Central Australia Railway | |
System: |
|
End: | Alice Springs |
Open: | Port Augusta–Marree: 1884 Marree–Oodnadatta: 1891 Oodnadatta–Alice Springs: 1929 |
Close: | 1981 |
Operator: | South Australian Railways Commonwealth Railways (became Australian National) |
Linelength Km: | 1241 |
Gauge: |
|
Map State: | collapsed |
The former Central Australia Railway, which was built between 1878 and 1929 and dismantled in 1980, was a 771abbr=onNaNabbr=on 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 The entire Central Australia Railway was superseded in 1980 after the standard gauge Tarcoola–Alice Springs Railway was opened, using a new route up to 200 km to the west.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 and is operated as the Pichi Richi Railway.
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
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] [7] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Date | Event | |
1853 | First recorded wagon (hauled by bullocks) through Pichi Richi Pass. | ||
1854 | Town of Port Augusta surveyed. | ||
1854 | 18 May | Goolwa to Port Elliot horse-drawn railway opens. | |
1854 | South Australian Government begins program of railway construction. | ||
1856 | 19 April | Adelaide to Port Adelaide line opens. | |
1857 | 5 October | Adelaide–Gawler line opens. | |
1857 | Surveyor-General Goyder inspects construction of the road through Pichi Richi Pass. | ||
1862 | Act of Parliament passed, offering land grants in exchange for constructing a railway north from Port Augusta. Goyder advises that a railway through Pichi Richi Pass is "not practical". | ||
1863 | Control of the Northern Territory is handed from New South Wales to South Australia. | ||
1864 | SA Parliament passes the Waste Lands Act granting licences to squatters on northern pastoral lands. | ||
1865–1866 | Severe drought in SA. | ||
1865 | Goyder defines the boundary of arable land in SA. | ||
1869 | Government passes the Strangways Act allowing credit to purchase farming land in the north of SA. | ||
1870 | 29 August | Adelaide and Burra Railway opens. | |
1870 | Government offer of land in return for constructing northern railway. | ||
1870 | Survey for Port Augusta and Northern Railway looking at alternative routes. Completion of Overland Telegraph Line to Darwin. | ||
1873–1877 | Boom agricultural years in Mid-North. | ||
1877 | Construction starts on the Port Augusta and Government Gums Railway. Equipment stockpiled at Port Augusta. | ||
1878 | 18 January | Official "turning of the first sod" of the Port Augusta and Government Gums Railway at Port Augusta by state governor Sir William Jervois. | |
1879 | 19 June | First shipment by rail from Quorn to Port Augusta. | |
1879 | 15 December | Line opens from Port Augusta to Quorn. | |
1880 | 28 June | Line opens from Quorn to Hawker. | |
1880–1882 | Drought conditions cause crop failures in Willochra area. | ||
1881 | 1 July | Railway opens to Beltana. | |
1882 | 18 April | First train arrives at Farina (previously named Government Gums). | |
1882 | 17 May | Official opening of the Port Augusta and Government Gums Railway and Terowie to Quorn Railway at Quorn by Governor Sir William Jervois. | |
1884 | 13 January | Hawker Railway Station burns down. Replaced by current stone station building. | |
1884 | 7 February | Railway extended to Hergott Springs by contractors Moorhouse, Robinson and Jesser. | |
1885–1891 | Deviations constructed in Pichi Richi Pass to ease curves. | ||
1887 | Public meeting in Adelaide called for bridges at Strangways Springs and Peake Creek to be purchased locally rather than cheaper English bridges. Cost difference was £11,944 v. £8145. | ||
1888 | 1 February | Railway extended to Coward Springs by Engineer-in-Chief South Australia, using unemployment relief labour. | |
1889 | 1 June | Railway extended to William Creek. More sharp curves in Pichi Richi Pass eased by deviations. | |
1889 | 1 November | Railway extended to Warrina by SA Government unemployment relief scheme. | |
1891 | 7 January | Railway extended to Oodnadatta by SA Government unemployment relief scheme. | |
1891–1892 | Severe recession in Australia. | ||
1892 | 17 December | Y class loco no. 141 is allocated to the Northern Division of the SAR. (It was later modified to a Yx class and is now at the Pichi Richi Railway.) | |
1904 | 2 May | Tenders called for extension of railway from Oodnadatta to Pine Creek, Northern Territory. The contract was not signed: the federal government blocked the employment of Chinese labourers. | |
1911 | 1 January | South Australia hands the Northern Territory to the Commonwealth Government, including the Great Northern Railway. The South Australian Railways continues to provide trains and staff for the time being, with the Commonwealth bearing losses and liabilities. | |
1911 | January | Loco Y141 derails near Brachina due to washout, killing the driver. | |
1912 | 14 September | Construction starts on the Trans-Australian Railway from Port Augusta to Kalgoorlie. | |
1914 | 28 March | Boiler of Y class locomotive explodes at Cudmore Hill near Port Augusta. | |
1914 | 28 July | World War I starts. | |
1917 | 17 October | Opening of the Trans-Australian Railway. | |
1918 | Hergott Springs renamed as Marree. | ||
1918 | 11 November | End of World War I. Global influenza pandemic follows. | |
1921 | 4 June | SAR rolling stock, including the "Coffee Pot", sold to Commonwealth Railways. | |
1923 | Sleeping car introduced between Terowie and Marree. An SAR employee at Quorn jokingly names the train to Oodnadatta The Afghan Express, which is eventually shortened to The Ghan. | ||
1925 | June | Delivery of the first two NM class steam engines (NM15 and 16). | |
1926 | 1 January | Commonwealth Railways takes over operation of the Great Northern Railway and names it the Central Australia Railway. | |
1926 | Alternative routes considered for extension to Stuart. | ||
1926 | Algebuckina bridge strengthened for NM class locos. Deviation used, but soon damaged twice by flood waters. | ||
1927 | 21 January | 34abbr=offNaNabbr=off line built from Oodnadatta to Wire Creek, which becomes construction base for the 439abbr=offNaNabbr=off extension to Stuart. | |
1928 | 23 December | Opening of line to Rumbalara railhead. | |
1929 | 2 August | Line completed to Stuart. First passenger train hauled into Stuart by NM35 on 6 August. | |
1929 | Commonwealth Railways changes name of Stuart railway station to Alice Springs. | ||
1930 | 17 January | Finke River bridge destroyed by floodwaters. Traffic suspended for seven weeks until March 1930. Deviation built downstream. | |
1930 | Completion of mechanical engineering workshops at Port Augusta. | ||
1937 | 26 July | Standard-gauge line between Port Pirie and Port Augusta completed. | |
1938 | Major flooding north of Oodnadatta. Railway closed for several weeks. | ||
1939 | 3 September | World War II commences. | |
1942 | New loco shed and Kennicott water treatment plant constructed at Quorn. New sheds also built at Marree, Oodnadatta and Alice Springs. | ||
1943 | 19 February | Head-on collision at Strangways between two freight trains. No fatalities. | |
1944 | 11 May | Crash near Copley. Freight train hauled by NM25 runs into the rear of troop train; four soldiers killed. | |
1944 | Leigh Creek coal trains start. Coal goes via Quorn (narrow gauge) then Terowie to Adelaide (broad gauge). | ||
1945 | September | World War II ends. | |
1946 | Major flooding. Food dropped by air to stranded Ghan. | ||
1949 | Ghan sleeping car service suspended due to coal shortages. | ||
1949 | 15 December | Commonwealth Railways commissioner recommends construction of a standard-gauge railway from Stirling North to Leigh Creek. | |
1951 | Diesel-electric locos ordered (NSU class). | ||
1951 | 27 August | Construction commences on Brachina to Leigh Creek standard-gauge line. | |
1952 | 4 July | Royal Commission report recommends Brachina to Stirling North route west of the Flinders Ranges for new standard-gauge line, bypassing Quorn and Hawker. | |
1954 | Playford power station opens at Port Augusta. Narrow-gauge coal trains operate through Pichi Richi Pass. | ||
1954 | June | Arrival of first NSU diesel locos. | |
1954 | 24 June | First diesel-hauled Ghan departs Quorn hauled by NSU 51 and 52. | |
1954 | November | Arrival of first NDH "Gloucester" railcars to operate Port Augusta to Marree passenger service. | |
1955 | 14 February | Destruction of Hookina Bridge by floodwaters. | |
1955 | 28 May | Standard-gauge line to Brachina completed. "Piggyback" trains commence on 4 June for coal and cattle trains (until 25 June 1956). | |
1956 | 17 May | Standard-gauge line completed to Leigh Creek coalfield. | |
1956 | 10 July | New schedule has southbound Ghan passengers transferring to standard-gauge railcars at Brachina. | |
1956 | 13 August | Last narrow-gauge Ghan through Pichi Richi Pass. Passengers travel by standard-gauge train from Port Augusta to Copley. Copley becomes transfer station for freight and passengers. | |
1956 | 4 October | Narrow-gauge line Hawker to Copley closed. Rails then lifted. | |
1957 | 29 June | Standard-gauge railhead reaches Marree. | |
1957 | 27 July | Official opening of the standard-gauge line to Marree. | |
1958 | 26 March | Narrow-gauge line between Copley and Marree closed. Rails then lifted. Marree becomes transfer station between standard-gauge and narrow-gauge lines. | |
1961 | Pedirka sandhills deviation completed. | ||
1965 | 24 April | First NT class diesel-electric locos in service. All were later transferred to Darwin; they returned south after the North Australia Railway closed in 1976. | |
1967 | February & March | Severe flooding. Low-level Finke River bridge destroyed. | |
1968 | Saltia bridge in Pichi Richi Pass hit by over-height truck. | ||
1969 | 29 January | Last passenger service to Quorn from Terowie. | |
1970 | 8 January | Last regular freight service between Quorn and Hawker. | |
1970 | November | Survey of Tarcoola to Alice Springs line commences. | |
1971 | 28 April | NJ diesel-electric locomotives introduced. NJ1 named Ben Chifley. | |
1972 | 17 September | Stirling North to Hawker line officially closed. | |
1973 | July | Pichi Richi Railway Preservation Society formed. | |
1974 | Second low-level bridge at Finke destroyed by floodwaters. | ||
1974 | 20 July | First steam-hauled train on the new Pichi Richi Railway. | |
1975 | 12 April | Construction commences on Tarcoola to Alice Springs line. First sod turned by Prime Minister Gough Whitlam at Tarcoola. | |
1975 | 1 July | Commonwealth Railways becomes Australian National Railways (ANR), a new federal government agency. | |
1978 | 1 April | ANR takes over the South Australian Railways and Tasmanian Government Railways. | |
1980 | 9 October | Tarcoola–Alice Springs line opens; first standard-gauge train northward. | |
1980 | 25 November | Last narrow-gauge Ghan from Marree to Alice Springs. Locos NJ3 and NJ6. | |
1980 | 11 December | First standard-gauge Ghan to Alice Springs. | |
1980 | December | Last revenue train to Oodnadatta. | |
1981 | 17 October | Last train on Peterborough–Quorn line, by Steamtown Peterborough. | |
1982 | Rails between Alice Springs and Marree removed. | ||
1987 | 10 June | Standard-gauge line from Leigh Creek to Marree closed and rails lifted. | |
1995 | 4 June | Standard-gauge line between Adelaide and Melbourne opens. | |
2001 | 17 July | Construction commences on Alice Springs–Darwin line. | |
2001 | September | Pichi Richi Railway extended to Port Augusta. | |
2003 | 18 September | Standard-gauge line reaches Darwin. | |
2004 | 3 February | First standard-gauge Ghan arrives at Darwin from Adelaide. | |
2007 | 19 January | Wirreanda Creek bridge at Gordon destroyed by floodwaters. | |
2013 | Abminga railway station area listed in state heritage list. | ||
2016 | 27 April | Last coal train from Leigh Creek to Port Augusta. | |
2016 | May | Port Augusta power stations closed and demolished. Port Augusta to Leigh Creek railway mothballed. |
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 one "which has so far failed to extend itself out of the region of nebulous ideas.".[9]
The key issues reported at the time were:
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 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.
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.
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.
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]
The following Acts were passed by the parliament of South Australia and, after federation in 1901, the Australian parliament.
Year | Act | Juris-diction | Key provisions |
---|---|---|---|
1862 | The Northern Railway Act 1862[13] | SA |
|
1864 | The Port Augusta and Northern Railway Act 1864[14] | SA |
|
1864 | The Sale of Railways Act 1864[15] | SA |
|
1867 | The Port Augusta and Northern Railway Act 1867[16] | SA |
|
1876 | Port Augusta and Government Gums Railway Act 1876[17] | SA |
|
1883 | Palmerston and Pine Creek Railway Act 1883[18] | SA |
|
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 |
|
1949 | Railway Standardization (South Australia) Agreement Act 1949[22] | Cth |
|
1950 | Brachina to Leigh Creek North Coalfield Railway Act 1950[23] | Cth |
|
1950 | Port Augusta to Alice Springs Railway (Alteration of Route) Act 1950[24] | Cth |
|
1952 | Stirling North to Brachina Railway Act 1952[25] | Cth |
|
1954 | Leigh Creek North Coalfield to Marree (Conversion to Standard Gauge) Act 1954[26] | Cth |
|
1974 | Tarcoola to Alice Springs Railway Act 1974[27] | Cth |
|
1997 | Alice Springs to Darwin Railway Act 1997[28] | SA |
|
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.
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. 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".
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 narrow gauge railway.[31]
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.[32] [33] 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. In 1926, Commonwealth Railways took over the running and commenced planning for extending the railway line north.
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.[34]
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.[35]
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.[36] [37]
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.[38] Some track was laid on sand without ballast, and wood sleepers were used, serving as food for termites, causing unstable tracks.[39]
The choice of route through the most arid regions of Australia was influenced above all 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.[40] 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.[41] The downside – an endless source of frustration for the railway maintainers – was that washouts occurred at some locations almost every year. When heavy rains fell inland in New South Wales and Queensland, gigantic "flash floods" came down normally dry riverbeds; bridges, embankments and other earthworks gave way under the onslaught. All but the largest bridge were severely damaged or washed away entirely, and miles of track were washed out – almost every year at some locations.[6]
Date | Location | Event | |
---|---|---|---|
1882 – March | Flinders Ranges | Washouts throughout | |
1889 – January | Farina to Marree | Washouts throughout | |
1890 – January | Hawker to Beltana | Washouts throughout | |
1903 – December | Farina | Washouts delay trains in the Farina area | |
1904 – February | North of Parachilna | Track washed away; two days' delay | |
1911 – February | Brachina | Train entered the creek south of station after rains. Driver of locomotive Y141 killed.[42] | |
1914 – January | Entire line | Major washouts throughout | |
1915 | Brachina | Bridge destroyed[43] | |
1917 – January | Entire line | Washouts | |
1918 – January | Near Bopeechee | Line cut by floodwaters | |
1919 – February | Farina to Marree | Washouts | |
1926 – March | Copley to Farina; Oodnadatta region; Algebuckina | Widespread rain caused damage in various parts of Central Australia.[44] A deviation at Algebuckina River was washed out twice while the bridge was being strengthened. | |
1929 – December | Throughout, especially Marree and northward | More than 450miles of track damaged by heavy rain after a seven-year drought; "unparalleled in the history of the railway"[45] [46] | |
1930 – February | Quorn to Marree; Finke and northward | Services suspended 17 January to 6 March after some 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.[47] | |
1930 – October | Oodnadatta to Alice Springs | Many washouts | |
1931 – April | Many washouts; Hookina Creek bridge damaged by logs | ||
1932 – March | Finke | River crossing closed for 6 days | |
1933 – November | Damage at various locations | ||
1935 – January | Damage at various locations | ||
1935 – October | Quorn to Parachilna, Ilbunga to Blood's Creek | Washouts | |
1936 – January | Boolcunda Creek bridge | Bridge badly damaged; track closed for 8 days | |
1936 – February | Camel Creek near Rodinga; Margaret Creek bridge | Rodinga: a locomotive and three wagons used in repairing tracks after recent floods dived nose-first into Camel Creek after the bridge was undermined. Margaret Creek bridge washed out; large pigsty constructed. Alice Creek bridge destroyed. | |
1936 – March | Finke | 16 people were marooned at Finke River railway crossing, which was 4feet under water; ten washaways were to the south[48] | |
1936 – May | Willochra to Gordon | Washouts | |
1937 – February | Willochra | Track subsides, derailing locomotive NM33 | |
1937 – December | Willochra to Beltana | Washouts | |
1938 – February | Damage at more than 100 locations north of Edward'sCreek | Marree Mixed stranded due to flooding further north. Major flooding north of Oodnadatta. Floodwaters nearly 16feet over rails and 2.4km (01.5miles) wide at Peake Creek. Finke River 7feet over rails. | |
1939 – January, February | Hawker, Farina, Finke | Trains held; no train to Alice Springs for 34 days causes food shortage[49] | |
1939 – June | Flood damage at numerous locations | ||
1940 – January | Oodnadatta to Alice Springs | Washouts | |
1940 – February | Finke | Finke River floods | |
1941 – March | Finke | River crossing closed | |
1944 – February | Severe flooding | ||
1946 – January | Bundooma; Hookina to Parachilna | Washouts caused by 6.8inches of rain; line closed for three weeks, food dropped by air | |
1946 – February | Railway closed for 23 days. Marree Mixed stranded. The Peake, Alberga, Stevenson, Hamilton and Finke rivers flooded. Food dropped by air. | ||
1947 – February, March | Beresford; Ewaninga to Alice Springs | Alice Springs train marooned at Beresford | |
1949 – May | Heavy rain and washouts | ||
1950 – February, March | Brachina, Commodore; Farina to Marree | No trains for 3 weeks Quorn to Marree; shortage of coal from Telford Cut coalfields shortages disrupted power supplies[50] | |
1950 – March | Brachina to Curdimurka | Alberga and Hamilton Rivers flood, making 180miles of line impassable; a coal train was among the trains stranded[51] | |
1950 – June | Alberga | Alberga and Hamilton Rivers flood | |
1953 – January | Oodnadatta to Finke | Trains delayed several days | |
1954 – October | Finke to Bundooma | Numerous washouts | |
1955 – February | Hookina | Numerous washouts between Willochra and Nilpena. Hookina bridge destroyed. Deviation built in two weeks, then also washed away in July and October 1956. | |
1956 – July | Pedirka–Ilbunga; Hookina | Railway closed for two days; Hamilton River (Pedirka) and Stevenson Creek (Ilbunga) flooded. Hookina River flood delayed traffic for 36 hours, then another 36 hours five days later. Further floods on 16 October washedthe deviation track away and because a new standard-gauge line had been built it was never restored.[52] | |
1960 – December | Ewaninga | Washaways; track damaged | |
1961 – April | Finke | Services delayed for 12 days | |
1963 – May | Oodnadatta area | 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] | |
1963 – June | Marree to William Creek; Peake Creek; Alberga River | Extensive flooding and damage. Ghan stuck at William Creek with loco derailed. Ghan passengers airlifted from Oodnadatta. | |
1967 – February, March | North of Oodnadatta | Major flooding in many locations; track breached in more than 32 places. Low-Level Finke bridge again destroyed. Line closed for 27 days. | |
1968 | Services suspended for three weeks | ||
1974 – January to April | North of Oodnadatta; Lake Eyre | Heavy rains. All roads into Alice Springs closed. Low-level bridge at Finke destroyed. Line closed from 13 January to 16 March. No passenger services until 1 April. Lake Eyre, normally dry, flooded to its deepest in recorded history. On the southern shore of Lake Eyre South, levees were required and the railway was eventually rebuilt on a new embankment. | |
1981 (post-closure) | Abminga | Rail recovery train stranded at Abminga. Finke River flowing. | |
2007 (post-closure) | Gordon | Wirreanda Creek bridge destroyed |
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]
The first diesel-electric locomotive entered service in June 1954. It was one of 14 locomotives ordered for both the Central and North Australia Railway. Built by the Birmingham Carriage and Wagon company, the locomotives had a maximum range of about 1130abbr=offNaNabbr=off and were designed to haul 330lt at 50abbr=offNaNabbr=off on level track.[55]
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).
After World War II, the railway line existence became questionable for a number of reasons:
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.[56] 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.[57] [58] 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.[59]
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.[60]
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.[61] By April 1954, Hannaberry had changed his mind and stated it was "out of the question".[62]
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.
With the new standard gauge Marree Railway Line opened, the narrow gauge line began to close in sections:
The old railway route is now a heritage trail.
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.[65]
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.[66]
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.[67]
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] | |
Woolshed Flat | Pichi Richi | Summit | Quorn [pop. 1230] |
Hawker [pop. 340] | |||
Hookina (at Wonoka) | Mern Merna | ||
Commodore (originally Meadows) | Nilpena (originally Blackfellow's Creek) | ||
Puttapa | Copley (originally Leigh Creek) [pop. 320] | ||
Farina (originally Government Gums) | Wirrawilla | Mundowdna | Marree (originally Hergott) [pop. 100] |
Callanna | Wangianna | Alberrie Creek | Bopeechee |
Stuart's Creek (Curdimurka) | Margaret Siding | ||
Beresford | Irrappatana | ||
Douglas | Anna Creek | Box Creek | Boorthanna |
Duff Creek | Edward's Creek | Warrina | Peake Creek |
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 | Ooraminna | |
Mount Polhill | Ewaninga | Mount Ertiva | MacDonnell |
Heavitree | Alice Springs [pop. 24,750] | Alice Springs Abattoirs | |
Extreme Railways
. Channel 5. 13 December 2012. 2. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20130404042918/http://www.channel5.com/shows/chris-tarrant-extreme-railways/episodes/episode-2-465. 4 April 2013.