Bavarian Ludwigsbahn

Bavarian Ludwigsbahn

The Bavarian Ludwigseisenbahn (literally: 'Bavarian Ludwig's Railway') was the first steam-hauled railway opened in Germany. The "Königlich privilegirte Ludwigs-Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft" ("Royal privileged Ludwig railway company", later called the "Ludwigs-Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft") received a concession to build a railway from Nuremberg to Fürth in the state of Bavaria on 19 February 1834.

Background

The first reports from England over the planning of railways attracted great attention in Germany, particularly in Bavaria, where the road between the important commercial cities of Nuremberg and Fürth was the busiest road connection in the kingdom. Bavarian interest was also stimulated by Friedrich List’s advocacy of an all-German railway system and the reports of Joseph von Baader, whom King Ludwig had sent to England to study railways. After a discussion of this topic in the first Bavarian parliament in 1825, it authorised the king to build an experimental railway in the Nymphenburg Palace park. As the king’s 1828 request for the merchant guilds to begin building a railway line led to no action, he turned his attention to his favourite project, the building of a canal between the Danube and the Main.

Establishment

After railways had been operating in England for a few years, the merchants decided to build a railway line along the Nürnberg-Fürth road. In 14 May 1833 they founded the Gesellschaft zur Errichtung einer Eisenbahn mit Dampffahrt zwischen Nürnberg und Fürth (company for the establishment of a steam railway between Nuremberg and Fürth) to develop the railway. Within six months the two main instigators from Nuremberg, the merchant and market chief, George Zacharias Platner, and the head of the poly-technical school, Johannes Scharrer, completed the raising the planned share capital of 132,000 guilders. The proposed dividend of 12 2/3% was met with skepticism, although the company did, in fact, pay a dividend of 20% in 1836.

King Ludwig was an unenthusiastic supporter of railways because of his preference for the building of the Ludwigskanal between the Main to Danube, built between 1836 and 1846. The canal was relatively unsuccessful, because of its profusion of locks, narrowness and early competition from railways, but it foreshadowed the more successful Rhine-Main-Danube Canal built on a similar route and completed in 1992. Ludwig allowed the railway company to use his name and authorized his government to buy a token two shares in it. Significantly for the construction of the railway, the king made available the Bavarian road builder, Paul Camille von Denis, for the railway construction. Von Denis adopted the English rail gauge of 1435 mm for a nearly dead-straight 6.04 km-long single-track line next to the Fürth-Nuremberg road.

Start of services

In 7 December 1835 the company opened the first German steam-powered railway line for passenger and freight traffic before a large public gathering. The steam locomotive Adler (Eagle) had been supplied with its driver by Stephenson’s company from Newcastle. The "Remy & Co aus Rasselstein" company of Neuwied, supplied only the convert|15|ft|m|sing=on-long rails of rolled wrought iron. The carriages were suppled by local wagon-builders.

Already on 20 September 1831 the private narrow gauge, horse-drawn Prinz-Wilhelm-Eisenbahn coal railway had opened between Hinsbeck (Ruhr) and Nierenhof, but it did not excite the public attention of a steam-hauled and passenger railway. Nevertheless, King Ludwig did not visit the railway named after him until August 1836. The cost of building the railway, which had been estimated at 132,000 guilders, actually reached 170,000 guilders as a result of lack of railway building experience and, in particular, the high price of land acquisition in the absence of a law providing for compulsory purchase.

Operations

Beginning on 8 December 1835 a horse-drawn services operated on the line from Nuremberg to Fürth once an hour. The Adler only operated at 13:00 and 14:00 daily. The high cost of importing hard coal from Saxony, which in the beginning still had to be brought by horse cart, prevented in the early years regular use of the Adler or the Pfeil (arrow). With the acquisition of more locomotives, only the early and late services were horses-drawn. Finally in the 1863 horse operations were abandoned to reduce maintenance costs (especially the provision of horse tracks) and to raise speeds.

Goods traffic at first consisted of the carriage of newspapers and beer. General freight traffic only started in 1839 and mail traffic in 1840. The success of the line is shown by the fact that up to 1855 dividends were never less than 12%. At the time this was considered a magnificent capital return. Nevertheless, the government refused permission to extend the line to Würzburg.

Closure

Competition developed with the building of horse trams between Nuremberg and Fürth, particularly once they were electrified in 1898. From 1893, part of the line was double-tracked but this was never completed. Traffic and profits fell constantly.

The Ludwigsbahn closed on 31 October 1922. The old station building in Fürth was torn down in 1938, to make room for a Nazi Party parade ground, now a plaza called Fürther Freiheit (Furth Liberty). The Nuremberg station was demolished in 1952 to allow the construction of a new multistory building. The line was leased to the Nuremberg tramways and trams operated on it until 1981. It was proposed to develop it as a high-speed tramway between Nürnberg and Fürth, but this was only achieved in the 1970s and 1980s with the construction of part of line U1 of the Nuremberg U-Bahn along the route, partly underground and partly elevated. This was opened to Fürth station on 5 December 1985, 150 years after the opening of the original line.

The line ran from the Nuremberg station in Plärrer place, along today's Fürther Straße, past the boundary with Fürth and then followed the present Hornschuchpromenade to the Ludwig station at Fürther Freiheit, 100 m north of Fürth station.

Locomotives and carriages

The Ludwigsbahn possessed many locomotives during its 87 years of operation. Some were bought second-hand, many were sold when it was closed.

In 1935 a replica of the Adler was constructed on old plans for the 100-year anniversary of the German railways, but it was seriously damaged on 17 October 2005 together with many other preserved locomotives in the great fire at the Nuremberg shed. However it was painstakingly restored in 2007 at a cost of € 1M and made operational again. The greatest number of carriages during the line’s existence was in 1893: 44 passenger vehicles, 1 luggage van and 10 waggons.

References

*de|Bayerische Ludwigsbahn
* Klee, Wolfgang, Bayerische Eisenbahngeschichte, Part 1: 1835-1875 in Bayern-Report, Fürstenfeldbruck, 1993. de icon
* Wolff, Gerd, Deutsche Klein- und Privatbahnen, Part 6, Bayern, Gifhorn, 1978. de icon
* Deutsche Reichsbahn, Die Deutschen Eisenbahnen in ihrer Entwicklung 1835-1935, Berlin, 1935. de icon
* DB Museum, Geschichte der Eisenbahn in Deutschland, Volume 1: Ein Jahrhundert unter Dampf, Die Eisenbahn in Deutschland 1835 – 1919, Nürnberg, 2005 de icon

ee also

*Royal Bavarian State Railways
*List of Bavarian locomotives and railbuses


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