Norris Garrett Bell (1860 – 12 January 1937), sometimes referred to as Col. N. G. Bell, was a Scottish-born railway engineer in Australia. He was employed as the Commissioner of Railways from 1917 to 1929 and played a significant role all aspects of constructing the Oodnadatta to Alice Springs railway link, "The Ghan".
Bell was born in Dundee, Scotland in 1860, and was educated at the High School of Dundee and Edinburgh Collegiate School, followed by the University of Edinburgh where he studied engineering, and had some experience with railway engineering in Scotland. He migrated to Australia in 1886 and took on the position of Resident Engineer for Queensland's Cooktown Railway. He later said the difficulties of operating that railway in the monsoonal tropical far north of Australia had prepared him for anything.[1]
Bell went on to become Chief Engineer of the New South Wales Government Rail then of the Commonwealth Railways in March 1914, succeeding Henry Deans.[2] In 1917 he was appointed the first Commissioner for Railways and tasked (along with Sir John Forrest) with heading construction of the Trans-Australia Railway across the Nullarbor[3] and later the railway from Oodnadatta to Alice Springs. The Trans-Australia was built to standard gauge and the section towards Alice Springs, mainly due to budget constraints, was built to narrow gauge. This would cause many problems until its conversion to standard gauge in 1980.
Bell is remembered as a visionary: while the states of Australia looked at their railways parochially, Bell pushed for national consistency within the railway. He argued that standard gauge should be adopted as the national railway gauge and spoke often about the logistical problems of operating "break of gauge" railway stations. Bell played a significant role in assisting Sir George Dibbs in founding the Australian Standards Association. Bell retired in 1929 just after the arrival of the first steam train (NM35) into the tiny town of Stuart (now Alice Springs), and was succeeded by George A. Gahan.
Bell died in 1937 aged 76. His remains were buried at the Cheltenham Cemetery.
Bell was appointed JP for Normanton in 1893.[4]
He was a member of Melbourne's Yorick Club, a keen golfer, bowls player and gardener.
Bell married Agnes; they had three sons and three daughters (A son and a daughter died in infancy): The children who survived to adulthood were:
They had a home in Wellington Street, Middle Brighton.[7]