Freight & Container Transportation
| Editor | Frank Shennen |
|---|---|
| Categories | Transport |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| Publisher | Shennen Publishing |
| Founder | Frank Shennen |
| First issue | May 1967 |
| Final issue | June 1985 |
| Country | Australia |
| Based in | Surry Hills, Sydney |
| Language | Australian English |
| ISSN | 0016-0865 |
Freight & Container Transportation was a Sydney-based monthly trade magazine covering freight transport in Australia. It was published between May 1967 and June 1985.
History
Freight & Container Transportation was established in May 1967 by Frank Shennen of Shennen Publishing, which already published the trade magazines Railway Transportation (established 1951) and Truck & Bus Transportation.[1] The magazine focused on the road, sea, and air freight industries in Australia.[2]
The magazine's launch coincided with a transformative period in Australian freight transport. Australia had pioneered containerised shipping with the construction of MV Kooringa, the world's first purpose-built fully-cellular container ship, which entered domestic service in 1964.[3] International container shipping arrived in Australia in March 1969 when the Encounter Bay made its debut visit to Fremantle, marking Australia's entry into the global container revolution.[4] By the mid-1960s, major Australian ports were preparing for the introduction of purpose-built cellular container ships on the Europe to Australia trade, a change that would prove more significant to commerce than the earlier transition from sail to steam.[5]
The magazine ceased publication in June 1985.[6] Its sister publication Railway Transportation had ceased a decade earlier in December 1974.
See also
References
- ^ "The people behind F&CT". Freight & Container Transportation: 17. May 1967.
- ^ "10th Anniversary issue of Freight & Container Transportation". Freight & Container Transportation: 6–7. April 1977.
- ^ "History and Heritage – Container Trade". Fremantle Ports. Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ "50 years since international container trade started". Fremantle Ports. 28 March 2019. Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ "Australia's Maritime History". Shipping Australia. Retrieved 31 January 2026.
- ^ "Freight & Container Transportation". National Library of Australia catalogue. Retrieved 31 January 2026.