NEW  ZEALAND
FO LK * SONG

Big Bull Yank
lyrics Will Lawson
c1900,    music Gus Hubbard c1980

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In 1892, a Baldwin 2-6-2 Prairie class locomotive set a world narrow gauge speed record on the Longburn line.

C                          Am                                  F                           C
When they take the Gov'ment engines off at the end of the Gov'ment road
                               Am                          G                            C
You'll hear a Baldwin's wheezy cough as they back her down to the load
                                             Am                       F                 C
For this is the stretch where the mail trains race for 50 miles and more
                                 Am                     G                E
Making up time that the tardy pace on the hills had lost before
        F                          C                                  F                           C
They couple her on with a time-worn jest where the Longburn block bells call
                             Am                            G                C
The big Bull Yank will do her best when they let the signal fall

                       F               C                              F                  C
        And you'll never feel a brake-shoe bite or the gaping buffers jar,
                                              Am                       G                         C
        When the big Bull Yank has got you tight at the end of her coupling-bar


C                                    Am                         F                         C
Now hear the sound of her hard exhaust, as her weight leans on the train,
                                       Am                          G                      C
There's a heavy roar as the bridge is crossed, and she is free on the plain.
                               Am                                          F                            C
Where the flax-leaves gleam in the autumn sun, you can hear the great wheels romp
                                          Am                     G            E
She's breaking her heart for a record run, by the Tokomaru swamp.
        F                       C                            F                          C
Ah ! There is life in the rushing cars, and the clamour of wheels is rhyme
                                   Am                         G                       C
Straining and rolling, and throwing stars to the call of her double chime.

                       F               C                              F                  C
        And you'll never feel a brake-shoe bite or the gaping buffers jar,
                                              Am                       G                         C
        When the big Bull Yank has got you tight at the end of her coupling-bar



C                              Am                           F                      C
Mile upon mile see her race and haul, and the townships flitting by
                                   Am                 G                            C
All hear the boast in her tuneful call that tells that her speed is high.
                                 Am                          F                          C
You can feel her galloping round the curves, and rolling down on her springs,
                                    Am                          G                    E
And the cars all follow in giddying swerves, like hurrying hunted things.
      F                             C                                F                        C
Her black smoke tells of a fire hard-coaled, they're driving her all they know
                                            Am                   G                     C
For the big Bull Yank has taken hold, and they've settled to let her go.

                       F               C                              F                  C
        And you'll never feel a brake-shoe bite or the gaping buffers jar,
                                              Am                       G                         C
        When the big Bull Yank has got you tight at the end of her coupling-bar


The Big Bull Yank

From WMRY.NetFirms

In 1891 the Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company ordered two Prairie type (2-6-2) tender locomotives from the Baldwin locomotive works, Philadelphia, U.S.A. to cope with increasing traffic on the Company's 84 mile line between Wellington and Longburn.

The locomotives were intended to work the easily graded section of line north of Paekakariki. Here the Baldwin 2-8-0s that brought the trains through the hills from Wellington would hand their load to the Prairie's for the fifty-seven mile run across the Manawatu plains to Longburn. Both of them were in service before the end of the year, being given road numbers 9 and 10.

The two engines soon proved to be favourites, not only were they more powerful than their sisters, but they rode better and could run faster, indeed it was their speed that ultimately made them legendary.

On the 20th July, 1892, No 10 headed out of Wellington with a special speed trial train, consisting of the locomotive, a passenger car and a van. After negotiating the hilly Wellington - Paekakariki section, No 10 rapidly picked up the pace as she rolled onto the Manawatu Plains. The loco ran freely at speeds of 50-55 m.p.h. and as she crossed the Tokomaru swamp she ran fifteen miles in fifteen minutes, hitting a top speed of 64.4 m.p.h. and thus setting the world speed record for the 3ft 6in gauge.


The Wellington and Manawatu Railway Company

From Wikipedia

The Wellington and Manawatu Railway (WMR) was a railway between Thorndon in Wellington, and Longburn, near Palmerston North

Unlike many other early railways in New Zealand, it was privately owned. At the time of the railway's founding, the government had already constructed a railway linking Palmerston North and the sea-port at Foxton, and was planning to extend its line to Wellington. However, a group of Wellington businessmen grew impatient at the government's delays, and chose to fund their own connection.

The WMR was founded in 1881, and the laying of track was completed in 1886. The WMR ran for about 134 kilometres. From central Wellington , the line wound through the hills (1880s photo) to Johnsonville, then proceeded to Tawa, Porirua, Paekakariki, Paraparaumu, Otaki, Shannon and Longburn.

The decision to pass through Shannon meant that the line joined the existing Palmerston-Foxton line in the middle, at Longburn, rather than at Foxton. This route was chosen as being more direct.

A number of new towns were established along the railway's route, notably Plimmerton, named after company director and 'Father of Wellington' John Plimmer, and Levin, named after William Hort Levin, a director of the company. The trains was advanced by standards of the time, having comfortable carriages, electric lighting, and telephone communication between stations.

The WMR was bought by the government in 1908, and integrated into the New Zealand Railways Department.

Will Lawson

From ADB.Online

(1876-1957) born at Gateshead, Durham, England When Will was 4 the Lawsons migrated to New Zealand. His father joined the New Zealand Insurance Co. and four years later was transferred to Brisbane. Here Will completed his education at Brisbane Grammar School. After his family returned to New Zealand in 1892, he worked as a clerk in the Wellington office of the Australian Mutual Provident Society, where he remained for the next eighteen years.

Inspired by the poetry of Henry Lawson (no relation), Lawson began to write ballads on sea and railway subjects. His first collection of verse, The Red West Road, appeared in Wellington in 1903.

In 1912 Lawson moved to Sydney to work on the Evening News. He continued to publish in the Bulletin and the Lone Hand, and met many of their writers and artists. During World War I, medically unfit for active service, he returned to New Zealand to write for various newspapers. After the war he worked as a publicity officer and compiled tourist guides. Over the following decade Lawson alternated between Sydney and New Zealand, working as a journalist, publicist and travel agent.

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Published on the web Jan 2007