Tasman Limited
DP railcar, as used on the initial Tasman Limited services in 1954/55 | |
Overview | |
---|---|
Service type | Passenger train |
Status | Ceased |
First service | April 1954 |
Last service | 28 July 1978 |
Former operator(s) | Tasmanian Government Railways |
Route | |
Start | Hobart |
End | Wynyard |
Distance travelled | 378 kilometres |
Average journey time | 8 hours |
Service frequency | daily |
Line used |
Main Western |
The Tasman Limited was a passenger train operated by Tasmanian Government Railways (TGR) on the Main and Western lines between Hobart, Launceston and Wynyard from April 1954 until July 1978. The service has the distinction of being the last ever regularly scheduled passenger train service in Tasmania.
History
With the introduction of the X class in 1950, Tasmania became the first state in Australia to operate mainline diesel locomotives, and the creation of an intercity express such as the Tasman was further established by the modernisation of the system and infrastructure, such as the redevelopment of Hobart's railway station in 1951.
The service initially began in April 1954, using articulated DP class railcars built in 1949/50 by Commonwealth Engineering. Operating daily, Mondays to Saturdays, the railcars carried name-boards depending on their direction of travel:
- Hobart to Launceston was The Tamar
- Launceston to Wynyard was the Table Cape
- Wynyard to Launceston was The Launcestonian
- Launceston to Hobart was The Derwent.
The Tasman departed Hobart at 08:35 and arrived in Launceston at 13:08, and Wynyard at 16:45. Stopping only for passengers at Derwent Park Junction, several intermittent stops happened in between due to scheduling conflicts on Tasmania's single lines, such as at Parattah in the state's Midlands. The train would often have to wait here for down-line freight to move on through, before it could proceed.
In December 1955, with an increase in patronage and the availability of purpose-built ACS articulated saloon and buffet carriages, the Tasman began being drawn by X class locomotives, often with a headboard for the service. Y class locomotives were also used.
Taking approximately eight hours to wind its way through the countryside to reach its final destination, the Tasman was never considered a true "express" train even by the standards of the day; however, the TGR advertised it as such and along with its specialised service and arrangements, it was considered the state's great luxury passenger train.
Decline and termination
During the 1960s and 1970s, investment in the railways of Tasmania was sufficiently low, that by 1974 all suburban and regional passenger services were halted "temporarily". With the influx of greater car ownership and more investment in the state's highway system than rail, the Tasman became the last of the daily passenger trains.
On 1 March 1978, the TGR was taken over by Australian National who reduced the service from six trips a week to three due to low patronage, and not long after it was announced that Tasman Limited was no longer viable. The last service departed Hobart on 28 July 1978.
A railcar and some of the rolling stock has been converted into a series of shops called the Margate Train outside Margate, Tasmania.
External links
- Photos of the Tasman Limited
- Tasman Limited photo storyboard
- "Memories of the Tasman Limited"
- Tasman Limited Promotional Film, c. 1955
- TNT-9 News report 28 July 1978 Last Tasman Limited