Otavi Mining and Railway Company

Otavi Mining and Railway Company

The Otavi Mining and Railway Company (Otavi Minen- und Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft or OMEG) was a railway and mining company in German South-West Africa (today's Namibia). It was founded on 6 April 1900 in Berlin with the Disconto-Gesellschaft and the South West Africa Company as major shareholders.[1]

OMEG built the longest 600 mm (1 ft 11 58 in) gauge railway in the world extending 567 kilometres (352 mi) from Swakopmund on the Atlantic coast to the mines of Tsumeb. Construction began in 1903 and reached Tsumeb three years later.[2] The first 225 kilometres (140 mi) of railway required 110 steel bridges to cross deeply eroded gullies through sparsely vegetated arid terrain. Most were deck plate girders.[3] Construction coincided with the Herero and Namaqua Genocide. Delays resulted from labor shortages and military feldbahn operations.[4] A 91-kilometer branch was completed in 1908 from Otavi to mines near Grootfontein.[5]

OMEG tank locomotive with high-side gondola near Tsumeb about 1931.

Contents

Overview

OMEG railway prior to 1915.

The first locomotives designed for regular service were fifteen 22-tonne 0-6-2T built by Arn. Jung.[6] Henschel & Sohn built twelve locomotives similar to the Jung design and three 0-6-0T.[6] Twenty 8-wheel auxiliary tenders carrying 8 kiloliters of water and 3.5 tonnes of coal were built to enable these tank locomotives to complete longer runs.[6][7] Henschel & Sohn built three HD class 2-8-2 in 1911 with separate 8-wheel tenders for long-distance running.[8] These locomotives weighed 59 tonnes (including the 26-tonne tender) and remained in service for 50 years as the 2-8-2 type became standard for the railway. By 1913, train service included 4 express trains, 14 mixed trains, and 29 freight trains each week.[5] Express and mixed trains included a baggage car, a car for African passengers, and a coach for first and second class passengers.[5] Express trains stopped only at designated stations, but other trains would stop at intermediate points when transport was required.[5] Equipment included 96 low-side ore gondolas, 55 high-side gondolas, 20 limestone gondolas, 20 boxcars, 12 tank cars, 4 stock cars, 3 passenger coaches and an executive business car with a kitchen, a bathroom, and an office convertible to a bedroom at night.[7][9] There was also a self-powered steam rail motor car with a coal bunker, a mail compartment, 2 compartments for Europeans, and 4 for Africans.[10]

The gasoline engine «Crown Prince».

A special 7-tonne rail motor coach was built for an anticipated visit of Kronprinz Wilhelm in 1914. A 6-cylinder Daimler-Benz gasoline engine gave the car a speed of 38 meters per second (137 km/h) and the title of the fastest 2-foot (0.61 m) gauge rail car.[8] World War I intervened to prevent Wilhelm's visit, and the car was used as an inspection vehicle after the war. German troops had moved inland by the time South African troops reached Swakopmund in January, 1915. German forces destroyed the railroad as they retreated, and South African forces reconstructed a 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) gauge line over the route to Karabib in 1915.

South African Railways 2 ft  (610 mm) gauge SAR NGG 16 Class Garratt, preserved in operating condition on the Welsh Highland Railway This later version of the locomotives used from 1927 to 1933 is the model considered for use in 1958.
Arnold Jung Locomotive from 1905 of the Otavi Mining and Railway Company in Tsumeb, Namibia

German troops surrendered following defeat at Otavi in July, 1915; and service was re-established over the remaining 60-centimeter gauge line from the railway shops at Usakos with freight transfer facilities at Karabib. Two Henschel & Sohn 4-6-2 locomotives built in 1914 had disappeared during the war;[8] but Baldwin Locomotive Works delivered a 4-6-2 in 1916. A coach converted for meal service from 1916 to 1931 is believed to be the only 2-foot (0.61 m) gauge dining car ever operated.[11] Six more Henschel & Sohn 2-8-2 were delivered in 1922.[8] These locomotives were designated South African Railways (SAR) NG5 class when the Otavi line was nationalized in 1923.

Locusts

Train service was interrupted by a locust infestation in 1924 until steam nozzles were installed on locomotives to sweep the insects off the rails before their crushed bodies could reduce traction under the locomotive wheels.

Flooding

The worst flooding in forty years caused extensive washouts in 1925. Three SAR NGG 13 Class 2-6-2+2-6-2 Garratt locomotives were used from 1927 until the Tsumeb mines closed in 1933.[12] Henschel & Sohn delivered three SAR NG15 Class 2-8-2 locomotives in 1931. German rearmament activity reopened the mines from 1936 until the South African government closed the mine as enemy property in 1940.[13][14] Four sleeping cars were built for the railroad in 1938;[15] when Henschel & Sohn delivered three more 2-8-2 SAR NG15 Class. Tsumeb mines reopened again in 1946.[16] Fifteen more SAR NG15 Class 2-8-2 locomotives were delivered as three groups of five in 1949, 1952, and 1957. Purchase of additional Garratt locomotives was briefly considered in 1958 before the remainder of the line was regauged to 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) in 1961[17] and became part of the TransNamib.

See also

  • Slippery rail
  • South African Class NG 15 2-8-2
  • Two foot gauge railways in South Africa

Notes

  1. ^ Dierks, Klaus. "Chronology of Namibian History, 1900". http://www.klausdierks.com/Chronology/57.htm. Retrieved 23 July 2010. 
  2. ^ Shaw 1958 pp.37-38
  3. ^ Shaw 1958 p.38
  4. ^ Andrews 1991 p.63
  5. ^ a b c d Shaw 1958 p.39
  6. ^ a b c Shaw 1958 p.45
  7. ^ a b Andrews 1991 p.65
  8. ^ a b c d Shaw 1958 p.47
  9. ^ Shaw 1958 p.42
  10. ^ Shaw 1958 p.36
  11. ^ Shaw 1958 p.43
  12. ^ Shaw 1958 pp.46-47
  13. ^ Shaw 1958 pp.43-45
  14. ^ Otavi Minerals
  15. ^ Shaw 1958 p.49
  16. ^ FundingUniverse: Newmont Mining Corporation
  17. ^ Andrews 1991 p.66

References

  • Andrews, Dick (1991). "Extra Narrow Gauge Junction: Otavi Ry., State Northern Ry. in South Africa [sic]". Narrow Gauge and Short Line Gazette 16 (1): 63–66. 
  • Shaw, Frederic J. (1958). Little Railways of the World. Berkeley, Calif.: Howell-North. 261 p. OCLC 988744. 

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