Global Information Lookup Global Information

Upper Hessian Railway Company information


The Upper Hessian Railway Company (Oberhessische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft) was a private concern whose aim was to build and run railway lines in the province of Upper Hesse in the Grand Duchy of Hesse, a state within the German Empire in the 19th and early 20th centuries.

Whilst the Main-Weser railway had linked Wetterau, a town in the western part of the province of Upper Hesse, to the new mode of transport as early as 1850–1852, much of the area, around the Vogelsberg, remained without any railway connexions for years. Not until 1868/69 was the Upper Hessian Railway Company founded with assistance from the Frankfurt banking house, Erlanger & Söhne, and with the financial support of the state of Hesse.

It contracted a Belgian company to build routes from the railway hub of Giessen to Gelnhausen (Lahn–Kinzig Railway) and Fulda (Vogelsberg Railway). On 29 December 1869 services were opened from Giessen to Hungen, on 29 June 1870 to Nidda and on 30 October 1870 to Büdingen. The entire route of the Lahn-Kinzig Railway to Gelnhausen, that comprised a link line of 70 km length along the western perimeter of the Vogelsberg to the Kinzig Valley Railway, was completed on 30 November 1870.

The 106 km long link from Giessen to Fulda ran through the northern foothills of the Vogelsberg, the first section of which was opened to traffic as far as Grünberg on 29 December 1869. But further construction on the railway was delayed by the Franco-Prussian War so that Alsfeld was not reached until 29 July 1870, Lauterbach until 30 October 1870 and Bad Salzschlirf by the end of the same year. The remainder of the Vogelsberg Railway was not completed until 31 July 1871. Twenty-eight kilometres of the two routes lay in Prussian territory.

The demand for services turned out to be below expectations for both passenger and goods traffic. As a result, the company reached an agreement with the Grand Duchy of Hesse whereby the state became the owner of the railway from 1 January 1876. The state set up a railway division for the Upper Hessian Railways in the provincial capital of Giessen. This formed the cornerstone for the subsequent Grand Duchy of Hesse State Railways.

and 18 Related for: Upper Hessian Railway Company information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8535 seconds.)

Upper Hessian Railway Company

Last Update:

The Upper Hessian Railway Company (Oberhessische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft) was a private concern whose aim was to build and run railway lines in the province...

Word Count : 405

Hessian Ludwig Railway

Last Update:

privately owned railway companies in Germany. The Hessian Ludwig Railway was a product of the failed – or, more accurately, non-existent – railway politics in...

Word Count : 1323

Grand Duchy of Hesse State Railways

Last Update:

its own state railway. Its basis was the acquisition of the Upper Hessian Railway Company. This opened and operated the Vogelsberg and Lahn-Kinzig lines...

Word Count : 361

Grand Duchy of Hesse

Last Update:

own company, the Grand Duchy of Hesse State Railways, which continued to expand the network into Upper Hesse. In 1897, the Hessian Ludwig Railway was...

Word Count : 17158

Prussian T 9

Last Update:

this Hessian state railway to the Prussian state railways. It was given the number 26 by the Upper Hessian Railway; the Prussian state railway initially...

Word Count : 1708

List of the first German railways to 1870

Last Update:

List of the first German railways to 1870 with German railways ordered by date of the commissioning the first phase of construction. For context see History...

Word Count : 93

South German Railway Company

Last Update:

Bachstein). Of these, Bachstein initially brought the following Hessian railways into the new company in 1895: Osthofen – Westhofen Reinheim – Reichelsheim Sprendlingen...

Word Count : 991

Nidda station

Last Update:

the second section of the Gießen–Gelnhausen railway (Hungen–Nidda) by the Upper Hessian Railway Company (German: Oberhessische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft)...

Word Count : 631

Deutsche Reichsbahn

Last Update:

Württemberg state railways Prussian-Hessian state railways Initially called the Reichseisenbahnen or Deutsche Reichseisenbahnen, the company was formally given...

Word Count : 4057

Alsfeld station

Last Update:

decided to build the Oberhessischen Eisenbahn ("Upper Hessian Railway", now called the Vogelsberg Railway) from Gießen via Alsfeld to Fulda. The official...

Word Count : 858

Hesse

Last Update:

Electorate of Hesse (also known as Hesse-Kassel). The Central Hessian region was inhabited in the Upper Paleolithic. Finds of tools in southern Hesse in Rüsselsheim...

Word Count : 8874

History of rail transport in Germany

Last Update:

Central Station, to where in the same year the main line of the Hessian Ludwig Railway was extended, linking Mainz with Ludwigshafen from 1853. With the...

Word Count : 6229

Starkenburg

Last Update:

Darmstadt rural district in 1977 Groß-Gerau Offenbach, from 1874 with the Upper Hessian exclave of Steinbach, divided into an urban and a rural district in...

Word Count : 387

Frankfurt

Last Update:

Frankfurt often serve high-ranking positions in Hessian politics, e.g. Michael Boddenberg is Hessian Minister of Finance and Boris Rhein was elected President...

Word Count : 20982

Britannia Bridge

Last Update:

(12 m) wide, continuous over their whole length, and covered with tarred hessian. A 12 foot (3.7 m) wide central walkway was present above the roof for...

Word Count : 4028

List of Prussian locomotives and railbuses

Last Update:

Prussian-Hessian Railway Company (Preussisch-Hessischen Eisenbahngemeinschaft). Up to 1 April 1883 the Prussian state railways or acquired private railways designated...

Word Count : 992

Mainz Hauptbahnhof

Last Update:

developing railway network. In Mainz, the local Hessian Ludwig Railway Company (Hessische Ludwigsbahn) obtained concessions to build railway lines from...

Word Count : 1511

Vogelsberg

Last Update:

cracks appearing in buildings and subsidence of the ground. The Upper Hessian Water Companies (Oberhessischen Versorgungsbetriebe AG, OVAG) are the largest...

Word Count : 2325

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net