began about 1850. One timber wharf was located on the south bank, downstream of the first Hexham bridge. This was originally used by
J & A Brown from the mid-1800s to load coal brought by train from Minimi across Hexham Swamp – Burraghihnbihng. As J & A Brown's operations expanded coal was loaded at this wharf from their other coal mines. Coal arrived via the
Richmond Vale Railway and a right-angle crossing (across the
Main North line) from 1856 until November 1967. Around 1890, this facility was loading cargoes of up to at a rate of per day. Coal for ships with larger cargos was sent from Hexham to other ports using the government rail line. There was a large rail yard called the Hexham Exchange Sidings to allow J & A Brown coal trains to be taken over the government line to Carrington. The Hexham Coal Washery, opened in 1953, remained operating after the coal loader closed. was constructed by J & A Brown Abermain Seaham Collieries Ltd at their Hexham Engineering Workshops in 1959 for
RW Miller. After the merger of RW Miller with Coal & Allied in the mid-1980s, it was used by Coal & Allied to load coal washed at the Hexham Coal Washery destined for
Sydney. This loader was closed in 1988 after the closure of the Hexham Coal Washery. and the loader was dismantled soon afterwards.. Another timber wharf had been built in 1829 by the Sparke family for the loading and unloading of goods travelling between Newcastle and Maitland. This wharf was located on the south bank about upstream from the current bridges across the Hunter River – Coquun. This was near the Wheatsheaf Hotel which was originally built in 1827 by Andrew Sparke and later operated by John Hannell, whose tomb is nearby. The loader was built in 1935 for the Hetton Bellbird Collieries and was sold to the Newcastle Wallsend Coal Company in 1956. It was supplied via the
South Maitland Railway up to the East Greta Exchange Sidings (near Maitland) and from there via the Main Northern railway line to the Hetton Bellbird Sidings at the loader. It had 10 'full' and 5 'empty' sidings. The coal was dumped at a dump station and was transferred via conveyor across the main line and highway to a ship-loader. Milk was also transported by small boats to the Hunter Valley Dairy Co-operative factory after it was opened at Hexham in 1927. == Industries ==