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Tea and Sugar Train Archive

Name of Collection

Tea and Sugar Train Archive

Type of material

Reports, notes (in diary form), correspondence, medical notes. RICE (remote and isolated children's exercise) information/correspondence. Background material (articles).

Inclusive dates

1976-1982.

Quantity

1 file storage box (6 manilla folders, 2 notebooks).

Form if not original

 Some photocopied material.

Location

Special Collections, Central Library, Level 3

Conditions of access

General conditions.

Notes

Documents donated to the Medical library (c.1994) by Robin Radford, the wife of Anthony Radford. Radford was the founder of the Flinders Medical Centre Community Medicine Department. This department provided the medical staff who travelled on the Tea and Sugar train every six weeks, providing medical care to isolated railway workers, their families and pastoral families.

Further description

The Tea and Sugar train began as a service provided by Australian National Railways for their workers on the line across the Nullarbor Plain. The service gradually increased to also serve isolated communities along the route. Running from Pt. Augusta to Kalgoorlie, the train carried groceries and fresh meat (with butchering facilities) and also provided banking facilities. From the late 1970's, medical services were included, provided by the Flinders Medical centre with the assistance of the Royal Flying Doctor Service. In 1981, the train was restricted to stops at railway camps only. The butcher's van was removed in 1982, although prepacked meat could be ordered at Pt. Augusta prices. As the size and number of railway settlements decreased (due to track and train improvement), the route was shortened to terminate at Cook. The last run of the Tea and Sugar train was in 1996.

Date of deposit

1994

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Maintained by:
Gillian Dooley
Special Collections Librarian
Flinders University Library.