A Haunting at the National Railway Museum
Located in Port Adelaide, The National Railway
Museum offers a glimpse into South Australia’s railway past. Within its many
sheds sit old trains from all eras of our railway past, including Steam
Trains, Diesel Engines, old Red Hens and even the old Callington Railway
Station, but did you know, there are also claims the site is haunted?
The National Railway Museum
started originally on Railway Terrace, Mile End in 1963 and was run entirely by
volunteers, who not only restored and preserved old trains but wrote and
published books about them too.
In 1988 the volunteers sought a new site
where their trains could be kept undercover to keep them out of the weather,
and in pristine condition. After a Government grant and help from the History
Trust of SA, a new site was purchased.
The Port Dock Station Railway Museum was
opened in 1988. In 2001 a new facility was opened within the existing one that
featured exhibits from the Australian National Railways and the Commonwealth
Railways. With the new exhibit came a new name for the site, one that remains
today “The National Railway Museum Port Adelaide”.
Within the complex are a series of sheds containing many displays of railway related items, including a miniature train set and old steam train carriages one can walkthrough. There is also the original 1878 Port Dock Station goods shed on the eastern side of the complex, and the old Callington booking office, which was built in 1951 in the town of Callington, near Murray Bridge. The building was taken from Callington in 1991 and re-erected in Port Adelaide in 1994.
The museum also has in its collection an original coffin trolley used until 1982 the Adelaide Railway Station to transport coffins by hand through the terminal.
My father worked in the railways, as did both
his parents, so trains were a big part of my life growing up. My wife and I,
and my Mother-In-Law had investigated the Steamtown Heritage Rail Centre in
2011, and had some great experiences, so when we were invited to join Lyon
Paranormal, Paranormal Spectrum and The Ghosts Within to investigate the
National Railway Museum for paranormal activity, my whole team made themselves
available for the opportunity!
There had been ongoing reports of spooky thing
happening at the site, including reports of a shadow person, and of phones
ringing when they are not plugged into the wall.
It is thought that one of the trains,
the “Y 12” may, in fact, be the very train that was involved in Australia’s first
terror attack, at Silverton, near Broken Hill. On New Year’s Day 1915, two
Turkish men opened fire into the carriages this locomotive which was hauling, a
picnic train, killing a number of passengers. It is believed by some parties
that the spirits of those deceased may linger near the locomotive.
Other deaths onsite include railway
workers killed while working in the rail yard shunting trains. There is also an
unconfirmed story of a man who fell asleep on the rails whilst very drunk and
was run over by a train.
We investigated as many carriages and trains as we could enter on the night, but for us, it seemed the spirits did not want to communicate. However, Paranormal Spectrum’s investigators did manage to collect an EVP during their sessions.
The National Railway Museum
Port Adelaide is located at 76 Lipson Street Port Adelaide – you can find more
information about exhibits and the train via their website at: http://www.natrailmuseum.org.au/
Allen Tiller is the Australian star of the international hit
television show “Haunting: Australia” and author of “The Haunts of Adelaide –
History, Mystery and the Paranormal” as well as being a historian, lecturer, poet,
musician, Tour Guide, blogger and podcaster. Allen is also a volunteer for many
different associations and groups.
You can find Allen online at:
www.twitter.com/Allen_Tiller
www.facebook.com/AllenHauntingAustralia
https://www.facebook.com/TheHauntsOfAdelaide
First published in MEGAscene issue 6 2016
© Allen Tiller
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