Tea & Sugar Train

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Tea & Sugar Train (also known as Slow Mixed Goods Train No. 5205) was a specific train that provided service to isolated Australian towns between Kalgoorlie and Port Augusta. This train was significant because in its early years of service provided all the supplies used by remote towns in Western Australia and Southern Australia.

Contents

[edit] History

The Tea & Sugar Train began in 1917 as a supply train for workers constructing the Trans-Australian Railway. Railway workers depended on the train for every necessity as the rail link was the main form of regular transport into the region.

After the line was completed, settlements began to grow along the line route, and there became a growing need to transport city luxuries to these isolated areas. Livestock were brought on this train as food for the settlements, and the train had its own butchering facilities. There was even a movie car that allowed towns people to view the latest movies inside the train car when the train pulled into town.

[edit] Recent Times

Each time the train crossed the Nullarbor Plain, it brought along different cars to suit the different needs of outback residents through out the year. On some trains there was a bank car, which allows residents to make financial transactions, and in December there was a Christmas car, with a Santa that traveled from town to town.

In the late 1970's, the Flinders Medical Center traveled occasionally on the train to provide care for those in the outback.

The train traveled along the world's longest stretch of straight track, which is straight for 310 miles (498 kilometers).

The Tea & Sugar train was taken out of service in 1996.

[edit] References

Zwingle, Erla. "The Tea & Sugar Train: Lifeline in Australia's Outback." National Geographic, June 1986, pp. 737 - 757


[edit] External links

http://www.lib.flinders.edu.au/resources/collection/special/teasugar.html

http://www.railpage.org.au/comrails/common/tea_sugar_cars.html