Chemin de Fer de l'État

Chemin de Fer de l'État

The Chemins de fer de l'État ("State Railways"), often referred to in France as the réseau de l'État ("State network"), was an early French railway company.

History

The company was established by state order of the Third Republic on 25 May 1878 to take over ten small failing railway companies operating in the area between the rivers Loire and Garonne. On 18 November 1908, the État absorbed the Chemins de fer de l'Ouest and in 1934 took over the Paris-Orléans company's lines in southern Brittany. At its greatest extent its operating area comprised all the territory west of a line extending from Dieppe by way of Paris to Bordeaux. On 1 January 1938 the État merged with all the other French railway companies to form the Société Nationale des Chemins de fer Français (SNCF), becoming that company's Région Ouest. The État then took a seat on the SNCF's Board of Directors, as did all the other companies until 1982 when all traces of the constituents of the SNCF disappeared.

Ligne Paris-Bordeaux

One of the PO's flagship lines was Paris-Orléans-Bordeaux. The État wished to create a competing line to the PO's. The PO line served Tours, Poitiers, and Angoulême, while the État decided to serve Chartres, Courtalain, Saumur, Niort, and Saintes, almost parallel to the competing line.

Thanks to purchases and exchanges made in 1878 with the PO, by 1884, the État operated:
*Chartres - Courtalain
*Bessé-sur-Braye - Château-sur-Loir
*Saumur - Montreuil-Bellay
*Montreuil-Bellay - Saint-Jean-d'Angély
*Saint-Jean-d'Angély - Saintes
*Saintes - Cavignac
Courtalain-Bessé-sur-Braye was opened in 1885 as well as Château-sur-Loir-Saumur-Cavignac. At La Grave d'Ambarès a junction with the PO was built, and État trains linked Paris and Bordeaux on 11 July 1886.

The last line portion was the hardest to build. On 1 July 1893, an extension via Lormont was opened, Three years later, on 01 August 1896 Bordeaux-Etat was opened, welcoming trains from Paris.

The État's line was 610km while the PO's was 582km. These were the only competing lines in France. This lasted until 1938, date of the creation the SNCF, when the PO line was kept.

The Dautry era

Raoul Dautry became managing director of the Etat in 1928. His desires were to reconquer the railway company's clientele, especially due to the popularity of the car.

Dautry began many modernisation projects, including infrastructure, stations and the opening of new lines (mainly Paris-Chartres by Gallardon). The electrification of the Paris-Le Mans line represents the biggest of his constructions, the line was at the time the most modern line in France.

Another one of his influences was the purchase of 600 new passenger cars. 50 of the cars were luxurious cars and were used on the new eletrified line.

As early as 1929, the Etat began experimenting with DMUs with a first order of Renault trains. In 1931, an agreement is reached between Michelin and the Etat, authorising trials of the "Micheline" train. By 1933, the trains were used for expresses between Paris and Deauville.

During the summer of 1937, the French Government ruled in favour of the nationalisation of the French railways. As a sign of disagreement, Dautry resigned, he was later elected into the SNCF's managing council.

Line openings

Locomotives of the Etat

* 040 TA
* 140 C
* 141 C
* 141 TC
* 231 B
* 231 G

Notes

External links

* [http://www.miragebookmark.ch/be-french-state-railways.htm Advertising bookmarks of the Chemin de fer de l'État ]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Chemin de fer de l’État — Chemin de fer de l État, Plural Chemins de fer de l État, ist das französische Äquivalent zum deutschen Begriff Staatsbahn. Er kann unter anderem folgende Eisenbahngesellschaften und ihre Strecken bezeichnen: Chemins de fer de l État belge, den… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chemin de fer de l'Etat de Genève — Chemin de fer de l État de Genève Ch. de fer de l État de Genève Ligne de la frontière franco suisse à Genève Eaux Vives Carte de la ligne Pays …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Chemin de fer de l’État Libanais — Libanesisches Eisenbahnnetz zur Zeit seiner größen Ausdehnung 1946/47 Der Libanon verfügt derzeit über keinen Schienenverkehr. Im 20. Jahrhundert besaß das Land ein heute zerstörtes Schienennetz, welches zuletzt durch die Chemin de fer de l’État… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chemin de fer de l'État de Genève — Ch. de fer de l État de Genève Ligne de la frontière franco suisse à Genève Eaux Vives Carte de la ligne Pays …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Chemin de fer de l'Etat de Genève — Annemasse–Genève Eaux Vives Streckenlänge: 6 km Spurweite: 1435 mm (Normalspur) Stromsystem: 25 kV 50 Hz  Maximale Neigung: 20 ‰ Verlauf Legende …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chemin de fer de l'État de Genève — Annemasse–Genève Eaux Vives Streckenlänge: 6 km Spurweite: 1435 mm (Normalspur) Stromsystem: 25 kV 50 Hz  Maximale Neigung: 20 ‰ Verlauf Legende …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chemin de fer de l’État de Genève — Annemasse–Genève Eaux Vives Streckenlänge: 6 km Spurweite: 1435 mm (Normalspur) Stromsystem: 25 kV 50 Hz  Maximale Neigung: 20 ‰ Legende …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chemin de fer de l'État — Administration des chemins de fer de l État L Administration des chemins de fer de l État, ou Réseau de l État, (et non Compagnie comme parfois appelée à tort; ce terme désignant alors une société commerciale) a été créée par le gouvernement… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Chemin de fer de l'État — Chemins de fer de l État bezeichnet die Eisenbahnen die von 1878 bis 1938 in der Regie des französischen Staates (État) betrieben wurden. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Entstehung 2 Ausbau 3 Übernahme in die Staatsbahn 4 Literatur 5 Weblinks und …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Chemin de Fer militaire (France) — Cet article traite de l histoire et de l application du chemin de fer militaire en France. L intérêt militaire de la voie ferrée est avant tout stratégique et logistique. Ceci explique l existence d accords de coopération entre l Armée et les… …   Wikipédia en Français

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”