About Bundaberg Railway Museum
Bundaberg's first railway station, built in 1881 as an outlet for the Mt Perry railway bringing copper from the mines, is now preserved as a proper museum. Located some 500 metres from its original site, the museum houses a wide variety of railway items past and present. The museum is a haven for train buffs. It include photos, uniforms and catering items from dining rooms to the Tilt Train. Books, including office records, engine driver's manuals, timetables and rule books. Tools of various types: locomotive spanners, heavy jacks and track work tools, Interlocked signal cabin recovered from Lowmead station, the last CTC panel from Bundaberg, and modern day transponders, A 1921 guard's van (originally a sleeping car) and a butter car insulated with cow's hair which stays cool even without the ice blocks. Static displays outside include a diamond crossing for cane trams to cross the government lines and various couplings, buffers, drawhooks and air hoses used on older rolling stock.
Visit Official Site ↗Bundaberg Railway Museum appears in the QLD2032 tourism layer, part of the Bundaberg visitor economy. Explore nearby property intelligence via LotScan or locally-registered trades in the contractor directory.
Listing sourced from the Australian Tourism Data Warehouse (ATDW) via Tourism and Events Queensland. QLD2032 is an independent platform, not affiliated with this business — details link to its official site; we host no booking, transactions, or imagery. Verify directly with the operator before booking or travelling. Removal requests: [email protected] (24-hour SLA).