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The XPT (express passenger train) is the mainstay of the NSW country passenger rail-network. Modelled on the British HST and introduced from 1982, they currently provide service from Sydney to Melbourne, Brisbane, Dubbo, Grafton and Casino. [102] An XPT consist can vary between four and seven cars depending on demand.
State Records Authority of New South Wales Annual Reports 1998 to 2005; Michael Allen ed. Archeion (Archives Office of NSW) No 5 June 1987 pp 7–11; Doust, Russell The Administration of Official Archives in New South Wales 1870–1980, M Lib thesis 1969; Peter J. Tyler, State Records New South Wales 1788 to 2011. Annandale, NSW: Desert Pea ...
A Standard stock electric suburban set, the first passenger train over the Sydney Harbour Bridge in 1932. New South Wales Government Railways (NSWGR) was an agency of the Government of New South Wales that administered rail transport in the colony, and then the state, of New South Wales, Australia, between 1855 and 1932.
State Rail Authority / Australian National: Sydney Central – Alice Springs: 21 November 1983 – 2 November 1987 Australind: Transwa: Perth – Bunbury: 24 November 1947–present AvonLink: Transwa: Midland – Northam: 24 September 1995–present Bathurst Bullet: NSW TrainLink: Sydney Central – Bathurst: 21 October 2012–present Brisbane ...
The Byron Bay Train is a passenger service in Byron Bay using a 620 class railcar converted for solar operation. A number of other private railways have been built in New South Wales to serve coal mines, steel works, notably the Port Kembla steel works, formerly operated by BHP (now BlueScope ) and quarries, especially in the first half of the ...
CountryLink was a passenger rail and road service brand that operated in regional areas of New South Wales, and to and from Canberra, Brisbane and Melbourne. [1] Originally created as a business unit (or sub-brand) of the State Rail Authority of New South Wales, it later became a subsidiary of RailCorp. [2]
The company was taken over by the New South Wales Government in 1854, and in 1855 the first railway in the state was opened between Sydney and the present-day Granville (see Rail transport in New South Wales). This railway was extended from Granville to the current Parramatta station and Blacktown in 1860 and Penrith in 1863.
The Western Sydney Records Centre comprises the State archives collection and the Government Records Repository. 2016 October 25. State Records renamed as "State Archives and Records Authority of New South Wales" and may be known as State Archives, State Archives NSW or State Archives and Records NSW.