,
Ballarat , NSW Only one
Concord or "Jack" coach of the type imported from the United States by Cobb & Co in the 1850s and 1860s survives. According to Deborah Tranter, while Australian built stagecoaches utilized the thorough-brace technology found on the Concord coach, they were generally smaller, lighter, straighter in line and had less room for passengers than the US coaches. Coaches built at the Charleville coachworks were generally designed for either 8 or 14 passengers. In addition to reproductions, a number of original Cobb & Co stagecoaches still exist in varying states of preservation. Often repainted in the 20th century, the provenance of some is now difficult to determine. These include: • An imported "Concord" coach built by
Abbot-Downing Company of
New Hampshire. Imported by F.B. Clapp and Co, c1869 and used in the Ballarat area. It is preserved in original condition and held by
Museum Victoria • Another stagecoach, possibly built in Geelong, Victoria c1880, is held by
Museum Victoria. It is believed to have been the last mail coach to operate commercially in Victoria — in 1916. • Two stagecoaches, numbered 48 and 100, built in Charleville, Queensland in the late 19th century, are in the National Carriage Collection at the
Cobb & Co Museum in
Toowoomba. • Another stagecoach built in Charleville, Queensland, c1890 is preserved at the
Powerhouse Museum in
Sydney. • An Australian-built stagecoach, possibly also built at the Cobb & Co factory in Charleville in the late 19th century, is in the collection of the
National Museum of Australia in
Canberra. Often described as the "Nowlands Coach," it was owned and operated by Nowlands Line of Coaches in the Liverpool Plains district. • An Australian built stagecoach is in the
Western Australian Museum at
Kalgoorlie. • A locally built stagecoach is on public display in the main street of
Hay, New South Wales. • A stagecoach built in
Bathurst is on display in the Visitor Information Centre, Bathurst, New South Wales. • A stagecoach is on display at the Cambridge Downs Heritage Display Centre,
Richmond, Queensland. ==Other remembrances==