Old Eyre Highway is a remnant part of the Eyre Highway that was abandoned in the construction of a route closer to the coast of the Great Australian Bight.
It has been known as the East West Road,[1][2] and briefly in the 1940s as Forrest Highway.[3][4]
Portions of the old route now exist in a range of protected areas, Aboriginal lands, and National Parks and reserves on the South Australian side. Permits to access are required from Yalata, as well as SA National Parks for camping and access.[5]
The sandy track and numerous cattle grids[6][7] were experienced by traffic well into the late 1970s when the SA route was sealed and moved south.
The route can be seen in most online maps as being between Yalata, South Australia and Eucla, Western Australia.
Tanks
During the survey and construction of the Trans-Australian Railway, and after into the stages of working on the Eyre Highway, locations for water on the Nullarbor and vicinity of the Eyre highway were given a range of names:
Rain sheds and rain tanks - there was reference to locations as early as 1894[8]
Existence of wells and springs across the area has been documented, with the water ranging from drinkable to undrinkable.[13][14]
At various stages in time, water rationing was required as travellers would seek water from stations on the route.[15]
Named locations
Some of the named features on the route include:
Ivy Tanks - an abandoned locality in South Australia.[16][17][18] Ivy Tanks was regularly identified in stories in the Walkabout magazine in the 1960s.[19][20] It was also the location of a repeater station for the Australian telecommunication network.[21][22] The locality is designated a postcode despite lack of habitation.
^"EAST-WEST ROAD". Great Southern Herald. Vol. XL, no. 2, 074. Western Australia. 1 November 1941. p. 2. Retrieved 26 April 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
^"EAST-WEST ROAD". Coolgardie Miner. Vol. 7, no. 331. Western Australia. 6 November 1941. p. 6. Retrieved 26 April 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
^"FORREST HIGHWAY". The Northern Miner. Queensland, Australia. 29 January 1942. p. 4. Retrieved 26 April 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
^Australian Geographical Society (1 April 1964), "FRIENDLY HIGHWAY (1 April 1964)", Walkabout, 30 (4), Australian National Travel Association, ISSN0043-0064
^Australian Geographical Society (1 May 1974), "HENRIETTA AND THE TERROR (1 May 1974)", Walkabout, 40 (5), Australian National Travel Association, ISSN0043-0064
^Australian Geographical Society (1 June 1969), "Communications Across the Nullarbor (1 June 1969)", Walkabout, 35 (6), Australian National Travel Association, ISSN0043-0064