Wow, driving a new car from Sydney to Charleville today would take the edge off the newness of a car. Back then it'd be just about ready for or scrapping, or at very least, a rebuild.
Yeah, I agree - guess they made 'em tougher back then?
I don't even know how you'd get there
Pretty damn certain that the Pacific Hwy as it we now it now didn't exist - not even sure if there was a coastal road from Sydney - Brisbane
Would the "main highway" have been through Cunningham's Gap
Edit: doing some searching & just found this
, which looks like it's dated 1901 & seems to show something similar to the current New England Hwy
I know he took "some" months to make the trip, then the grazier kept him on to teach him how to drive his new car
He then stayed round Charleville area for a couple of years, including doing a mail run - go out on this leg of triangular trip, camp overnight, across the top of the triangle, camp, come home down the other leg! Then travelled to Brisbane to join the AIF late 1914 / early 1915, in time to make it to Gallipoli, then later France.
Yep, & we complain about doing things tough!