The Tea and Sugar was the nickname for one of two dedicated Commonwealth Railways trains that were the sole source of provisions for the isolated settlements of the 1691-kilometre (1051-mile) Trans-Australian Railway between Port Augusta and Kalgoorlie.
Overview | |
---|---|
Status | Ceased |
First service | 1917 |
Last service | 30 August 1996 |
Former operator(s) | Australian National |
Route | |
Termini | Port Augusta Kalgoorlie |
Distance travelled | 1,692 kilometres |
Train number(s) | 4205/4280 |
Line(s) used | Trans-Australian Railway |
History
editThe Tea and Sugar began in 1915 as a provision train for workers constructing the Trans-Australian Railway. They and their families depended on the train for every necessity since the rail link was the only form of transport into the region. When the railway was completed in 1917, settlements had been established along the route at which many railway operational, locomotive maintenance and track repair employees lived with their families, and there was a need to transport food, water and goods to them. This was achieved by two single-purpose weekly trains, the eastbound counterpart being known as "The Bomber".[1] Sheep were brought on the train, which had its own butcher. There was a car that allowed railway families to view the latest films (or at least, at the smaller stations, part of them) while the train was in the siding, and a welfare car staffed by a nurse.[2]: 152, 212 [3]
Each time the train crossed the Nullarbor Plain, it included carriages to suit the different needs of residents throughout the year. On some trains there was a bank car, which allowed residents to make financial transactions, and a post office car; and in December there was a Christmas car, with a much-anticipated Santa who brought presents.
Former railways commissioner Dr Ron Fitch, who was the engineer for the Trans-Australian Railway early in his career, observed that the Tea and Sugar was the "most over-glamorised train in Australia ... whose real claim to fame was that its start-to-stop average speed must have made it the slowest train in the world".[3]
The train originally operated on a 1692 kilometres (1051 miles) journey from Port Augusta to Kalgoorlie. A 1985 timetable showed the westbound service leaving Port Augusta at 12:00 on Wednesday and arriving at Kalgoorlie at 14:15 on Saturday, with the eastbound service departing at 15:00 on Wednesday arriving at 18:55 on Friday.[4] The schedule was later cut back to an 822 km (511 mi) journey from Port Augusta to Cook.
The Tea and Sugar was withdrawn in August 1996. Some carriages have been preserved at the National Railway Museum, Port Adelaide.[5][6][7][8]
References
edit- ^ "Tea & Sugar Bites the Dust" Railway Digest October 1996 page 21
- ^ Fitch, Ronald J. (1993). Railroading at its wildest. Dural, New South Wales: Kangaroo Press Pty Ltd. ISBN 0864174969.
- ^ a b Fitch, Ronald J. (2006). Australian Railwayman: from cadet engineer to railways commissioner. Dural, New South Wales: Rosenberg Publishing Pty Ltd. p. 212. ISBN 1877058483.
- ^ "South Australia" Railway Digest December 1985 page 376
- ^ Tea & Sugar Train ABC News 28 June 2009
- ^ Tea & Sugar Butcher's Van FA640 Archived 22 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine National Railway Museum
- ^ Tea & Sugar Provision Van Archived 22 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine National Railway Museum
- ^ Tea & Sugar Pay Car PA281 Archived 22 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine National Railway Museum
- Zwingle, Erla "The Tea & Sugar Train: Lifeline in Australia's Outback." National Geographic, June 1986, pp. 737 – 757
- Chambers, T.F. "The Tea and Sugar" Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin October 1962