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Chemins de fer du Midi

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Map of the chemins de fer du Midi railway network in the station Bordeaux-Saint-Jean.
Inauguration of the Bordeaux-Sète line on April 2, 1857 at Toulouse-Matabiau station.
Participation certificate of the Compagnie des Chemins de Fer du Midi, issued 4. July 1927

The Compagnie des chemins de fer du Midi (abbr. CF du Midi), also known in English as the Midi or Southern Railway, was an early French railway company which operated a network of routes in the southwest of the country, chiefly in the area between its main line – which ran from Bordeaux, close to the Atlantic coast, to Sète on the Mediterranean – and the Pyrenees.

The company was established by the Pereire brothers, who thus broke the virtual monopoly held in France by James Rothschild on the slow-paced railway projects taking place in the area of Paris during the 1840s and 1850s. The Rothschild branch of Paris responded by strengthening its grip on the sector with an alliance to the industrialist Talabot. The Pereires in turn founded their financial company Crédit Mobilier.[1]

In 1934 the company was merged with the Chemin de fer de Paris à Orléans to become part of the Chemins de fer de Paris à Orléans et du Midi (PO-Midi).

In 1856, the Midi completed its rail line from Bordeaux to Toulouse.[2][3] In 1857, it continued on from Toulouse through Narbonne to Sète.[2] This put it in competition with the Canal du Midi, and on 28 May 1858 the railway took over the lease of the canal.[2][4]

Electrification

Compagnie des chemins de fer du Midi power station near Artouste

In 1909, the Compagnie du Midi launched a vast program of electrification of its lines under the impetus of the engineer Jean-Raoul Paul (1869-1960). It was a huge challenge for the time because it went far beyond the scope of railway operations alone. It was necessary to build infrastructure such as dams, power plants and distribution systems.

The company was far from coal production centres, so it was hard to get the fuel required for steam traction, and some coal was even imported from England. The proximity of the Pyrenees made hydropower generation possible and this favoured electrification. The shortage of coal during the war of 1914-1918, and especially its prohibitive cost after the war, provided further impetus for electrification. After investigations in Switzerland and Germany, a system using alternating current (AC) at 12 kV and 16⅔ Hz was chosen for economic reasons. The three-phase system was rejected as being too complex so a single-phase system was chosen.

The narrow-gauge Cerdanya line was electrified from the start because its gradients (up to 6%) were too steep for steam traction. The Perpignan - Villefranche-de-Conflent line (Pyrénées-Orientales) was chosen as the site for future tests because it provided conditions of both plain and mountain. This was the only line that was not later converted to 1,500 volts. It operated thus until 1971. From 1911, the company tried six different types of overhead line system and chose the American Westinghouse system. This design was very simple and was capable of absorbing temperature variations.

Even before the end of the tests, the company became a candidate for the construction of Eastern and Western trans-Pyrenees railways. Electric traction was chosen from the outset, reducing construction costs by allowing steeper gradients and sharper curves. The company then began an intensive electrification programme for the network, including work on the tracks, the construction of hydroelectric plant for the production of electrical energy and the creation of a distribution network for the transport of this energy.

On 29 August 1920, the government imposed the 1500 V direct current (DC) system, mainly because the army did not want to use the same system as Germany. The reaction of the Midi was immediate and the company launched, in December 1920, new electrification programmes at 1500 V. From 1923, all facilities operated at 1500 V, except the Perpignan - Villefranche-de -Conflent line. In less than two years, the Midi network had succeeded in converting. The programme of electrification of the Midi was impressive because, in only a dozen years, the electrified network of the Midi formed a coherent whole. The programme ended in 1932, with the exception of the Montauban - Sète link, which was only switched on in 1935 after the signing of an agreement with the Chemin de fer de Paris à Orléans (PO).

Electric locomotives

Where numbers appear inconsistent, this may be because Midi and SNCF used different numbering systems.

Alternating current
The prototype 1′C1′ locomotive, E 3101
SNCF Z 4900 class [fr] railcar

Six prototype locomotives were ordered:
Midi numbers first

Direct current

SNCF numbers first

References

  1. ^ López-Morell, Migule Á. (2015). Rothschild; Una historia de poder e influencia en España. Madrid: MARCIAL PONS, EDICIONES DE HISTORIA, S.A. p. 141. ISBN 978-84-15963-59-2.
  2. ^ a b c Rolt, L. T. C. (1973). From Sea to Sea. Ohio University Press. ISBN 978-0-8214-0152-1.
  3. ^ Mukerji, Chandra (2009). Impossible Engineering. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-14032-2.
  4. ^ "Nicolas Jansburg's Structurae article on Canal du Midi (Translated from French)". Retrieved 13 October 2009.

Further reading

  • Ministère des travaux publics, Recueil des lois et conventions relatives aux chemins de fer du Nord, de l'Est, d'Orléans, de Paris-Lyon-Méditerranée et du Midi : 1883 à 1910, Paris, Imprimerie Nationale, 1911, 821 p. (lire en ligne [archive])
  • Pierre Rivals, La fusion des exploitations des Compagnies des chemins de fer de l'Orléans et du Midi, Librairie du Recueil Sirey, Paris, 1936, 151 pages
  • Didier Janssoone, Biarritz : La Gare du Midi, Cheminements, 2008 - (ISBN 978-2-84478-642-5)
  • Christophe Bouneau, « Chemins de fer et développement régional en France de 1852 à 1937 : la contribution de la compagnie du Midi », dans la revue Histoire, économie et société, 1990, 9e année, no 1, Les transports, pp. 95–112 (lire [archive])
  • Conférences faites à la gare Saint-Jean, à Bordeaux, Paris, Hachette, 1867-1868, 320 p. (lire en ligne [archive])