Domestic Science Car 2.
Manual Training Car 4.
Domestic
Science Car 2. Note the wood stove recess over the draw hook.
Maternal and Child Welfare Car 7 (Baby Clinic)
Dental Clinic Car and Trailer Cars 1,2,3.4.
A few years earlier in 1958 there was Domestic Science Cars 1 & 2. (Built 1923), # 1 was written off Sep 61 and converted to CW 15. # 2 was written off in Sep 89. The car was found stored in the workshop???
Manual
Training Car 3 & 4. (Built 1925/28). It appears both were converted to
brake vans in 1942. No. 3 became 1335 and No. 4 became 1337. A note on 1337
history card goes like this.
Present
Car 1337 entered service as Manual Training Car No. 4 6th February
1928. Reclassified 2nd brake 18/9/42 and renumbered 1335. Reclassified
Manual Training Car No.4 11/8/48. Reclassified Display Car and renumbered 1337,
early January 1969. Renumbered again as 1335 late in January 1969, then again
renumbered as 1337 shortly afterwards. It still retains that number. The car
which entered service as 1337 was a 2nd corridor lavatory in service
22nd November 1944. Renumbered 1335 February 1969. Oct 1977 no
longer required as display car by Burns Philip & Co Ltd against for A. J.
Crown. The car was written off Jun 84. A note on history card for Domestic
Science Car No 2 showed that power for the car came from Manual Training Car 4.
This indicated at some stage both cars travelled together. Talk about a rabbit
hole???
Around
1965 saw the entry into service the Prisoner Car 773.
Car
773 entered service in 1913 as a 2nd class lavatory “BL” car. The
carriage was modified in 1936 with the toilets being moved to the end of the
carriage and reclassed 1st class lavatory “AL”. In 1963 the carriage
was reclassed back to “BL”. In 1965 bars were fitted to the windows and the
carriage was used to carry prisoners. In Brisbane the trains would stop at
Exhibition station to pick up and set down passengers for the carriage.
In 1976 the carriage was modified, lowering the heights of the seats for better vision was part of the work.
The carriage is currently part of the Pioneer Steam Railway fleet at Swanbank.
Living in Charleville some 483 miles west of Brisbane during the 1950’s and 60’s I didn’t see any of these carriages. The first car I recall seeing was the Domestic Science car, it was at the back of Ipswich Workshops during the mid-1960’s.
The
second car I saw was the Maternal and Child Welfare Car, one morning going to
work in 1972, the carriage was in the siding at Prairie. The next morning it
was gone. The carriage did spend time in Hughenden and Winton. Some history of
the carriage was recorded by Vincent J Little in the March 2004 issue of the
Australian Sn Modeller. The history card for the carriage shows it was a 2nd
Suburban Car No. 452 built in 1904. The writing on the card was hard to follow,
plans suggest it was converted into a lecture room with sleeping accommodation
in 1929 and then as a baby and child welfare car 7. 1951 it was converted into
a clinic car. The carriage was modified in 1964 and 1967 The carriage remained
in service until about 1984 before being donated to the ARHS Museum. Around
1996 it was transferred from the colliery siding Rosewood to the Darling Downs
Railway Society for restoration. At the time the carriage was not in very good
condition.
There were other cars that didn’t carry passengers but it’s time to get back on track and look at dental cars. The first dental clinic car was built in 1929 and was numbered No. 5. This was changed to No.1 in 1945. This was a very unique carriage, just 20 ft long, bogie at one end and a fixed single axle at the other end. It appears the carriage worked out of Cairns on the Atherton Tablelands and remained in service to the late 1970’s.
There
is quite a bit of information and tales about the Dental Cars on the internet.
Queensland
State Archives “Root Canal Express”
Queensland
Museum Blog. “Queensland Cavity Express”.
Australian
Dental Association Queensland. “My first
day as a travelling school dentist in the 1950’s” Denise McEniery
Trove
“Married life on wheels”. Two dentists marry and there first job was the
Townsville Dental cars.
The carriage had a dental surgery and accommodation (very small). The two windows/door compartment on the end above the round tank had a seat (most likely turned into a bunk as well) and cupboards. The end window was a separate compartment with a toilet and a circular bath. The other two windows on the other end, had a door on the other side contained a seat and a cupboard, my guess this was the waiting room. I couldn’t find a plan for the trailer wagon, one end looks like being a garage for a car and cables suggest where was a power plant. In later years LPG gas was fitted.
Blinds on the side give the carriage that far north appearance that was on other carriages in the division.
Dental Clinic No.1 last run was in 1978. The carriage was given to the signal & telegraph section Townsville for storage. The trailer was given a new number C 40847 in May 1978. There are two history cards for the same wagon, the other being C 40848. The wagon could not be found in 1987 and was written off.
In 1945 Dental Clinic Cars 2 and 3 entered service. Unit 2 worked the Central Division from Rockhampton and unit 3 the South Western Division from Brisbane. From time to time Unit 3 would be in the dock platform at Brisbane Central. The Dental hospital was just a short walk up the hill behind the station. The two Units were identical, one 53 ft carriage containing two dental surgery’s, two accommodation cabins, dinette, kitchenette, a toilet and a shower.
A 32 v power plant was located in one end. In 1958 the power plant was relocated to the trailer car, the plant room became another toilet and shower. The 32ft trailer car had a work bench, storage, petrol tank and garage for a car. Both cars had roof and underframe water tanks with a combined capacity of 1,400 gallons. In 1953 the trailer car garage door height was increased.
In
1963 all cars were altered to have 240 volts power system and in 1969 LPG gas
was fitted. The cars were withdrawn around 1983/4. Clinic cars 2 and 4 with
trailer car # 2 ? went to the ARHS and clinic & trailer cars # 3 went to
Pioneer Steam Railway. Records show the two trailers or their equipment could
have been swapped around.
The two cars at Pioneer Steam Railway have been restored.
Records
viewed didn’t show any itineraries for the cars, they but did show that the
dentists did visit locations away from the rail. Unit 3 appeared in a number of
heavy shunting incidents at Jondaryan, Wallumbilla and Roma Street. One report
showed the dentist chair had move more than 2 feet across the surgery smashing into
cupboards, the chair was not fixed to the floor for cleaning purposes.
Queensland
Railways Plan P-29 dated 2.6.45
Model.
Construction
was built using the following materials.
Styrene
sheet for the underframe.
Evergreen
scribed sheet and strip for the sides and end.
Caintode
Flats bogies, buffers, brake cylinder, dynamo.
Kadee
couplings.
The roofs were picked up from a buy & sell. They were somewhat different with less detail to the roofs on my 3ft 6in Models Sunshine Cars and were a few mm shorter. Thus, the sides of the clinic car were reduced to fit. They were solid resin and heavy weighting over 80 grams, using the dermal and a milling cutter the weight was reduced by about half.
Kadee
# 58 were used this time, # 158 whisker couples were not available when
purchasing my last order. A length of ⅛” brass tube is cut to make a pivot bush
for the coupling shaft, a 2mm screw and washer hold it all together. The #158
coupling allow you to have a smaller yoke in the headstock to limit the cross
travel of the coupling shaft. This stops the coupling hitting the buffers. Plus,
when shunting and pushing back it reduces the side swing in the coupler.
In
the 1960’s carriage roofs were black or a reddish brown, the white came along
in the late 1960’s/early 1970’s. For a period, I was using Floquil “Rust” for the
reddish-brown roofs. Then I switched to using SMS orange. At the NMRA
convention last year our convention bag had a bottle of SMS paint. My bottle
was VR orange. Bring one not to waste anything, I had to use it for something.
Time to do some experiments, first up some white was added, but didn’t work all
that well, it looked a bit like breakfast that didn’t agree with your belly
after a night on the grog. Back to the drawing board. Next up was to add some
black, and the results are above. Down the track, they will be weathered.
At
this point the carriages are not weathered, as more decals are required.
A few years back a 3ft 6in Models “AL” carriage kit was converted into a Maternal and Child Welfare Car no. 7 for a mate who lived in Winton as a boy growing up. This model was painted using Floquil paints.
All up a very interesting project, modelling a carriage set you didn’t know that well, showed you can still learn a lot about your prototype. Plus, believe it or not you learn new skills went you need fix one’s mistakes, not to talk about the new words you also leant.
Westgate
Carriage shop is still building carriages, next month we will look at the
Davidson Cars.
The June issue of the Australian Model Railway Magazine is in the shops, part two of Amby West is in the issue, it’s the operations side of the layout, it’s a bit different to that what’s in the blog, more has been added.
Until next time, enjoy the hobby and have fun.
Arthur H.
Acknowledgements.
QR Weekly Notices
Australian Model Railway Association Queensland Library
Photos from various Modelers and Historians
Queensland State Library.
Various Internet sites.






































































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