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Wikipedia

Central Australia Railway

The former Central Australia Railway, which was built between 1878 and 1929 and closed in 1980, was a 1,241 km (771 mi) 1067 mm narrow gauge railway between Port Augusta and Alice Springs.[1] A standard gauge line duplicated the southern section from Port Augusta to Maree in 1957 on a new nearby alignment. The entire Central Australia Railway was superseded in 1980 after the standard gauge Tarcoola–Alice Springs Railway was opened, using a new route up to 200 km to the west. A small southern section of the original line between Port Augusta and Quorn has been preserved as the Pichi Richi Tourist Railway.

Central Australia Railway
Overview
Termini
Service
System
Operator(s)South Australian Railways
Commonwealth Railways
(became Australian National)
History
OpenedPort Augusta–Marree: 1884
Marree–Oodnadatta: 1891
Oodnadatta–Alice Springs: 1929
Closed1981
Technical
Line length1,241 km (771 mi)
Track gauge1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in);
duplicated Port Augusta–Marree 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge from 1957–2016
Route map

1241 km
Alice Springs (old)
Alice Springs abattoir
Alice Springs (current)
1237 km
Heavitree
Macdonnell triangle
1231 km
Macdonnell
1224 km
Mount Ertwa
end preserved track
Ewaninga triangle
1208 km
Ewaninga
1192 km
Pohill Siding
1175 km
Ooraminna
1163 km
Deep Well
Deep Well siding
1141 km
Rodinga
Rodinga stock yards
1125 km
Maryvale
1099 km
Bundooma
1076 km
Engoordina
1060 km
Mount Squire
1044 km
Rumbalara
Rumbalara stock yards
1028 km
Musgrave
1014 km
Finke (Aputula)
1012 km
Finke stock yards
997 km
Crown Point
981 km
Duffield
965 km
Wall Creek
962 km
border
945 km
Abminga
Abminga sidings
929 km
Bloods Creek
908 km
Ilbunga
895 km
Mount Emery
876 km
Pedirka
859 km
Mt Rebecca
841 km
Mt Sarah (Stevenson Creek)
825 km
Macumba
811 km
Alberga
804 km
Wire Creek
Wire Creek siding
792 km
Todmorten
Oodnadatta sidings
770 km
Oodnadatta
744 km
North Creek
Mount Dutton stock yards
729 km
Mount Dutton
Mount Dutton triangle
714 km
Algebuckina
698 km
Peake Creek
Warrina stock yards
682 km
Warrina
Edwards Creek triangle
666 km
Edwards Creek
Edwards Creek siding
650 km
Duff Creek (Weedina)
632 km
Boorthana
616 km
Box Creek
600 km
Anna Creek
588 km
Douglas
574 km
William Creek
William Creek triangle
554 km
Irrappatana
537 km
Strangways Springs
525 km
Beresford
501 km
Coward Springs
Coward Springs triangle
489 km
Margaret
473 km
Curdimurka (Stuarts Creek)
453 km
Lake Eyre
440 km
Bopeechee
425 km
Alberrie Creek
407 km
Wangianna
387 km
Callanna
Marree gauge interchange
Marree
356 km
372 km
Marree
359 km
Mundownda
Witchelina
339 km
Wirrawilla
Farina triangles
Farina
303 km
320 km
Farina
Lyndhurst
278 km
294 km
Lyndhurst
Old Mine loop
Telford
271 km
Telford
end of Leigh Creek line tracks
Leigh Creek Coalfield
Copley
245 km
262 km
Copley
Leigh Creek
240 km
Puttapa
231 km
247 km
Puttapa
Beltana
232 km
Beltana
212 km
Nilpena (Black Fellows Creek)
Parachilna
175 km
195 km
Parachilna
Commodore
163 km
183 km
Commodore
Brachina
153 km
173 km
Brachina
163 km
Edeowie
Moralana
127 km
137 km
Mern Merna
Cotabena
107 km
124 km
Hookina (Wonoka)
Neuroodla
89 km
105 km
Hawker
89.6 km
Wilson
73.0 km
Gordon
57.5 km
Willochra
Wilkatana
48 km
39.8 km
Quorn
Quorn Pichi Richi Depot
32.4 km
Summit siding
23.6 km
Woolshed Flat
18.2 km
Saltia siding
start dormant tracks
Bungala Solar Plant
Goods yard
Northern Power Station
Port Augusta Racecourse
0 km
Port Augusta
Pichi Richi Depot
The routes of the narrow-gauge Central Australia Railway (1878–1980) and the standard-gauge Marree line which replaced the southernmost third of the route from 1957 to 2016 (click to enlarge).
Remaining trackbed of the Central Australia Railway near Lake Eyre South after the rails were lifted. Much of the 1241 km railway was laid on earth without ballast.

Naming

Whilst officially the Central Australia Railway, it has been known by a number of names.

Initially the northern end point had not be determined. Government acts and the press used a number of terms prior to construction including

  • The Port Augusta Railway
  • The Northern Railway
  • The Port Augusta to (far) North Railway

After construction, railway was referred to as Port Augusta-Oodnadatta railway[2] before the line was extended towards Alice Springs and it was also referred to as the North-South Railway in possible anticipation to extend the line to Darwin.[3]

It has also often been referred to as the Great Northern Railway[4] in the 1890s and into the twentieth century. The most southern part of the line between Port Augusta and Quorn is now referred to as the Pichi Richi Tourist Railway.

Another colloquial name used was The Ghan, after the passenger train that utilised the line. It is suggested that The 'Ghan name is in recognition of the Afghan Cameleers that plied their trade in the area well before the railway; however, see The Ghan (Etymology) for alternatives. This colloquial term for the railway appears to have been widely in use from at least the early 1930s;[5] it may have been in use prior to this. The new Adelaide–Darwin railway line initially used The New Ghan as a trading name. It has now reverted to The Ghan, relegating the original line name colloquially as The Old Ghan.[6][page needed][7][page needed]

History

Proposal

From the proposal for a line heading north of Port Augusta to turning the first sod in 1878 took 18 years[8] and the process was referred to by the press as "which has so far failed to extend itself out of the region of nebulous ideas.".[9]

The key issues reported at the time were:

Cost benefits

Significant debate about the cost delayed and eventually altered the final design. The costs were significant for the South Australian colony and there was rigorous debate over that period. Mineral extraction was touted as the key benefit,[10] with farming and passenger traffic being deemed by many as being uneconomic alone although others suggest the key products were 'wool, station stores, and copper' in that order.[11] The cost per kilometre was set in the Acts which precluded more expensive options.[citation needed]

Gauge and minimum speed

There was fierce debate about the gauge of the line, the maximum weight to be carried and maximum speed as all three dictated the cost.

Route and end point

A multitude of routes and end-points were nominated with over a dozen potential routes explored, most of these to the north. End points that were discussed included Government Gums (Farina, South Australia (320 km), Yudnamutana, South Australia (390 km) and Beltana (232 km). The 1867 Act stated that the line would be 200 miles from Port Augusta. Newspapers of the time did mention extending the line to Port Darwin although this was not gazetted in Parliament.

State versus corporate

The State run South Australian Railways wanted to build the line and there were others who thought 'capitalists', predominantly from the United Kingdom, would offer better value for money. South Australian Railways developed a trial called the Northern Extension Railway to Burra to test the engineering capabilities.[12]

Legislation

The following Acts were passed by the parliament of South Australia and, after federation in 1901, the Australian parliament.

Parliamentary Acts associated with the Central Australia Railway
Year Act Juris-diction Key provisions
1862 The Northern Railway Act 1862[13] SA
  • Carriage of passengers, merchandise and produce between Port Augusta and some point (not less than 100 miles) northwards.
  • First 20 miles to be completed in two years, remainder in five years.
  • Speed was to be a "rate of not less than eight miles an hour for the whole distance travelled, including stoppages (luggage trains excepted)".
  • Propulsion was to be either horse or steam locomotive.
  • Two passenger and two goods trains were to be provided at least twice a week, one way, for the entire length.
  • All military, police, and other forces, when proceeding on duty, and all public mails and public stores, or stores belonging to a public department, were to be conveyed in the ordinary trains free of charge.
  • in the event of war or civil commotion, the whole of the resources of the railway were to be placed at the disposal of the government at the charges actually incurred.
  • The company would be entitled to a grant of the land traversed by the railway for a breadth of two chains, and to grants of contiguous blocks of land up to 20 square miles at the rate of two square miles for every mile traversed by the railway.
1864 The Port Augusta and Northern Railway Act 1864[14] SA
  • Similar to the 1862 Act.
  • Purpose was "to encourage the formation of railways northwards from Port Augusta, or Port Paterson, with a branch line between those ports".
  • Land grant increased to four square kilometres with some limitations.
1864 The Sale of Railways Act 1864[15] SA
  • Authorised SA Government to sell any railway or tram line; reflected lack of commitment to financing railways in South Australia.
1867 The Port Augusta and Northern Railway Act 1867[16] SA
  • Length of railway was extended to at least 200 miles from Port Augusta; costs "shall not exceed 3750 pounds for every mile"; land grants removed.
  • Gauge "shall be five feet and three inches".
  • Horse drawn or steam engine propulsion were still alternatives.
1876 Port Augusta and Government Gums Railway Act 1876[17] SA
1883 Palmerston and Pine Creek Railway Act 1883[18] SA
  • Specified a narrow gauge of "three feet six inches" for the Palmerston and Pine Creek railway (i.e., what was to become the northern part of the Central Australia Railway).
1902 The Transcontinental Railway Act 1902[19] SA
1907 The Northern Territory Surrender Act 1907[20] SA
1910 Northern Territory Acceptance Act 1910[21] Cth
  • Federal legislation to confirm the 1907 Act. Specified a line from Port Darwin to be constructed to meet the Port Augusta (Central Australia) Railway at the South Australian border and be referred to as The Transcontinental Railway. No start or completion date included.
1949 Railway Standardization (South Australia) Agreement Act 1949[22] Cth
  • Authorised a Commonwealth–SA agreement for railway gauges in SA to be converted to standard gauge on grounds of defence and development of Australia, facilitation of interstate trade and commerce, and to secure maximum efficiency and economy in railway operation – financed 70 per cent Commonwealth, 30 per cent SA. In a supplementary provision in the Schedule, the Commonwealth undertook to standardise the Central Australia Railway and North Australia Railway and to build a new standard-gauge railway to close the Alice Springs–Birdum gap.
1950 Brachina to Leigh Creek North Coalfield Railway Act 1950[23] Cth
  • Authorised an agreement between the Commonwealth and SA for the federal government to construct a railway "as soon as practicable" from Brachina to Leigh Creek North Coalfield; acknowledged that the limited capacity of the narrow-gauge line to transport coal to the impending Port Augusta power station necessitated a standard-gauge railway. (The Act provided only for 60 per cent of the required distance from the coalfield to Port Augusta; objection by the South Australian Government to the alignment of routes further south led to a royal commission being appointed.)
1950 Port Augusta to Alice Springs Railway (Alteration of Route) Act 1950[24] Cth
  • Appointed a royal commission to investigate which of two routes were more suitable for the construction of a standard gauge railway between Stirling North and Brachina. Specific factors ordered to be taken into account included the proposed conversion to standard gauge of the railway from Port Augusta to Alice Springs; the cost of construction, maintenance and comparative economics of the respective routes; the probability of increased tonnage of coal hauled from Leigh Creek and the consequential financial results on the cost of constructing and operating railways on the respective routes. Consideration of "any break-of-gauge station required at the northern terminus of the standard gauge line" was explicitly excluded.
1952 Stirling North to Brachina Railway Act 1952[25] Cth
  • Authorised the Commonwealth Railways to construct a standard-gauge railway from Stirling North to Brachina. Specified that the total cost of this railway and the previously authorised Brachina to Leigh Creek North Coalfield railway, including the cost of rolling stock, was not to exceed 11  million pounds. (This Act provided for the remaining 40 per cent of the distance from the coalfield to Port Augusta, the SA Government having accepted the findings of the royal commission, causing a delay of 24 months.)
1954 Leigh Creek North Coalfield to Marree (Conversion to Standard Gauge) Act 1954[26] Cth
  • Authorised the standard-gauge line to be extended to Marree, subject to agreement by the SA Government. Specified that the total cost of this railway and the two railways previously authorised was not to exceed 12.241 million pounds.
1974 Tarcoola to Alice Springs Railway Act 1974[27] Cth
1997 Alice Springs to Darwin Railway Act 1997[28] SA
  • Committed South Australian Government funding up to $125 million (plus $25 million if necessary for contingencies, and $26.5 million to underwrite any loans) to the Alice Springs to Darwin railway. Included the South Australian and Northern Territory governments' acknowledgement of various mutual obligations.

Construction

Design, construction, as well as a hiatus, occurred in four periods distinct under both South Australian and Federal Australian Governments over a fifty-year period.

Initial design and route

Around 1871, there was general agreement between Robert C. Patteson, Assistant Engineer (report writer), H. C. Mais, (Engineer-in-Chief) and Surveyor General. George Goyder (creator of the Goyder line of rainfall) about the length and route of the railway.[11] All three could not see going further north than Beltana (232 km) due to rain fall and environment, The two options out of Port Augusta were the Western Plains and the Pichi Richi routes.[29] The Pichi Richi route, while more expensive, offered access to the farmland to the west.

An extensive permanent survey was conducted circa 1876 and the final route mapped to Government Gums due to the water available at the terminus.[30] The length was to be "198 miles 66.92 chains", and the route consisted of "no less than 64 bridges, ranging in length from 20 feet to 740 feet, 470 flood-openings from 10 to 40 feet wide, 550 culverts from 2 feet 6 inches to 10 feet wide, 61 pipe-drains,and 14 water courses".[30]

Initial build to Farina (Government Gums)

The first sod was turned at Port Augusta on 18 January 1878 and took until 1882 to reach Government Gums (320 km), 1884 Maree (372 km), 1888 Coward Springs (501 km) and finally Oodnadatta in 1891 (770 km). Construction was by South Australian Railways as a 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) narrow gauge railway.[31][32][page needed]

Cessation of extending the line

Between 1891 and 1926, the railway line was not extended. Discussion occurred about if the existing line should be extended or commence a standard gauge railway from Tarcoola.[33][34] The South Australian Railways were transferred to the Australian Federal Government on 1 January 1911 however South Australian Railways continued running the service until 1 January 1926.[1] In 1926, Commonwealth Railways took over the running and commenced planning for extending the railway line north.

Completion from Oodnadatta to Alice Springs

 
A Commonwealth Railways poster of the 1940s advertising train travel to winter holidays in Central Australia. The scene is Heavitree Gap, or Ntaripe in the Arrernte language, 3.5 km (2 mi) south of Alice Springs railway station. Both the size of the cliff and the speed of the train bore no connection with reality.

Extending the line from Oodnadatta to Alice Springs commenced around 1926 and was completed on 6 August 1929.

The Northern Territory Act (Cth 1910) required the building of a North-South railway although no date was specified. Two unballasted routes were shortlisted with a standard gauge line from Kingoonya to Alice Springs estimated at 4.5m pounds and the 1.7m pound narrow gauge extension from Oodnadatta to Alice Springs. The 270 miles 65 chain extension was passed after a number of debates in Federal Parliament.[35]

Railway workers were paid 5 pounds, 8 shillings a week and a request for this to be raised to 6 pounds per week was refused by Sir John Quick in the Federal Arbitration Court on 11 March 1927.[36]

The first train consisted of 12 carriages including Mail and Fruit vans. There were 60 first class and 60 second class passengers and left on 5 August 1929 however an official ceremony to be attended by the Prime Minister was cancelled due to the cost of running a special train.[37][38]

Operations

Conditions

The tortuously curving narrow-gauge line between Marree and Alice Springs was notoriously prone to delays, often caused by flash floods washing away bridges and tracks.[39] Some track was laid on sand without ballast, and wood sleepers were used, serving as food for termites, causing unstable tracks.[40]

Floods

The chosen route for the Central Australian Railway was heavily influenced by the need for water for steam locomotives. Since time immemorial, Aboriginal people had followed a chain of artesian springs and waterholes to sustain them when carrying ochre from the Far North of South Australia to trading places in the south. The explorer John McDouall Stuart followed a similar route during several expeditions between 1858 and 1862.[41] The route taken by the Overland Telegraph ten years later, to which Stuart is believed to have given attention during his travels, was very similar. When the railway route was surveyed, it was hardly surprising that it followed the reliable sources of water.[42]: 52  And as a consequence, the railway was intermittently subject to floods on a grand scale that washed away bridges, embankments and other earthworks. A selection during 50 years is in this table:

Reports of floods on the Central Australia Railway
Year Event
1911

A train driver was killed at Brachina, 107 miles (172 kilometres) north of Port Augusta, when the train entered the creek after rains.[43]

1915

Rain occurred around Quorn and further north, with significant damage around Brachina, including a bridge destroyed.[44]

1926

Widespread rain damaged the railway between Quorn and Oodnadatta.[45]

1929

The railway north of Quorn was damaged for more than 460 miles (740 km) after torrential rain broke a seven-year drought.[46][47]

1930

Service was suspended north of Finke from 17 January to 6 March 1930 after some of the Finke River bridge piers were carried away and others were damaged. A deviation was put in place to run the line over the river bed.[48]

1936

A works train locomotive dived nose-first into Camel Creek near Rodinga after the 30-foot Camel Creek bridge was undermined. The fireman sustained a broken leg; the driver was also injured. The train, comprising a locomotive and three wagons, was repairing tracks after recent floods.

1936

Sixteen passengers and railway crew were stranded at Finke River, where water was "four feet over the line". They would "have to remain there for some days".[49]

1937

Reports of flooding delaying trains for at least 3 days.[citation needed]

1939

Reports of six weeks of disruptions and headlines of "Train weeks late". Food shortages in Alice Springs after the train was delayed 34 days.[50]

1950

In February, trains from the Telford Cut coalfields were among those unable to operate. Reserves of South African coal would be required to continue power supplies if the line did not reopen soon.[51]

1950

In March, floods caused washaways and made 180 miles (290 km) of line impassable from Brachina to Curdimurka; a coal train was among the trains stranded.[52]

1963

In May, The Ghan was held up for nearly a week by floods described as "the worst since 1938", and 114 of the 140 passengers were eventually flown from Oodnadatta to Alice Springs on five special flights.[53]

1967

The line was closed for about 27 days after the track was breached in more than 32 places. The Finke River bridge was again destroyed. Alice Springs required what was described as a "minor Berlin airlift" for food supplies.[citation needed]

World War II

In 1944, it was reported that trains had increased on the line from the normal two a week to 56, whilst the North Australia Railway had increased from one a week to 147. Rolling stock, sidings, marshaling areas and water points for the steam engines were all key issues in increasing traffic on the line.[54]

Diesel locomotives

The first diesel electric engine commenced service in June 1954. It was one of 14 engines ordered for both the Central and North Australia Railway. Built by the Birmingham Carriage and Wagon company, the engines were designed to haul loads of 330 imperial tons at 50 mph, with a maximum range of 700 miles.[55] The Trans-Australian Railway and this line were the first two lines to be powered by diesel electric engines only in Australia.[56]

Film

Shortly before the closure of the narrow gauge line in 1980, BBC Television filmed an episode of the television series Great Railway Journeys of the World featuring the original route of the Ghan (and the infamously slow speed of the train).[citation needed]

Decline, conversion to standard gauge and closure

After World War II, the railway line existence became questionable for a number of reasons:

  • The railway had a history of extensive flood damage as the original steam engines required access to streams which were prone to floods.
  • The track was narrow gauge and not ballasted and thus loads and speeds were both reduced, reducing the profitability of the line.
  • Goyder's Line of rainfall (1865), excluding rains in 1865, 1872 and some other years, was shown as being highly accurate with communities and cropping lands north of his line being abandoned after long dry spells. The entire railway is north of this line.
  • Trucks and roads were becoming more reliable and utilised in South Australia.
  • The 1910 Northern Territory Acceptance Act mandating a railway line between Darwin and Adelaide requiring a standard gauge railway, which would need to be less susceptible to flooding than the existing route designed for diesel-electric engines rather than steam.
  • Improved railway engineering and construction methods allowed for improved design.
  • The standard gauge upgrade of the southern section of the line from near Port Augusta to Maree placed pressure on the remaining narrow gauge sections that remained opened due to transfer and maintenance costs.

Standard gauge line to Marree

In 1949, both South Australia and the Federal Government enacted the Railway Standardisation (South Australia) Agreement Act[22] which looked at the upgrade of all lines to standard gauge, including the Central Australia Line. The act was more of an overarching statement rather than a commitment to complete all lines in a set order or time.

The Leigh Creek and Telford Cut Coalfields were first excavated in 1943 following a shortage of coal during World War II and between 1951 and 1954, discussions surrounded two route options to upgrade to standard gauge. Option B2 was upgrading the current line to Telford, the C option was the chosen option which was up to 32 km west of the current line.[57] The South Australian and Federal governments bickered over by-passing the township of Quorn and it was only after a Royal Commission, that the Commonwealth Railways got their way with option C avoiding Quorn and the work commenced on the 255 km line.

The South Australian Government and agriculturists wanted to extend the standard gauge line a further 88 km to Marree.[58][59] This would reduce the bruising of the cattle and shorten the time to market as well as increase the number of cattle that could be transferred. Transferring livestock at Telford was considered problematic with coal dust and machinery.[60]

The federal minister of transport travelled to the area in mid-1954 and confirmed the extension from Telford Cut to Marree. The cost was set at 1,241,000 pounds, compared to 821,000 pounds to bring the existing line up to an acceptable level including ballasting and possible bridge replacement.[61]

The Minister for Transport, Senator George McLeay and the Commonwealth Railways Commissioner, Mr. P. J. Hannaberry, both stated that they were "strongly in favour" to extend the standard gauge line all the way to Alice Springs in 1952.[62] By April 1954, Hannaberry had changed his mind and stated it was "out of the question".[63]

In 1957, the Marree Railway Line, the new standard gauge line from Stirling North (near Port Augusta) to Marree (372 km from Port Augusta) opened, replacing the existing line via Quorn. This was predominantly for coal to be transferred from the Leigh Creek and Telford Cut Coalfields to the power stations at Stirling North. The line was extended to Marree for cattle to be transported to market from the grazing plains, including around the Birdsville Track.

Closures

With the new standard gauge Marree Railway Line opened, the narrow gauge line began to close in sections:

  • 1957: The section between Brachina (173 km) to Beltana (232 km) is closed in March
  • 1957: The section between Leigh Creek (262 km) to Marree (372 km) is closed in July
  • 1958: Beltana (232 km) to Leigh Creek (262 km) closed in July.[64]
  • 1972: Port Augusta (0 km) to Hawker (105 km) closed.
    • Some sections of the narrow-gauge line remain in operation as the Pichi Richi Railway and the section from Port Augusta to Stirling North was realigned and restored in 2000–2002.
  • 1981: The entire narrow gauge line was closed with the section between Marree (372 km) and Alice Springs (1243 km) abandoned, replaced by Tarcoola-Alice Springs line standard gauge line.[65][page needed]
  • 1987: Standard gauge between Marree and Telford Cut closed.
  • 2016: Stirling North-Telford Cut standard gauge line mothballed after power station and mine closure.[66]

Heritage trail, restoration and preserved sections

The old railway route is now a heritage trail.[67]

In 1974, the newly formed Pichi Richi Railway Preservation Society commenced a restoration program, headquartered at Quorn at the picturesque southern end of the railway; Stirling North, near Port Augusta, was the other terminus. It progressively restored and operated the Pichi Richi Railway as a working museum, upgrading track and undertaking preservation of a wide range of South Australian Railways rolling stock and some locomotives, secured against deterioration in the former running sheds. Between 2000 and 2002, the line was extended 12 km (7 mi) to Port Augusta station, running alongside the standard gauge mainline for about half the distance.[68]

In May 2016, traffic ceased on the standard gauge line between Telford Cut coal mine and Port Augusta after the power station at Port Paterson was shut down.[69]

The Farina Restoration Project Group, whose members travel to the former town at agreed periods to work voluntarily, is restoring the small, now-deserted railway township of Farina.[70]

List of stations, stopping places and localities

Stations, stopping places and localities on the Central Australia Railway
For south-to-north sequence, read across. As an indication of settlement today, 2016 census populations of 100 or more are shown as [pop.]. Population figures of early years are not available. Compared with the final decades of the 20th century, the present-day population Port Augusta is higher; Stirling North much higher; Quorn lower; Marree and Oodnadatta much lower; Alice Springs lower.
Port Augusta [pop. 6560] Port Augusta racetrack Stirling North [pop. 2670] Saltia
Woolshed Flat Pichi Richi Summit Quorn [pop. 1230]
Willochra Gordon Wilson Hawker [pop. 340]
Hookina (at Wonoka) Mern Merna Edeowie Brachina
Commodore (originally Meadows) Parachilna Nilpena (originally Blackfellow's Creek) Beltana
Puttapa Copley (originally Leigh Creek) [pop. 320] Telford Lyndhurst
Farina (originally Government Gums) Wirrawilla Mundowdna Marree (originally Hergott) [pop. 100]
Callanna Wangianna Alberrie Creek Bopeechee
Lake Eyre Stuart's Creek (Curdimurka) Margaret Siding Coward Springs
Beresford Strangways Springs Irrappatana William Creek
Douglas Anna Creek Box Creek Boorthana
Duff Creek Edward's Creek Warrina Peake Creek
Algebuckina Mount Dutton North Creek Oodnadatta [pop. 200]
Todmorten Wire Creek Alberga Macumba
Mount Sarah Mount Rebecca Pedirka Mount Emery
Illbunga Bloods Creek Abminga Wall Creek
Duffield Crown Point Finke (now Aputula) [pop. 170] Musgrave
Rumbalara Mount Squire Engoordina Bundooma
Maryvale Rodinga Deep Well Ooraminna
Mount Polhill Ewaninga Mount Ertiva MacDonnell
Heavitree Alice Springs [pop. 24,750] Alice Springs Abattoirs

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ a b "Central Australia Railway". War Time History of the Commonwealth Railways. Retrieved 17 April 2017.
  2. ^ "Port Augusta-Oodnadatta railway". The Advertiser. Adelaide. 24 October 1925. p. 16 – via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^ "North-South railway". The Northern Miner. Charters Towers. 28 April 1921. p. 16 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ "South Australia Great Northern Railway Impresses Commissioner". The Barrier Miner. Broken Hill. 4 December 1922. p. 4. Retrieved 9 October 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  5. ^ "Newspaper archive". Trove. National Library of Australia. Retrieved 17 April 2017.[dead link]
  6. ^ Newell, Brian R (2000), Following the Old Ghan railway line 1878–1980 (1st ed.), Brian R Newell, ISBN 978-0-646-39415-2
  7. ^ Pearce, Kenn (2011), Riding the 'wire fence' to the Alice: memories of the old Ghan railway, Railmac Publications, ISBN 978-1-86477-079-7
  8. ^ "The Port Augusta Railway". Adelaide Advertiser / The Express and Telegraph. No. 18 January 1878. p. 2. Retrieved 1 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  9. ^ "The Port Augusta Railway". No. 11 August 1870. South Australian Register. Retrieved 1 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^ "Port Augusta Railway". Border Watch (Mt Gambier). No. 11 December 1869. Retrieved 2 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  11. ^ a b "THE PORT AUGUSTA RAILWAY". The South Australian Advertiser. 5 August 1871. p. 3. Retrieved 2 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  12. ^ "Opening of the Northern Extension Railway". South Australian Register. Adelaide, SA. 30 August 1870. p. 5. Retrieved 11 June 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  13. ^ "The Northern Railway Act 1862". Australasian Legal Information Institute. UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law.
  14. ^ "The Port Augusta and Northern Railway Act 1864". Australasian Legal Information Institute. UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law.
  15. ^ "The Sale of Railways Act 1864". Australasian Legal Information Institute. UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law.
  16. ^ "The Port Augusta and Northern Railway Act 1867". Australasian Legal Information Institute. UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law.
  17. ^ "Port Augusta and Government Gums Railway Act 1876". Australasian Legal Information Institute. UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law.
  18. ^ "Palmerston and Pine Creek Railway Act 1883". Australasian Legal Information Institute. UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law.
  19. ^ "The Transcontinental Railway Act 1902". Australasian Legal Information Institute. UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law.
  20. ^ "The Northern Territory Surrender Act 1907" (PDF). Australasian Legal Information Institute. UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law.
  21. ^ "Northern Territory Acceptance Act 1910". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government.
  22. ^ a b "Railway Standardization (South Australia) Agreement Act 1949" (PDF). Australasian Legal Information Institute. UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law.
  23. ^ "Brachina to Leigh Creek North Coalfield Railway Act 1950" (PDF). Australasian Legal Information Institute. UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law.
  24. ^ "Port Augusta to Alice Springs Railway (Alteration of Route) Act 1950". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government.
  25. ^ "Stirling North to Brachina Railway Act 1952". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government.
  26. ^ "Leigh Creek North Coalfield to Marree (Conversion to Standard Gauge) Act 1954". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government.
  27. ^ "Tarcoola to Alice Springs Railway Act 1974". Federal Register of Legislation. Australian Government.
  28. ^ "Alice Springs to Darwin Railway Act 1997". South Australian Legislation. Government of South Australia.
  29. ^ "The Port Augusta Railway". The South Australian Advertiser: 5. January 1878 – via National Library of Australia.
  30. ^ a b "THE PORT AUGUSTA AND GOVERNMENT GUMS RAILWAY". Adelaide Observer. 19 January 1878. p. 6 – via National Library of Australia.
  31. ^ Australian Bureau of Statistics. . Year Book Australia, 2005. Australian Bureau of Statistics. Archived from the original on 28 April 2012. Retrieved 9 July 2008.
  32. ^ Fuller, Basil (2012), The Ghan: the story of the Alice Springs railway, New Holland Publishers, ISBN 978-1-74257-275-8
  33. ^ "Central Australia Railway Development Commonwealth Scheme". Advocate, Burnie, Tasmania. 3 June 1925 – via National Library of Australia.
  34. ^ "TO TAP CENTRAL AUSTRALIA". The Daily Telegraph (Sydney, Australia). 20 January 1926. p. 7 – via National Library of Australia.
  35. ^ "The Senate – Alice Springs Railway". Fairfax. Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 23 April 2017 – via Newspapers.com.  
  36. ^ "(article)". The Sydney Morning Herald. 12 March 1927.[full citation needed]
  37. ^ "(article)". The Age. 5 August 1929. p. 8.[full citation needed]
  38. ^ "(article)". The Age. 1 June 1929. p. 20.[full citation needed]
  39. ^ "Central Australia Railway Floods". Townsville Daily Bulletin. 16 March 1939. p. 12. Retrieved 8 October 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  40. ^ . Chris Tarrant: Extreme Railways. Episode 2. 13 December 2012. Channel 5. Archived from the original on 4 April 2013. Retrieved 13 December 2012.
  41. ^ "Maps depicting the explorations and surveys of John McDouall Stuart". John McDouall Stuart Society. 2021. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  42. ^ Wilson, John (2021). The train to Oodna-Woop-Woop: a social history of the Afghan Express. Banksia Park, South Australia: Sarlines Railway Books. ISBN 9780646842844.
  43. ^ "Brachina railway disaster". Advertiser (Adelaide, SA: 1889 – 1931). 3 February 1911. p. 8. Retrieved 2 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  44. ^ "Floods in the Quorn district". Chronicle (Adelaide, SA: 1895 – 1954). 2 January 1915. p. 15. Retrieved 15 August 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  45. ^ "Central Australia". Age (Melbourne, Vic.: 1854 – 1954). 26 March 1926. p. 9. Retrieved 15 August 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  46. ^ "Isolated". Sydney Morning Herald (NSW: 1842 – 1954). 30 December 1929. p. 9. Retrieved 15 August 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  47. ^ "Drought of seven years has been broken". Evening News (Rockhampton, Qld.: 1924 – 1941). 30 December 1929. p. 2. Retrieved 15 August 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  48. ^ "Central Australia Railway". The Telegraph (Brisbane, Queensland). No. 26 November 1930. 26 November 1930. p. 14. Retrieved 28 July 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  49. ^ "Railway line four feet under water". The Age. 4 March 1936. p. 11. Retrieved 23 April 2017 – via Newspapers.com.  
  50. ^ "Train weeks late". The Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax. p. 12. Retrieved 23 April 2017 – via Newspapers.com.  
  51. ^ "Floods Isolate 120 Mile Area of Central Aust. Railway". Newcastle Sun (NSW: 1918 – 1954). 4 February 1950. p. 2. Retrieved 2 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  52. ^ "Alice Springs line cut". Barrier Miner (Broken Hill, NSW: 1888 – 1954). 17 March 1950. p. 1. Retrieved 2 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  53. ^ "Flood bound 114 fly to "Alice"". The Age. Fairfax. 20 May 1963. p. 3. Retrieved 23 April 2017 – via Newspapers.com.  
  54. ^ "Federal Trains Increase". The Worker (Brisbane). 24 November 1944. p. 12. Retrieved 5 July 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  55. ^ "NEW DIESEL ELECTRIC LOCOS FOR CENTRAL AUSTRALIA RAILAY". Quorn Mercury. 10 June 1854. p. 1 – via National Library of Australia.
  56. ^ "TRANSPORT A special eight-page feature New outlook for railways". Canberra Times (ACT: 1926 – 1995). 27 May 1966. p. 21. Retrieved 1 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  57. ^ "Route of standard Gauge Railway". Quorn Mercury (SA: 1895 – 1954). 8 November 1951. p. 1. Retrieved 2 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  58. ^ "Marree Railway "High Priority"". Advertiser (Adelaide, SA: 1931 – 1954). 11 March 1954. p. 3. Retrieved 2 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  59. ^ "BROAD GAUGE TO MARREE, S.A. AIM". Mail (Adelaide, SA: 1912 – 1954). 26 April 1952. p. 8. Retrieved 2 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  60. ^ "THREE PARTIES WOULD GAIN BY EXTENSION TO MARREE". News (Adelaide, SA: 1923 – 1954). 5 May 1954. p. 6. Retrieved 2 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  61. ^ "BROAD GAUGE RAILWAY FOR NORTH". Chronicle (Adelaide, SA: 1895 – 1954). 6 May 1954. p. 10. Retrieved 2 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  62. ^ "Standard gauge to Marree". Quorn Mercury (SA: 1895 – 1954). 10 July 1952. p. 1. Retrieved 2 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  63. ^ "ALICE BROAD GAUGE "OUT OF QUESTION"". News (Adelaide, SA: 1923 – 1954). 30 April 1954. p. 12. Retrieved 2 September 2018 – via National Library of Australia.
  64. ^ "Route Information Oodnadatta to Alice Springs". Chris's Commonwealth Railways Information (ComRails). Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  65. ^ Reid, Graeme (1996), The Demise of the Central Australia Railway, Australian Railway Historical Society, New South Wales Division
  66. ^ Nicholson, Leanne (7 October 2015). "Alinta to close Leigh Creek mine in weeks". Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  67. ^ South Australian Tourism Commission; Northern Territory Department of Lands, Planning & Environment (2001), Discover the outback Port Augusta to Alice Springs: Old Ghan Railway heritage trail, Northern Territory Department of Lands, Planning & Environment, South Australian Tourism Commission, retrieved 8 October 2012 – via National Library of Australia
  68. ^ "Pichi Richi Railway: authentic outback railway in the Flinders Ranges". Pichi Richi Railway. Retrieved 2 September 2018.
  69. ^ Gage, Nicola (18 November 2015). "Leigh Creek mine site should be revegetated, traditional owners urge". ABC News (Australia).
  70. ^ "(home)". Farina Restoration Project Group.

Further reading

  • Anchen, Nick (2017). Iron Roads in the Outback: The Legendary Commonwealth Railways. Ferntree Gully, Vic: Sierra Publishing. ISBN 9780992538828.
  • Browne, Jeremy R. (2020). Along the Old Ghan line: a guide to discovering the Old Ghan railway. Adelaide: Independently published. ISBN 9780646821870.
  • Pearce, Kenn (2011). Riding the 'Wire Fence' to the Alice: memories of the old Ghan railway. Elizabeth, South Australia: Railmac Publications. ISBN 9781864770797.
  • Wilson, John (2021). The train to Oodna-Woop-Woop: a social history of the Afghan Express. Banksia Park, South Australia: Sarlines Railway Books. ISBN 9780646842844.

External links

  • Photo album of images along the line
  • History of the Adelaide-Darwin Railway
  • Tarcoola to Alice Springs Railway Act 1974
  • Weekend Extra film on the last original Ghan Australian Broadcasting Corporation 1980

central, australia, railway, this, article, about, former, which, made, between, 1878, 1929, shut, down, 1981, current, north, south, railway, lines, adelaide, darwin, railway, line, former, narrow, gauge, line, between, darwin, birdum, north, australia, railw. This article is about the former Central Australia Railway which was made between 1878 and 1929 and shut down in 1981 For the current north south railway lines see Adelaide Darwin railway line For the former narrow gauge line between Darwin and Birdum see North Australia Railway For the Adelaide to Darwin passenger train see The Ghan For the heritage railway between Port Augusta and Quorn see Pichi Richi Railway The former Central Australia Railway which was built between 1878 and 1929 and closed in 1980 was a 1 241 km 771 mi 1067 mm narrow gauge railway between Port Augusta and Alice Springs 1 A standard gauge line duplicated the southern section from Port Augusta to Maree in 1957 on a new nearby alignment The entire Central Australia Railway was superseded in 1980 after the standard gauge Tarcoola Alice Springs Railway was opened using a new route up to 200 km to the west A small southern section of the original line between Port Augusta and Quorn has been preserved as the Pichi Richi Tourist Railway Central Australia RailwayOverviewTerminiStirling North near Port AugustaAlice SpringsServiceSystemSouth Australian Railways 1878 1917 South Australian Railways on behalf of Commonwealth Railways 1917 1926 Commonwealth Railways 1926 1975 Australian National CR s successor agency 1975 1981Operator s South Australian RailwaysCommonwealth Railways became Australian National HistoryOpenedPort Augusta Marree 1884Marree Oodnadatta 1891Oodnadatta Alice Springs 1929Closed1981TechnicalLine length1 241 km 771 mi Track gauge1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in duplicated Port Augusta Marree 1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gauge from 1957 2016Route mapCentral Australia Railway narrow gauge Marree railway line standard gauge 1241 km Alice Springs old Central Australia RailwayAdelaide Darwin railwayto DarwinAlice Springs abattoir Alice Springs current 1237 km HeavitreeAdelaide Darwin railwayto Port AugustaMacdonnell trianglestart preserved track1231 km Macdonnell1224 km Mount Ertwaend preserved trackEwaninga triangle1208 km Ewaninga1192 km Pohill Siding1175 km Ooraminna1163 km Deep WellDeep Well siding1141 km RodingaRodinga stock yards1125 km Maryvale1099 km Bundooma1076 km Engoordina1060 km Mount Squire1044 km RumbalaraRumbalara stock yards1028 km Musgrave1014 km Finke Aputula 1012 km Finke stock yards997 km Crown Point981 km Duffield965 km Wall Creek962 km Northern TerritorySouth Australia border945 km AbmingaAbminga sidings929 km Bloods Creek908 km Ilbunga895 km Mount Emery876 km Pedirka859 km Mt Rebecca841 km Mt Sarah Stevenson Creek 825 km Macumba811 km Alberga804 km Wire CreekWire Creek siding792 km TodmortenOodnadatta sidings770 km Oodnadatta744 km North CreekMount Dutton stock yards729 km Mount DuttonMount Dutton triangleAlgebuckina Bridge714 km Algebuckina698 km Peake CreekWarrina stock yards682 km WarrinaEdwards Creek triangle666 km Edwards CreekEdwards Creek siding650 km Duff Creek Weedina 632 km Boorthana616 km Box Creek600 km Anna Creek588 km Douglas574 km William CreekWilliam Creek triangle554 km Irrappatana537 km Strangways Springs525 km Beresford501 km Coward SpringsCoward Springs triangle489 km Margaret473 km Curdimurka Stuarts Creek 453 km Lake Eyre440 km Bopeechee425 km Alberrie Creek407 km Wangianna387 km CallannaMarree gauge interchangeMarree 356 km 372 km Marree359 km MundowndaWitchelina339 km WirrawillaFarina trianglesFarina 303 km 320 km FarinaLyndhurst 278 km 294 km LyndhurstOld Mine loopTelford 271 km Telfordend of Leigh Creek line tracksLeigh Creek CoalfieldCopley 245 km 262 km CopleyLeigh Creek 240 kmPuttapa 231 km 247 km PuttapaBeltana 232 km Beltana212 km Nilpena Black Fellows Creek Parachilna 175 km 195 km ParachilnaCommodore 163 km 183 km CommodoreBrachina 153 km 173 km Brachina163 km EdeowieMoralana 127 km137 km Mern MernaCotabena 107 km124 km Hookina Wonoka Neuroodla 89 km105 km Hawker89 6 km Wilson73 0 km Gordon57 5 km WillochraWilkatana 48 kmPeterborough Quorn railway lineend of Pichi Richi Railway39 8 km QuornQuorn Pichi Richi Depot32 4 km Summit siding23 6 km Woolshed Flat18 2 km Saltia sidingstart dormant tracksBungala Solar PlantGoods yardAdelaide Port Augusta railway lineNorthern Power StationPort Augusta Racecourse0 km Port Augusta Pichi Richi DepotAdelaide Darwin railwayto Alice SpringsThe routes of the narrow gauge Central Australia Railway 1878 1980 and the standard gauge Marree line which replaced the southernmost third of the route from 1957 to 2016 click to enlarge Remaining trackbed of the Central Australia Railway near Lake Eyre South after the rails were lifted Much of the 1241 km railway was laid on earth without ballast Contents 1 Naming 2 History 2 1 Proposal 2 1 1 Cost benefits 2 1 2 Gauge and minimum speed 2 1 3 Route and end point 2 1 4 State versus corporate 3 Legislation 4 Construction 4 1 Initial design and route 4 2 Initial build to Farina Government Gums 4 3 Cessation of extending the line 4 4 Completion from Oodnadatta to Alice Springs 5 Operations 5 1 Conditions 5 2 Floods 5 3 World War II 5 4 Diesel locomotives 6 Film 7 Decline conversion to standard gauge and closure 7 1 Standard gauge line to Marree 7 2 Closures 8 Heritage trail restoration and preserved sections 9 List of stations stopping places and localities 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksNaming EditWhilst officially the Central Australia Railway it has been known by a number of names Initially the northern end point had not be determined Government acts and the press used a number of terms prior to construction including The Port Augusta Railway The Northern Railway The Port Augusta to far North RailwayAfter construction railway was referred to as Port Augusta Oodnadatta railway 2 before the line was extended towards Alice Springs and it was also referred to as the North South Railway in possible anticipation to extend the line to Darwin 3 It has also often been referred to as the Great Northern Railway 4 in the 1890s and into the twentieth century The most southern part of the line between Port Augusta and Quorn is now referred to as the Pichi Richi Tourist Railway Another colloquial name used was The Ghan after the passenger train that utilised the line It is suggested that The Ghan name is in recognition of the Afghan Cameleers that plied their trade in the area well before the railway however see The Ghan Etymology for alternatives This colloquial term for the railway appears to have been widely in use from at least the early 1930s 5 it may have been in use prior to this The new Adelaide Darwin railway line initially used The New Ghan as a trading name It has now reverted to The Ghan relegating the original line name colloquially as The Old Ghan 6 page needed 7 page needed History EditProposal Edit From the proposal for a line heading north of Port Augusta to turning the first sod in 1878 took 18 years 8 and the process was referred to by the press as which has so far failed to extend itself out of the region of nebulous ideas 9 The key issues reported at the time were Cost benefits Edit Significant debate about the cost delayed and eventually altered the final design The costs were significant for the South Australian colony and there was rigorous debate over that period Mineral extraction was touted as the key benefit 10 with farming and passenger traffic being deemed by many as being uneconomic alone although others suggest the key products were wool station stores and copper in that order 11 The cost per kilometre was set in the Acts which precluded more expensive options citation needed Gauge and minimum speed Edit There was fierce debate about the gauge of the line the maximum weight to be carried and maximum speed as all three dictated the cost Route and end point Edit A multitude of routes and end points were nominated with over a dozen potential routes explored most of these to the north End points that were discussed included Government Gums Farina South Australia 320 km Yudnamutana South Australia 390 km and Beltana 232 km The 1867 Act stated that the line would be 200 miles from Port Augusta Newspapers of the time did mention extending the line to Port Darwin although this was not gazetted in Parliament State versus corporate Edit The State run South Australian Railways wanted to build the line and there were others who thought capitalists predominantly from the United Kingdom would offer better value for money South Australian Railways developed a trial called the Northern Extension Railway to Burra to test the engineering capabilities 12 Legislation EditThe following Acts were passed by the parliament of South Australia and after federation in 1901 the Australian parliament Parliamentary Acts associated with the Central Australia RailwayYear Act Juris diction Key provisions1862 The Northern Railway Act 1862 13 SA Carriage of passengers merchandise and produce between Port Augusta and some point not less than 100 miles northwards First 20 miles to be completed in two years remainder in five years Speed was to be a rate of not less than eight miles an hour for the whole distance travelled including stoppages luggage trains excepted Propulsion was to be either horse or steam locomotive Two passenger and two goods trains were to be provided at least twice a week one way for the entire length All military police and other forces when proceeding on duty and all public mails and public stores or stores belonging to a public department were to be conveyed in the ordinary trains free of charge in the event of war or civil commotion the whole of the resources of the railway were to be placed at the disposal of the government at the charges actually incurred The company would be entitled to a grant of the land traversed by the railway for a breadth of two chains and to grants of contiguous blocks of land up to 20 square miles at the rate of two square miles for every mile traversed by the railway 1864 The Port Augusta and Northern Railway Act 1864 14 SA Similar to the 1862 Act Purpose was to encourage the formation of railways northwards from Port Augusta or Port Paterson with a branch line between those ports Land grant increased to four square kilometres with some limitations 1864 The Sale of Railways Act 1864 15 SA Authorised SA Government to sell any railway or tram line reflected lack of commitment to financing railways in South Australia 1867 The Port Augusta and Northern Railway Act 1867 16 SA Length of railway was extended to at least 200 miles from Port Augusta costs shall not exceed 3750 pounds for every mile land grants removed Gauge shall be five feet and three inches Horse drawn or steam engine propulsion were still alternatives 1876 Port Augusta and Government Gums Railway Act 1876 17 SA Gauge set to narrow gauge three feet six inches cost was not to exceed 3750 pounds per mile Passenger trains not to exceed 20 miles per hour other trains 14 miles per hour Route defined between Port Augusta and Government Gums Farina 1883 Palmerston and Pine Creek Railway Act 1883 18 SA Specified a narrow gauge of three feet six inches for the Palmerston and Pine Creek railway i e what was to become the northern part of the Central Australia Railway 1902 The Transcontinental Railway Act 1902 19 SA Authorised construction of a railway from Oodnadatta South Australia to Pine Creek 1907 The Northern Territory Surrender Act 1907 20 SA Paved the way for annexing the Northern Territory to the new federal Australian Government from South Australia Authorised South Australia s transferring the Central Australia Railway and Palmerston and Pine Creek Railway to the federal Australian Government 1910 Northern Territory Acceptance Act 1910 21 Cth Federal legislation to confirm the 1907 Act Specified a line from Port Darwin to be constructed to meet the Port Augusta Central Australia Railway at the South Australian border and be referred to as The Transcontinental Railway No start or completion date included 1949 Railway Standardization South Australia Agreement Act 1949 22 Cth Authorised a Commonwealth SA agreement for railway gauges in SA to be converted to standard gauge on grounds of defence and development of Australia facilitation of interstate trade and commerce and to secure maximum efficiency and economy in railway operation financed 70 per cent Commonwealth 30 per cent SA In a supplementary provision in the Schedule the Commonwealth undertook to standardise the Central Australia Railway and North Australia Railway and to build a new standard gauge railway to close the Alice Springs Birdum gap 1950 Brachina to Leigh Creek North Coalfield Railway Act 1950 23 Cth Authorised an agreement between the Commonwealth and SA for the federal government to construct a railway as soon as practicable from Brachina to Leigh Creek North Coalfield acknowledged that the limited capacity of the narrow gauge line to transport coal to the impending Port Augusta power station necessitated a standard gauge railway The Act provided only for 60 per cent of the required distance from the coalfield to Port Augusta objection by the South Australian Government to the alignment of routes further south led to a royal commission being appointed 1950 Port Augusta to Alice Springs Railway Alteration of Route Act 1950 24 Cth Appointed a royal commission to investigate which of two routes were more suitable for the construction of a standard gauge railway between Stirling North and Brachina Specific factors ordered to be taken into account included the proposed conversion to standard gauge of the railway from Port Augusta to Alice Springs the cost of construction maintenance and comparative economics of the respective routes the probability of increased tonnage of coal hauled from Leigh Creek and the consequential financial results on the cost of constructing and operating railways on the respective routes Consideration of any break of gauge station required at the northern terminus of the standard gauge line was explicitly excluded 1952 Stirling North to Brachina Railway Act 1952 25 Cth Authorised the Commonwealth Railways to construct a standard gauge railway from Stirling North to Brachina Specified that the total cost of this railway and the previously authorised Brachina to Leigh Creek North Coalfield railway including the cost of rolling stock was not to exceed 11 million pounds This Act provided for the remaining 40 per cent of the distance from the coalfield to Port Augusta the SA Government having accepted the findings of the royal commission causing a delay of 24 months 1954 Leigh Creek North Coalfield to Marree Conversion to Standard Gauge Act 1954 26 Cth Authorised the standard gauge line to be extended to Marree subject to agreement by the SA Government Specified that the total cost of this railway and the two railways previously authorised was not to exceed 12 241 million pounds 1974 Tarcoola to Alice Springs Railway Act 1974 27 Cth Approved an agreement between the Australian Government and the Government of South Australia to build a standard gauge line well to the west of the Central Australia Railway from the existing Trans Australian Railway at Tarcoola to Alice Springs Stipulated maximum expenditure of 145 million 1997 Alice Springs to Darwin Railway Act 1997 28 SA Committed South Australian Government funding up to 125 million plus 25 million if necessary for contingencies and 26 5 million to underwrite any loans to the Alice Springs to Darwin railway Included the South Australian and Northern Territory governments acknowledgement of various mutual obligations Construction EditDesign construction as well as a hiatus occurred in four periods distinct under both South Australian and Federal Australian Governments over a fifty year period Initial design and route Edit Around 1871 there was general agreement between Robert C Patteson Assistant Engineer report writer H C Mais Engineer in Chief and Surveyor General George Goyder creator of the Goyder line of rainfall about the length and route of the railway 11 All three could not see going further north than Beltana 232 km due to rain fall and environment The two options out of Port Augusta were the Western Plains and the Pichi Richi routes 29 The Pichi Richi route while more expensive offered access to the farmland to the west An extensive permanent survey was conducted circa 1876 and the final route mapped to Government Gums due to the water available at the terminus 30 The length was to be 198 miles 66 92 chains and the route consisted of no less than 64 bridges ranging in length from 20 feet to 740 feet 470 flood openings from 10 to 40 feet wide 550 culverts from 2 feet 6 inches to 10 feet wide 61 pipe drains and 14 water courses 30 Initial build to Farina Government Gums Edit The first sod was turned at Port Augusta on 18 January 1878 and took until 1882 to reach Government Gums 320 km 1884 Maree 372 km 1888 Coward Springs 501 km and finally Oodnadatta in 1891 770 km Construction was by South Australian Railways as a 1 067 mm 3 ft 6 in narrow gauge railway 31 32 page needed Cessation of extending the line Edit Between 1891 and 1926 the railway line was not extended Discussion occurred about if the existing line should be extended or commence a standard gauge railway from Tarcoola 33 34 The South Australian Railways were transferred to the Australian Federal Government on 1 January 1911 however South Australian Railways continued running the service until 1 January 1926 1 In 1926 Commonwealth Railways took over the running and commenced planning for extending the railway line north Completion from Oodnadatta to Alice Springs Edit A Commonwealth Railways poster of the 1940s advertising train travel to winter holidays in Central Australia The scene is Heavitree Gap or Ntaripe in the Arrernte language 3 5 km 2 mi south of Alice Springs railway station Both the size of the cliff and the speed of the train bore no connection with reality Extending the line from Oodnadatta to Alice Springs commenced around 1926 and was completed on 6 August 1929 The Northern Territory Act Cth 1910 required the building of a North South railway although no date was specified Two unballasted routes were shortlisted with a standard gauge line from Kingoonya to Alice Springs estimated at 4 5m pounds and the 1 7m pound narrow gauge extension from Oodnadatta to Alice Springs The 270 miles 65 chain extension was passed after a number of debates in Federal Parliament 35 Railway workers were paid 5 pounds 8 shillings a week and a request for this to be raised to 6 pounds per week was refused by Sir John Quick in the Federal Arbitration Court on 11 March 1927 36 The first train consisted of 12 carriages including Mail and Fruit vans There were 60 first class and 60 second class passengers and left on 5 August 1929 however an official ceremony to be attended by the Prime Minister was cancelled due to the cost of running a special train 37 38 Operations EditConditions Edit The tortuously curving narrow gauge line between Marree and Alice Springs was notoriously prone to delays often caused by flash floods washing away bridges and tracks 39 Some track was laid on sand without ballast and wood sleepers were used serving as food for termites causing unstable tracks 40 Floods Edit The chosen route for the Central Australian Railway was heavily influenced by the need for water for steam locomotives Since time immemorial Aboriginal people had followed a chain of artesian springs and waterholes to sustain them when carrying ochre from the Far North of South Australia to trading places in the south The explorer John McDouall Stuart followed a similar route during several expeditions between 1858 and 1862 41 The route taken by the Overland Telegraph ten years later to which Stuart is believed to have given attention during his travels was very similar When the railway route was surveyed it was hardly surprising that it followed the reliable sources of water 42 52 And as a consequence the railway was intermittently subject to floods on a grand scale that washed away bridges embankments and other earthworks A selection during 50 years is in this table Reports of floods on the Central Australia RailwayYear Event1911 A train driver was killed at Brachina 107 miles 172 kilometres north of Port Augusta when the train entered the creek after rains 43 1915 Rain occurred around Quorn and further north with significant damage around Brachina including a bridge destroyed 44 1926 Widespread rain damaged the railway between Quorn and Oodnadatta 45 1929 The railway north of Quorn was damaged for more than 460 miles 740 km after torrential rain broke a seven year drought 46 47 1930 Service was suspended north of Finke from 17 January to 6 March 1930 after some of the Finke River bridge piers were carried away and others were damaged A deviation was put in place to run the line over the river bed 48 1936 A works train locomotive dived nose first into Camel Creek near Rodinga after the 30 foot Camel Creek bridge was undermined The fireman sustained a broken leg the driver was also injured The train comprising a locomotive and three wagons was repairing tracks after recent floods 1936 Sixteen passengers and railway crew were stranded at Finke River where water was four feet over the line They would have to remain there for some days 49 1937 Reports of flooding delaying trains for at least 3 days citation needed 1939 Reports of six weeks of disruptions and headlines of Train weeks late Food shortages in Alice Springs after the train was delayed 34 days 50 1950 In February trains from the Telford Cut coalfields were among those unable to operate Reserves of South African coal would be required to continue power supplies if the line did not reopen soon 51 1950 In March floods caused washaways and made 180 miles 290 km of line impassable from Brachina to Curdimurka a coal train was among the trains stranded 52 1963 In May The Ghan was held up for nearly a week by floods described as the worst since 1938 and 114 of the 140 passengers were eventually flown from Oodnadatta to Alice Springs on five special flights 53 1967 The line was closed for about 27 days after the track was breached in more than 32 places The Finke River bridge was again destroyed Alice Springs required what was described as a minor Berlin airlift for food supplies citation needed World War II Edit In 1944 it was reported that trains had increased on the line from the normal two a week to 56 whilst the North Australia Railway had increased from one a week to 147 Rolling stock sidings marshaling areas and water points for the steam engines were all key issues in increasing traffic on the line 54 Diesel locomotives Edit The first diesel electric engine commenced service in June 1954 It was one of 14 engines ordered for both the Central and North Australia Railway Built by the Birmingham Carriage and Wagon company the engines were designed to haul loads of 330 imperial tons at 50 mph with a maximum range of 700 miles 55 The Trans Australian Railway and this line were the first two lines to be powered by diesel electric engines only in Australia 56 Film EditShortly before the closure of the narrow gauge line in 1980 BBC Television filmed an episode of the television series Great Railway Journeys of the World featuring the original route of the Ghan and the infamously slow speed of the train citation needed Decline conversion to standard gauge and closure EditAfter World War II the railway line existence became questionable for a number of reasons The railway had a history of extensive flood damage as the original steam engines required access to streams which were prone to floods The track was narrow gauge and not ballasted and thus loads and speeds were both reduced reducing the profitability of the line Goyder s Line of rainfall 1865 excluding rains in 1865 1872 and some other years was shown as being highly accurate with communities and cropping lands north of his line being abandoned after long dry spells The entire railway is north of this line Trucks and roads were becoming more reliable and utilised in South Australia The 1910 Northern Territory Acceptance Act mandating a railway line between Darwin and Adelaide requiring a standard gauge railway which would need to be less susceptible to flooding than the existing route designed for diesel electric engines rather than steam Improved railway engineering and construction methods allowed for improved design The standard gauge upgrade of the southern section of the line from near Port Augusta to Maree placed pressure on the remaining narrow gauge sections that remained opened due to transfer and maintenance costs Standard gauge line to Marree Edit In 1949 both South Australia and the Federal Government enacted the Railway Standardisation South Australia Agreement Act 22 which looked at the upgrade of all lines to standard gauge including the Central Australia Line The act was more of an overarching statement rather than a commitment to complete all lines in a set order or time The Leigh Creek and Telford Cut Coalfields were first excavated in 1943 following a shortage of coal during World War II and between 1951 and 1954 discussions surrounded two route options to upgrade to standard gauge Option B2 was upgrading the current line to Telford the C option was the chosen option which was up to 32 km west of the current line 57 The South Australian and Federal governments bickered over by passing the township of Quorn and it was only after a Royal Commission that the Commonwealth Railways got their way with option C avoiding Quorn and the work commenced on the 255 km line The South Australian Government and agriculturists wanted to extend the standard gauge line a further 88 km to Marree 58 59 This would reduce the bruising of the cattle and shorten the time to market as well as increase the number of cattle that could be transferred Transferring livestock at Telford was considered problematic with coal dust and machinery 60 The federal minister of transport travelled to the area in mid 1954 and confirmed the extension from Telford Cut to Marree The cost was set at 1 241 000 pounds compared to 821 000 pounds to bring the existing line up to an acceptable level including ballasting and possible bridge replacement 61 The Minister for Transport Senator George McLeay and the Commonwealth Railways Commissioner Mr P J Hannaberry both stated that they were strongly in favour to extend the standard gauge line all the way to Alice Springs in 1952 62 By April 1954 Hannaberry had changed his mind and stated it was out of the question 63 In 1957 the Marree Railway Line the new standard gauge line from Stirling North near Port Augusta to Marree 372 km from Port Augusta opened replacing the existing line via Quorn This was predominantly for coal to be transferred from the Leigh Creek and Telford Cut Coalfields to the power stations at Stirling North The line was extended to Marree for cattle to be transported to market from the grazing plains including around the Birdsville Track Closures Edit With the new standard gauge Marree Railway Line opened the narrow gauge line began to close in sections 1957 The section between Brachina 173 km to Beltana 232 km is closed in March 1957 The section between Leigh Creek 262 km to Marree 372 km is closed in July 1958 Beltana 232 km to Leigh Creek 262 km closed in July 64 1972 Port Augusta 0 km to Hawker 105 km closed Some sections of the narrow gauge line remain in operation as the Pichi Richi Railway and the section from Port Augusta to Stirling North was realigned and restored in 2000 2002 1981 The entire narrow gauge line was closed with the section between Marree 372 km and Alice Springs 1243 km abandoned replaced by Tarcoola Alice Springs line standard gauge line 65 page needed 1987 Standard gauge between Marree and Telford Cut closed 2016 Stirling North Telford Cut standard gauge line mothballed after power station and mine closure 66 Heritage trail restoration and preserved sections EditThe old railway route is now a heritage trail 67 In 1974 the newly formed Pichi Richi Railway Preservation Society commenced a restoration program headquartered at Quorn at the picturesque southern end of the railway Stirling North near Port Augusta was the other terminus It progressively restored and operated the Pichi Richi Railway as a working museum upgrading track and undertaking preservation of a wide range of South Australian Railways rolling stock and some locomotives secured against deterioration in the former running sheds Between 2000 and 2002 the line was extended 12 km 7 mi to Port Augusta station running alongside the standard gauge mainline for about half the distance 68 In May 2016 traffic ceased on the standard gauge line between Telford Cut coal mine and Port Augusta after the power station at Port Paterson was shut down 69 The Farina Restoration Project Group whose members travel to the former town at agreed periods to work voluntarily is restoring the small now deserted railway township of Farina 70 List of stations stopping places and localities EditStations stopping places and localities on the Central Australia RailwayFor south to north sequence read across As an indication of settlement today 2016 census populations of 100 or more are shown as pop Population figures of early years are not available Compared with the final decades of the 20th century the present day population Port Augusta is higher Stirling North much higher Quorn lower Marree and Oodnadatta much lower Alice Springs lower Port Augusta pop 6560 Port Augusta racetrack Stirling North pop 2670 SaltiaWoolshed Flat Pichi Richi Summit Quorn pop 1230 Willochra Gordon Wilson Hawker pop 340 Hookina at Wonoka Mern Merna Edeowie BrachinaCommodore originally Meadows Parachilna Nilpena originally Blackfellow s Creek BeltanaPuttapa Copley originally Leigh Creek pop 320 Telford LyndhurstFarina originally Government Gums Wirrawilla Mundowdna Marree originally Hergott pop 100 Callanna Wangianna Alberrie Creek BopeecheeLake Eyre Stuart s Creek Curdimurka Margaret Siding Coward SpringsBeresford Strangways Springs Irrappatana William CreekDouglas Anna Creek Box Creek BoorthanaDuff Creek Edward s Creek Warrina Peake CreekAlgebuckina Mount Dutton North Creek Oodnadatta pop 200 Todmorten Wire Creek Alberga MacumbaMount Sarah Mount Rebecca Pedirka Mount EmeryIllbunga Bloods Creek Abminga Wall CreekDuffield Crown Point Finke now Aputula pop 170 MusgraveRumbalara Mount Squire Engoordina BundoomaMaryvale Rodinga Deep Well OoraminnaMount Polhill Ewaninga Mount Ertiva MacDonnellHeavitree Alice Springs pop 24 750 Alice Springs AbattoirsSee also Edit Trains portalAdelaide Darwin railway line Marree railway line North Australia Railway Pichi Richi Railway The GhanNotes EditReferences Edit a b Central Australia Railway War Time History of the Commonwealth Railways Retrieved 17 April 2017 Port Augusta Oodnadatta railway The Advertiser Adelaide 24 October 1925 p 16 via National Library of Australia North South railway The Northern Miner Charters Towers 28 April 1921 p 16 via National Library of Australia South Australia Great Northern Railway Impresses Commissioner The Barrier Miner Broken Hill 4 December 1922 p 4 Retrieved 9 October 2012 via National Library of Australia Newspaper archive Trove National Library of Australia Retrieved 17 April 2017 dead link Newell Brian R 2000 Following the Old Ghan railway line 1878 1980 1st ed Brian R Newell ISBN 978 0 646 39415 2 Pearce Kenn 2011 Riding the wire fence to the Alice memories of the old Ghan railway Railmac Publications ISBN 978 1 86477 079 7 The Port Augusta Railway Adelaide Advertiser The Express and Telegraph No 18 January 1878 p 2 Retrieved 1 June 2018 via National Library of Australia The Port Augusta Railway No 11 August 1870 South Australian Register Retrieved 1 June 2018 via National Library of Australia Port Augusta Railway Border Watch Mt Gambier No 11 December 1869 Retrieved 2 June 2018 via National Library of Australia a b THE PORT AUGUSTA RAILWAY The South Australian Advertiser 5 August 1871 p 3 Retrieved 2 June 2018 via National Library of Australia Opening of the Northern Extension Railway South Australian Register Adelaide SA 30 August 1870 p 5 Retrieved 11 June 2018 via National Library of Australia The Northern Railway Act 1862 Australasian Legal Information Institute UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law The Port Augusta and Northern Railway Act 1864 Australasian Legal Information Institute UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law The Sale of Railways Act 1864 Australasian Legal Information Institute UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law The Port Augusta and Northern Railway Act 1867 Australasian Legal Information Institute UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law Port Augusta and Government Gums Railway Act 1876 Australasian Legal Information Institute UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law Palmerston and Pine Creek Railway Act 1883 Australasian Legal Information Institute UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law The Transcontinental Railway Act 1902 Australasian Legal Information Institute UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law The Northern Territory Surrender Act 1907 PDF Australasian Legal Information Institute UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law Northern Territory Acceptance Act 1910 Federal Register of Legislation Australian Government a b Railway Standardization South Australia Agreement Act 1949 PDF Australasian Legal Information Institute UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law Brachina to Leigh Creek North Coalfield Railway Act 1950 PDF Australasian Legal Information Institute UTS and UNSW Faculties of Law Port Augusta to Alice Springs Railway Alteration of Route Act 1950 Federal Register of Legislation Australian Government Stirling North to Brachina Railway Act 1952 Federal Register of Legislation Australian Government Leigh Creek North Coalfield to Marree Conversion to Standard Gauge Act 1954 Federal Register of Legislation Australian Government Tarcoola to Alice Springs Railway Act 1974 Federal Register of Legislation Australian Government Alice Springs to Darwin Railway Act 1997 South Australian Legislation Government of South Australia The Port Augusta Railway The South Australian Advertiser 5 January 1878 via National Library of Australia a b THE PORT AUGUSTA AND GOVERNMENT GUMS RAILWAY Adelaide Observer 19 January 1878 p 6 via National Library of Australia Australian Bureau of Statistics Completion of the Adelaide to Darwin railway line Year Book Australia 2005 Australian Bureau of Statistics Archived from the original on 28 April 2012 Retrieved 9 July 2008 Fuller Basil 2012 The Ghan the story of the Alice Springs railway New Holland Publishers ISBN 978 1 74257 275 8 Central Australia Railway Development Commonwealth Scheme Advocate Burnie Tasmania 3 June 1925 via National Library of Australia TO TAP CENTRAL AUSTRALIA The Daily Telegraph Sydney Australia 20 January 1926 p 7 via National Library of Australia The Senate Alice Springs Railway Fairfax Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 23 April 2017 via Newspapers com article The Sydney Morning Herald 12 March 1927 full citation needed article The Age 5 August 1929 p 8 full citation needed article The Age 1 June 1929 p 20 full citation needed Central Australia Railway Floods Townsville Daily Bulletin 16 March 1939 p 12 Retrieved 8 October 2012 via National Library of Australia The Australian Outback Chris Tarrant Extreme Railways Episode 2 13 December 2012 Channel 5 Archived from the original on 4 April 2013 Retrieved 13 December 2012 Maps depicting the explorations and surveys of John McDouall Stuart John McDouall Stuart Society 2021 Retrieved 29 December 2021 Wilson John 2021 The train to Oodna Woop Woop a social history of the Afghan Express Banksia Park South Australia Sarlines Railway Books ISBN 9780646842844 Brachina railway disaster Advertiser Adelaide SA 1889 1931 3 February 1911 p 8 Retrieved 2 September 2018 via National Library of Australia Floods in the Quorn district Chronicle Adelaide SA 1895 1954 2 January 1915 p 15 Retrieved 15 August 2018 via National Library of Australia Central Australia Age Melbourne Vic 1854 1954 26 March 1926 p 9 Retrieved 15 August 2018 via National Library of Australia Isolated Sydney Morning Herald NSW 1842 1954 30 December 1929 p 9 Retrieved 15 August 2018 via National Library of Australia Drought of seven years has been broken Evening News Rockhampton Qld 1924 1941 30 December 1929 p 2 Retrieved 15 August 2018 via National Library of Australia Central Australia Railway The Telegraph Brisbane Queensland No 26 November 1930 26 November 1930 p 14 Retrieved 28 July 2018 via National Library of Australia Railway line four feet under water The Age 4 March 1936 p 11 Retrieved 23 April 2017 via Newspapers com Train weeks late The Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax p 12 Retrieved 23 April 2017 via Newspapers com Floods Isolate 120 Mile Area of Central Aust Railway Newcastle Sun NSW 1918 1954 4 February 1950 p 2 Retrieved 2 September 2018 via National Library of Australia Alice Springs line cut Barrier Miner Broken Hill NSW 1888 1954 17 March 1950 p 1 Retrieved 2 September 2018 via National Library of Australia Flood bound 114 fly to Alice The Age Fairfax 20 May 1963 p 3 Retrieved 23 April 2017 via Newspapers com Federal Trains Increase The Worker Brisbane 24 November 1944 p 12 Retrieved 5 July 2018 via National Library of Australia NEW DIESEL ELECTRIC LOCOS FOR CENTRAL AUSTRALIA RAILAY Quorn Mercury 10 June 1854 p 1 via National Library of Australia TRANSPORT A special eight page feature New outlook for railways Canberra Times ACT 1926 1995 27 May 1966 p 21 Retrieved 1 September 2018 via National Library of Australia Route of standard Gauge Railway Quorn Mercury SA 1895 1954 8 November 1951 p 1 Retrieved 2 September 2018 via National Library of Australia Marree Railway High Priority Advertiser Adelaide SA 1931 1954 11 March 1954 p 3 Retrieved 2 September 2018 via National Library of Australia BROAD GAUGE TO MARREE S A AIM Mail Adelaide SA 1912 1954 26 April 1952 p 8 Retrieved 2 September 2018 via National Library of Australia THREE PARTIES WOULD GAIN BY EXTENSION TO MARREE News Adelaide SA 1923 1954 5 May 1954 p 6 Retrieved 2 September 2018 via National Library of Australia BROAD GAUGE RAILWAY FOR NORTH Chronicle Adelaide SA 1895 1954 6 May 1954 p 10 Retrieved 2 September 2018 via National Library of Australia Standard gauge to Marree Quorn Mercury SA 1895 1954 10 July 1952 p 1 Retrieved 2 September 2018 via National Library of Australia ALICE BROAD GAUGE OUT OF QUESTION News Adelaide SA 1923 1954 30 April 1954 p 12 Retrieved 2 September 2018 via National Library of Australia Route Information Oodnadatta to Alice Springs Chris s Commonwealth Railways Information ComRails Retrieved 7 March 2018 Reid Graeme 1996 The Demise of the Central Australia Railway Australian Railway Historical Society New South Wales Division Nicholson Leanne 7 October 2015 Alinta to close Leigh Creek mine in weeks Retrieved 7 October 2015 South Australian Tourism Commission Northern Territory Department of Lands Planning amp Environment 2001 Discover the outback Port Augusta to Alice Springs Old Ghan Railway heritage trail Northern Territory Department of Lands Planning amp Environment South Australian Tourism Commission retrieved 8 October 2012 via National Library of Australia Pichi Richi Railway authentic outback railway in the Flinders Ranges Pichi Richi Railway Retrieved 2 September 2018 Gage Nicola 18 November 2015 Leigh Creek mine site should be revegetated traditional owners urge ABC News Australia home Farina Restoration Project Group Further reading EditAnchen Nick 2017 Iron Roads in the Outback The Legendary Commonwealth Railways Ferntree Gully Vic Sierra Publishing ISBN 9780992538828 Browne Jeremy R 2020 Along the Old Ghan line a guide to discovering the Old Ghan railway Adelaide Independently published ISBN 9780646821870 Pearce Kenn 2011 Riding the Wire Fence to the Alice memories of the old Ghan railway Elizabeth South Australia Railmac Publications ISBN 9781864770797 Wilson John 2021 The train to Oodna Woop Woop a social history of the Afghan Express Banksia Park South Australia Sarlines Railway Books ISBN 9780646842844 External links EditPhoto album of images along the line History of the Adelaide Darwin Railway Tarcoola to Alice Springs Railway Act 1974 Weekend Extra film on the last original Ghan Australian Broadcasting Corporation 1980 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Central Australia Railway amp oldid 1163369006, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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