Once described as the 'eighth wonder of the world', the grand old Zig Zag is back on track

The Zig Zag Railway in NSW was described as "the eighth wonder of the world" for people in the 1870s. Now, volunteers have restored it to its former glory.

Driver Lee Wiggins instructs his colleague a he backs up the Locomotive 218A during the reopening of the historic Zig Zag Railway in Lithgow

Driver Lee Wiggins instructs his colleague as he backs up the Locomotive 218A during the reopening of the historic Zig Zag Railway in Lithgow, NSW, on 13 May. Source: AAP / Jeremy Ng

Key Points
  • The 154-year-old Zig Zag railway is ready to reopen to the public.
  • It was closed 10 years ago due to stricter rail regulations, and was ravaged by bushfires, vandalism and storms.
  • Volunteers have been upgrading the station at the foot of the mountains near Lithgow to return the heritage railway to its former glory.
With soot on the palms of his hands, under his fingernails and dusted across his nose and cheeks, Lee Wiggins is at one with a 54-tonne steam locomotive.

Mr Wiggins, wearing a black felt train driver's hat, was at the helm of one of the first passenger trips on the grand Zig Zag Railway on Saturday morning, a decade after the NSW Blue Mountains tourist icon was forced to close.

"They're not like driving a car. You sit down and you feel what the engine is telling you and you respond to it," he said.

"It's the closest thing to a living piece of machinery there is."
A driver waving from an old-fashioned train.
Driver Lee Wiggins waves out of the Locomotive 218A during the reopening of the historic Zig Zag Railway in Lithgow, NSW. Source: AAP / Jeremy Ng
Visitors will be able to experience a similar sense of awe when the 154-year-old railway reopens to the public from 27 May after local volunteers worked for 10 years to return it to its former glory.

The railway closed in 2012 due to stricter rail regulations and rising operational costs, while the site was subsequently ravaged by bushfires, vandalism and storms.

The Gospers Mountain fire that tore through the region during Black Summer in 2019 turned thousands of sleepers to ash and damaged signalling equipment and buildings.
Volunteers have long been upgrading the station at the foot of the mountains near Lithgow, restoring the tracks, and painting the trains to return the heritage railway to its former glory.

Chairman Lee Burton said he was proud of the small group of people who got the Zig Zag back on track.
An old fashioned train being driven on tracks next to a cliff.
VIPs and members take photos out the window of the carriage during the reopening of the historic Zig Zag Railway in Lithgow. Source: AAP / JEREMY NG/AAPIMAGE
"I can't wait to once again share our historic railway with not only the people of Lithgow and NSW but from all over Australia and beyond," he said.

Despite the enormous challenges, volunteers persisted and the Office of the National Rail Safety Regulator this month granted the railway full accreditation to run.

About 100 locals from the neighbouring villages of Clarence and Dargan sat in the heritage carriages on Saturday, among the first visitors to see the bright green World War II-era locomotive back in action.

The engine, affectionately known as The Yank for its US origins, filled the air with the rich aroma of coal steam as the train slowly rattled along cliffs and arching sandstone viaducts.

Passengers took in dramatic views of the canyons in the Gardens of Stone National Park, as well as the skeletons of thousands of eucalypts still scarred by fire.

A wide shot of bushland with a viaduct railway bridge next to a cliff.
Bushfires roared through the area in 2019 and 2020, destroying many of the railway's sleepers. Source: AAP / JEREMY NG/AAPIMAGE
Dargan local David Gerdes, who lost his house in the 2019 fires, said he had been longing for the Zig Zag to re-open.

"I've really missed the sound of the steam whistles," he said.

"It's more than just a steam railway, it's a piece of history."

The Zig Zag Railway opened in October 1869, lauded as an early technological triumph as trains moved people and produce to and from Sydney over steep rocky cliffs and sandstone viaducts.

In 1910 a deviation bypassed the inefficient railway and it was turned into a reserve until a volunteer group opened a tourist passage in the 1970s.

'Eighth wonder of the world'

A national newspaper article from 1947 described the early days of the railway as being "the eighth wonder of the world" for people in the 1870s.

Having volunteered on the railway during the 2013 fires, Mr Gerdes hopes the re-opening marks a new era for the region.

"It's been an awful thing for us all to go through, but we've been through it together and it's really strengthened community bonds."
Regulation this month granted it full accreditation to run as a tourist line.

Passengers will soon take in sweeping views of the mountains from steam locomotive AC16 218, known as The Yank, one of two surviving engines out of 20 imported from the US in 1943.

"The Zig Zag railway is one of NSW's greatest engineering feats," local MP Paul Toole told NSW parliament this week.

"The Zig Zag railway will once again be celebrated as part of our heritage well into the future."

The reinvigorated Zig Zag will run three 90-minute trips on Saturdays and Sundays every fortnight.

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4 min read
Published 13 May 2023 3:22pm
Source: AAP, SBS



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