Medical emergency, but too far from the nearest doctor or hospital? Never fear! Help is at hand from the Blackall Ambulance Train!!
Or would have been if your emergency had been a) last century; b) in Queensland's central west and c) within cooee of the train line to or from Blackall! Sadly, the ambulance train is no longer operational, and it's now housed at the Blackall railway museum.
This unique part of Blackall's history - a railcar equipped with medical supplies - provided medical aid and assistance to locals in the region when help would not otherwise have been available.
While clearly limited to areas accessible by rail (!), the train was often used to attend emergencies when the area was flooded and roads were blocked. How? The railway track embankment was often above the high water mark! In an emergency, the victim was able to be taken to an area accessible by the train, or train staff transported to the victim.
Despite its retirement, the ambulance train is another fine example of Outback innovation in action!
And you don't even have to be a train buff to appreciate it!!
While clearly limited to areas accessible by rail (!), the train was often used to attend emergencies when the area was flooded and roads were blocked. How? The railway track embankment was often above the high water mark! In an emergency, the victim was able to be taken to an area accessible by the train, or train staff transported to the victim.
Despite its retirement, the ambulance train is another fine example of Outback innovation in action!
And you don't even have to be a train buff to appreciate it!!
Happy travels!!
PS And the other photo? Other than showing the view from the Ambulance Train, it serves no real purpose other than my deep satisfaction in taking a photo like this with my trusty 20-year-old non-digital point-and-click camera!! Oh ... and also that I really like it!! See you next time!!
OH!
ReplyDeleteI've not heard of the ambulance train before, I hang my head in train buff shame.
Wait til Andrew reads about it!
@Jayne - not sure if it's unique to Australia, but believe it's unique IN Australia! Happy to be proven wrong (well ... not THAT happy, but at least accepting!)if anyone out there knows more!
ReplyDeleteYes, I haven't heard of it either, although Sydney and I think Melbourne too had ambulance trams. I think Sydney's was used to transport injured soldiers from ships at the docks to hospitals. Good find.
ReplyDeleteNever even heard of an ambulance train, so there you go, you're interesting AND informative!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the history of the rail ambulance. I have never heard of that. I am like you, I enjoy my digital point and shoot. Never leave home without it. See what pretty blues you found with yours.
ReplyDelete@Andrew - Ambulance trams? What happened to them?
ReplyDelete@Toni - thanx, but is that good??!!
@LV - yes, I realised the blue photo fitted in with blue Monday after I visited your site!
You had me at this line: "And you don't even have to be a train buff to appreciate it" - 'tis a rare achievement indeed, to find out something interesting about trains, so I take my hat off to you!
ReplyDeleteActually, it was a great idea - if your medical emergency wasn't a heart attack:-). This was really interesting and I love to collect anecdotes like this one. I hope you are having a great day. Blessings...Mary
ReplyDelete@Kath - yep, 'unique' overrides 'OMIGOD not another train thing ...' any day!
ReplyDelete@Mary - welcome back! And welcome back to my blog!! And yes, back then if you had a heart attack in a remote area, you were probably done for with or without the ambulance train! Thanx for your visit!!
What a great idea! I live remotely and we have a retired ambo who has started a group locally that has a defibrilator that can save you whilst you wait the 45 or so minutes for an ambulance. This could work on our defunct train line me thinks. Am very impressed with what your non-digital camera achieves! Will have to watch for you coming this way - I'm a lot of things and I'm sure some would call me a "quirky regional oddity"!
ReplyDeleteHi Cheryl! Any quirky regional oddities are more than welcome here! And who knows, may even be photographed/featured on this site!!! Let us know if you can implement the defunct train line plan - that would be amazing!
ReplyDeleteIt looks like the ambulance train was a very functional way to handle many medical needs.
ReplyDeleteHey Cathy! Yes, makes you wonder why it's still not on standby!! Thanx for dropping by!!
ReplyDeleteI suppose the Sydney one(s) was burnt, along with most of the trams at Randwick workshops. There was prison tram too, which ran from the Darlinghurst Court House to Long Bay Gaol. It is preserved at the Sydney Tram Museum.
ReplyDelete@Andrew - Bummer! What's with this wilful destruction of historical items? Now the prison tram is also a great idea!! In fact, the thought of it trundling through the streets laden with miscreants provides a disturbing mental image!!
ReplyDeleteHello from the Blackall Visitor Information Centre!
ReplyDeleteBlackall VIC is currently located here and will eventually have an equipped museum, and if we are lucky to also get the railway items up and running