There was an inauspicious start. Excessive rains during August and September 1872, held up surveying. Then it was found that the route originally proposed was "impracticable". Mr J.W Reeve, engineer and managing partner in Tasmania for the London contractors Clarke, Punchard & Reeve, arrived in Hobart in June 1872. Reeve and his engineering staff believed they could complete the railway, telegraph and all works by late 1874. In mid-1872, two 0-6-0T engines built by Fox and Walker of Bristol, arrived in Launceston on the
barque Westbury. They were used by the contractors as construction engines. On 3 January 1873, blasting had begun to create a cutting in the Hobart Domain. During the same month, the barques
Fugitive and
Araunah, operated by the T.B. Walker line, arrived in Launceston with a cargo of 610 tonnes of deep web rail. This type matched that of the L.W.R. These rails were stockpiled alongside the L.W.R. line ready for construction of a third rail between Launceston and Western Junction. Inadequate passenger services from England saw the T.M.L.R. charter a ship from John Patton & Co of Liverpool. The
Northfleet was a 955-ton ship and had been in service for twenty years. With 350 navvies on board, including some of their families, a total of 412 people, as well as 417 tonnes of railway equipment and rail, set sail from London. On 21 January 1873, the ship was anchored off of Dover, waiting for favourable winds. In clear conditions, a steam ship later identified as the
Murillo, rammed the
Northfleet and shattered the timbers of the hull. In the panic caused, the captain of the
Northfleet fired his handgun, and some of the men on board forced their way into lifeboats ahead of women and children. The
Murillo did not stop, and 300 perished as the
Northfleet sank. Despite this, the contractors office in London was besieged daily by men anxious to leave and work in Tasmania. By February 1873, 225 labourers had arrived in nine ships from England. Eventually 1,000 men would venture across to the island, not including local and interstate labourers. Local workers were paid 50c per hour, but many men from England deserted as the promise of 70c per hour did not materialise. Construction proceeded until the link was made with the broad gauge Launceston and Western Railway at Evandale in March 1876. Connecting broad gauge trains operated into Launceston until the third rail was completed on 1 November 1876, enabling the Main Line Company's trains to run through. This arrangement was not without its difficulties as the Government, who now owned the Launceston and Western railway line, wanted to charge tolls and other rates for the use of its facilities. To clear the impasse, the Main Line Company built its own sheds at Launceston and laid the extra rail at its expense. The question of tolls remained unresolved for years, as did interpretations of the Act in regard to the obligations for other payments. == Government purchase ==