A National Award Win for Rail Heritage WA
Rail Heritage WA (RHWA) has just won the inaugural 'Passenger Vehicle Restoration'
award for its restoration of 1885 passenger carriage AG 14.
Ismail Julius and Graeme Vincent 'on the Job' of restoring AG 14.
The Association of Tourist and Heritage Railways of Australia (ATHRA) 'Passenger Vehicle Restoration' Award is awarded annually to encourage and recognise excellence in the restoration of passenger vehicles by individuals and groups operating in the railway and tramway tourist and heritage sector of Australia. The emphasis is on the restoration effort itself and the skills of the people undertaking the restoration work.
AG 14 entered service with the railways of the WA Government in 1885 - only six years after the first Government Railway was opened. The restoration of this 122 year old railway carriage ensures its rightful place as an important part of the state's railway heritage.
The project commenced with the relocation of the carriage (very carefully due to its condition) from the Railway Museum to the undercover restoration area then occupied by RHWA at the former Midland Workshops. People who undertook the work were all volunteers for Rail Heritage WA. Funding for materials was provided through the Lotterywest 'Conservation of Cultural Heritage' grants - from the first round in which moveable heritage items were eligible for support.
A view inside AG 14 showing the level of craftmanship.
A heritage consultant and a former car & wagon builder guided the project, with mechanical work supervised by a former railway fitter. Many of the volunteers had gained appropriate skills in a heritage setting from the Federation Train project three years earlier and were able to apply this to an even older carriage. The restoration of AG 14 was a great way to share and demonstrate those 'rare trade' skills in which the Midland Workshops once excelled.
The carriage is highly significant as it is believed to be the sole survivor of the first class of the larger carriages in WA and represents the turn-of-the-century local passenger service in Kalgoorlie.
Another view inside AG 14.
AG 14 has now returned to be proudly on display at the Railway Museum and will be in pride of place when passenger rail travel is the theme of this year's RailFest open day on Sunday 14 October.
RAIL HERITAGE RESTORED
Rail Heritage WA volunteers at the Midland Railway
Workshops this week farewell two of their prized projects –
a small four-wheel brake van and a steam tank locomotive with a
combined age of 233 years.
Both vehicles are classified by the National Trust
and have been magnificently restored.
The Onslow brake van, believed
to be the oldest remaining in WA, dated from 1892 and served with
WA Government Railways before transferring to the Public Works Department
for use in north-west ports. In 1926 it began a new life in Onslow
as a passenger car, brake van and freight van.
Onslow van on arrival
The van has been part of the Onslow Museum’s
tramway display for more than 30 years, but was severely damaged
by a cyclone several years ago. The Onslow Museum, with the assistance
of a grant from Lotterywest, contracted Rail Heritage WA to restore
it. When the van arrived at Midland Workshops in August 2004 it
looked terrible but structurally it was in surprisingly good shape.”
A small group of volunteers carefully conserved
the van’s historic fabric and faithfully re-created it as
it was in its early days at Onslow.
H18 & Onslow
Steam tank engine H18 was built
in Glasgow, Scotland, in 1887 and used by WA Government Railways
in various locations including the Boyanup to Bunbury railway, at
Fremantle Harbour, on the Mundaring Weir line and at Esperance.
It was presented to the Australian Railway Historical Society in
1962.
The volunteers have meticulously restored the locomotive,
including giving it a mechanical overhaul, so that if a boiler becomes
available in future the rest of the locomotive is ready for a return
to steam operations.
H18 would be displayed at the Railway Museum
at Bassendean. When the museum at Boyanup was revamped, it could
go on display there as a link with the town’s earliest history.