Royal Westphalian Railway Company
The Royal Westphalian Railway (Template:Lang-de, KWE), was a German rail company established in 1848 with funding from the Prussian government, which later became part of the Prussian State Railways. The network eventually extended about 315 km from Rheine via Hamm to Warburg and from Welver (near Hamm) to Oberhausen.
History
The Royal Westphalian Railway was initially established only to fill the 32 km-long gap between Hamm and Lippstadt, connecting the Münster–Hamm line of the Munster–Hamm Railway Company (Münster-Hammer Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft) opened in 1848 with the line being constructed at the same time by the Cologne-Minden-Thuringian Connection Railway Company (Köln-Minden-Thüringischen-Verbindungs-Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, KMTVEG). The latter company, however, went bankrupt in 1848 and further construction and the line's later operations were taken over by the Prussian government.
The cause of the bankruptcy of the KMTVEG was the difficulty of building a 600-metre-long tunnel at Willebadessen under the main ridge of the Eggegebirge range. The tunnel, which was never completed, was designed to avoid bridging the valley at Altenbeken. The remains of the site are still visible after more than 150 years; these ruins are known as the Old Railway (Alte Eisenbahn).
The main line of the Royal Westphalian Railway ran from Hamm via Soest, Lippstadt, Paderborn and Altenbeken to Warburg. It was opened on 4 October 1850 to Paderborn and on 21 June 1853 to Warburg. The line was first railway in western Germany to cross mountainous country. The Altenbeken Viaduct was a significant achievement of the early German railways.
After the company took over the Münster–Hamm Railway Company in 1855, it extended the Münster–Hamm line to Rheine in 1856 and to German ports on the North Sea.[1] Together with the Royal Hanoverian State Railways, it built a connection from Rheine to the German ports on the North Sea. This was a very important connection for Prussia because of the high tariffs charged by the Dutch Rhine ports. The Kingdom of Hanover was annexed by Prussia after the Austro-Prussian War of 1866 and two years later this line became part of the Westphalian Railway.
Together with the Rhenish Railway Company, it built and operated a generally straight line, opened in 1876, from Welver station (between Hamm and Soest), via Unna-Königsborn to Dortmund South station (which was destroyed in World War II). The line was extended to the west in 1879 as the Westphalian Emscher Valley Railway (westfälische Emschertalbahn, WfE) via Dorstfeld, Bodelschwingh, Mengede, Herne, Gelsenkirchen, Horst to Osterfeld WfE station. Operations on this line proved to be uneconomic and sections of it were soon closed, following the nationalisation of its main competitors.
Network
Opening | Length in km | Course | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1 October 1850 | 76.1 | Hamm–Paderborn | |
28 March 1851 | 4.6 | Warburg–Haueda | Leased[2] |
22 July 1853 | 54.5 | Paderborn–Warburg | Taken over with the Cologne-Minden-Thuringian Connection Railway Company[2] following a new route.[3] |
7 May 1855 | 34.9 | Münster–Hamm | Acquisition of Munster–Hamm Railway Company |
27 June 1856 | 39.0 | Münster–Rheine | |
1 October 1864 | 41.4 | Altenbeken–Höxter | |
10 October 1865 | 7.4 | Höxter–Holzminden | Connecting with the Duchy of Brunswick State Railway's Brunswick Southern Railway to Kreiensen, Jerxheim and Magdeburg |
1 January 1868 | 178.4 | Emden–Salzbergen/Rheine | Acquisition of the Emden–Rheine section of the Hanoverian Western Railway of the Royal Hanoverian State Railways[2] |
30 September 1875 | 60.3 | Münster–Enschede | |
15 May 1876 | 35.8 | Welver–Dortmund KWE | |
15 January 1878 | 64.0 | Ottbergen–Northeim | |
Summer 1878 | 80 | Emden–Norden–Esens–Wittmund/state border to Oldenburg | Constructed on behalf of the Prussian Ministry of Commerce to create a connection between Emden and Wilhelmshaven for military purposes[4] |
Summer 1878 | 14 | Abelitz–Aurich | Constructed on behalf of the Prussian Ministry of Commerce[4] |
1 September 1878 | 12 | Dortmund KWE–Mengede | |
12 November 1879 | ~35 | Bodelschwingh–Osterfeld KWE | |
15 March 1880 | 4 | Osterfeld KWE–Sterkrade KWE |
Notes
- ^ Ellerbrock, Karl-Peter. 150 Jahre Köln-Mindener Eisenbahn: Katalog Zur Gleichnamigen Ausstellungs- Und Veranstaltungsreihe: Eine Gemeinschaftsinitiative Der Stiftung Westfälisches Wirtschaftsarchiv ..Essen: Klartext, 1997. Print.
- ^ a b c H. Kobschätzky: Streckenatlas der deutschen Eisenbahnen 1835–1892, Düsseldorf 1971
- ^ Altenbekener Eisenbahnfreunde
- ^ a b "Eisenbahn in Ostfriesland - Zeittafel (chronology)" (in German). www.westbahn.de. Retrieved 1 October 2010.
References
- Menninghaus, Werner; Krause, Günter (1985). Die Königlich Westfälische Eisenbahn. Geschichte der Strecke Warburg–Hamm–Emden (in German). Uhle & Kleimann.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Klee, Wolfgang (2001). Eisenbahnen in Westfalen. Von den Anfängen bis zur Gegenwart (in German). Münster: Aschendorff.
- Wichert, Hans Walter (1994). ... vom Streckenbau zum Schnellausbau. Eine Dokumentensammlung zur Köln-Minden-Thüringer Verbindungsbahn 1845–1849 und den Anfängen der Königlich-Westfälischen Eisenbahn (in German). Paderborn.
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Jockel, Hans-Josef (1983). Die Eisenbahn im Eggegebirge Altenbeken (in German).
- Högemann, Josef; Kristandt, Peter (2003). Die Eisenbahn in Altenbeken. 150 Jahre! Eisenbahnviadukt Altenbeken. Vivat Viadukt (in German). Georgsmarienhütte.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)