- Taunus-Eisenbahn
The Taunus-Eisenbahn (
Taunus Railway) is a double-track electrified railway line, which connects Frankfurt and Wiesbaden,Germany . It is 41.2 km long and follows the course of theMain , mostly close to its north side. Its first stage was opened in September 1839 and is thus the oldest railroad line in theGerman state ofHesse . Today it is used byRegionalExpress trains between Frankfurt and Wiesbaden and the trains of Line 1 of theRhine-Main S-Bahn between Frankfurt-Höchst and Wiesbaden. Between Frankfurt Hbf (Frankfurt central station) and Frankfurt-Höchst, they run on the formerHessische Ludwigsbahn line.History
The building of the line was preceded by many years of negotiations between three sovereigns states, through which the planned line ran: the
Free City of Frankfurt , the Duchy of Nassau (of whichWiesbaden was capital), and for the section inMainz-Kastel , a right Rhine suburb ofMainz , in theGrand Duchy of Hesse . In particular the Grand Duchy opposed its building, because it feared a loss of traffic from itself as a result of the connection of the other two states, and demanded instead rail connections between Frankfurt and its own cities ofDarmstadt , Mainz and Offenbach. In the end they agreed on the current route.In 1835, a committee established for the construction of the line sold shares, which were immediately oversubscribed 40 times. Work began in 1837, although the final concession was not approved until 1838: on
8 May by the City of Frankfurt, on11 May by the Grand Duchy of Hessen and on13 June by Nassau. The Taunus railway company was established on12 August 1838 in Frankfurt/Main. Paul Camille von Denis, aBavaria n born inMainz and had worked on the first German railway betweenNuremberg andFürth (opened in 1835), designed the route.Operations
The first stage was opened on
26 September 1839 from theTaunusbahnhof in Gallusanlage (now Willy-Brandt-Platz), Frankfurt by the Mainz masterbuilder, Ignaz Opfermann, in the then small Nassau town of Höchst am Main. The railway reachedHattersheim am Main on24 November 1839 andMainz-Kastel on13 April 1840 . The extension to the Wiesbadener Taunusbahnhof on the Rheinstraße was opened19 May 1840 . It was the ninth railway line opened in Germany.The director of the company from 1840 to 1852 was Johann Adam Beil, a Hessian
privy councillor and former Frankfurt senator.The line was originally 43.4 kilometers long. A 6.6 kilometers branch from Höchst to
Bad Soden (theSodener Bahn ) opened in 1863.Originally the railway operated six locomotives from the factory of George and
Robert Stephenson , 87 carriages and 44 wagons. The first engine drivers were British.Ownership change
The Taunus-Eisenbahn suffered from competition from the Frankfurt - Mainz line (opened on the left bank of the Main in 1863) and it decided to sell its company to the
Hessische Ludwigsbahn in 1871. The Ludwigsbahn took over the enterprise with effect from 1 January 1872, but it sold it on to thePrussian state railway , which took it over on3 May 1872 .In 1888, the line in Frankfurt was shortened by about a kilometer when it was diverted from its old railway terminal to the new Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof. The same happened 1906 at the Wiesbaden end, ehrn the current Wiesbadener Hbf replaced the old Taunusbahnhof.
In 1920 the line was taken over by the Deutsche Reichsbahn. It attained great importance for long distance, regional and suburban traffic. Including its extension, the Right Rhine line, it is today part of
Regionalexpress line RE 10 of theRhein-Main-Verkehrsverbund , which runs from Frankfurt toKoblenz . Not much long-distance passenger traffic uses it any more, but it is well connected to Frankfurt Hbf and Frankfurt Airport long distance station (via Frankfurt Airport long regional station), which both have excellent long distance connections.ources
*Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland –2005/2006 edition, Schweers + Wall, 2005, ISBN 3-89494-134-0 de icon
*Eisenbahn in Hessen. Kulturdenkmäler in Hessen. Denkmaltopographie Bundesrepublik Deutschland, hrsg. vom Landesamt für Denkmalpflege Hessen, Theiss Verlag Stuttgart, 2005, 3 volumes, 1.448 S., ISBN 3-8062-1917-6 de icon
*Arbeitsmaterial für den SU, Naacher, 3rd edition, 1991 de icon
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.