Ambarawa Railway Museum
Ambarawa
is famous nationwide by the credo Palagan Ambarawa. Small city that
forgotten nowadays but became one of the important base camp of
National heroes during Dutch occupancy in World War II. A small
city in the junction of national road between Yogyakarta to Semarang
and accessible to several small cities nearby like Salatiga, Magelang
and Bandungan. Fifty km south of Semarang, Ambarawa has locomotives
of various types and ages, and it is still possible to ride on a
cog railway between Ambarawa and Bedono, a village nearby. Ambarawa
Railway Museum 50 km south of Semarang, Ambarawa is the home of
Java's antique locomotives, housed in a museum. Prior arrangements
should be made for groups. Also of interest are a collection of
antique telephones and other instrument used for railway communication.
The museum was established in the 1970s primarily
to preserve a wide selection of the steam locomotives, which were
then coming to the end of their useful lives on the 3ft 6in (1067mm)
gauge railways of the Indonesian State Railway (the Perusahaan Negara
Kereta Api, PNKA). These are parked in the open air next to the
original station, originally a transhipment point between the 4ft
8 in gauge branch from Kedungjati to the northeast and the 3ft 6in
gauge line onward towards Yogyakarta via Magelang to the south.
It is still possible to see that the two sides of the station were
built to accommodate different size trains. Ambarawa lays some way
above sea level and was an administrative centre for the Dutch colonialists.
Now the provincial Government of Central Java is increasingly taking
an interest from the point of view of its heritage significance
and its potential as a tourist attraction. Non-Governmental bodies
like the Semarang Heritage Society are also acting to assist and
there is also an unofficial overseas group 'The Friends of Ambarawa
Railway Museum'.
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