Frederick William Northern Railway

Kassel–Bebra
Route number: 610
Line length: 79
Maximum speed: 130
Legend
Thuringian Railway from Erfurt
206.3 Faßdorf junction to Bebra–Fulda railway
210.4 Bebra
to Bebra–Göttingen railway
213.6 Lispenhausen
216.2 Rotenburg an der Fulda
218.8 B 83
223.8 Heinebach
228.4 Altmorschen
230.3 Hannover–Würzburg HSL Fulda Viaduct, Morschen
232.5 Beiseförther Tunnel 239 m
232.8 Fulda
233.1 Malsfeld-Beiseförth
siding
to Kanonenbahn
234.7 southern approach
234.8 Flood bridge over Fulda
235.2 Malsfeld
Kanonenbahn
237.4 Flood bridge approach, Fulda
237.5 Fulda
238.8 Melsungen
239.5 Melsungen Viaduct (crossing 3 roads and 2 rivers)
236.6 Melsungen Barttenwetzer Bridge (planned)
243.6 Melsungen-Röhrenfurth
245.2 Mülmische
246.8 Körle
250,0 Guxhagener Tunnel (434 m)
251.3 Guxhagen
254.2 Fulda
from Frankfurt (Main)
254.7
13.7
Baunatal-Guntershausen
13.5 Crossing of the Bauna
10.7 Baunatal-Rengershausen
A 44
A 49
7.9 Kassel-Oberzwehren
Oberzwehren junction HSL to Fulda
Hercules Railway (1000 mm gauge)
Kassel-Naumburg railway
to Hess. Lichtenau (–Eschwege)
2.7 Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe
to Warburg
to Hannoversch Münden
0.0 Kassel Hauptbahnhof

Frederick William Northern Railway (German: Friedrich-Wilhelms-Nordbahn) is a line in the German state of Hesse completed in 1849, connecting Kassel with Bebra and Gerstungen on the border with Thuringia, as well as with Bad Karlshafen (formerly) and Warburg on the border with Westphalia. It was one of the first railway lines in Hesse-Kassel and in Germany.

Contents

Route

The Frederick William Northern Railway was built by the Frederick William Northern Railway Company (Friedrich-Wilhelms-Nordbahn-Gesellschaft) and named after Frederick William, the Elector of Hesse. It was part of a continuous east-west rail link built between Westphalia and Halle. In Kassel it connected with it the Carl Railway (Carl Bahn), running to the north, which in turn connected in Hümme with the line to Warburg and Westphalia. In Gerstungen it connected with the line of the Thuringian Railway Company. In Warburg it connected to the Hamm–Warburg line of the Royal Westphalian Railway Company.

Formation

The states of Saxe-Weimar-Eisenach, Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Prussia and Hesse-Kassel negotiated from 1840 on the building of an east-west railway. Between Gerstungen in the east of Hesse-Kassel and Haueda (near Liebenau) on the border with Westphalia, the route runs through Bebra and Kassel, then capital of Hesse-Kassel. An agreement was reached in the autumn of 1841. In 1844 the Frederick William Northern Railway Company received a concession to build the line in Hesse-Kassel.

Name

The line was renamed the Electoral Frederick William Northern Railway (Kurfürst-Friedrich-Wilhelms-Nordbahn) in 1853 and after the annexation of Hesse-Kassel by Prussia as a result of the Austro-Prussian War in 1866 it was renamed Hessian Northern Railway (Hessische Nordbahn).

The name Frederick William Northern Railway is not only applied to the line between Kassel and Bebra, but also to the whole route between Warburg and Gerstungen. The first line built in the Electorate was the Carl Railway, the line between Kassel and the Weser river port of Carlshafen (now Bad Karlshafen) then considered the most important line to be built in the state. Subsequently the two links to Warburg and Gerstungen were added to create the Frederick William Northern Railway.

It soon became apparent, however, that the expected traffic to Carlshafen would not eventuate, as traffic quickly moved from the Weser to the emerging rail network. The line to Carlshafen soon became a line of only local significance. This meant that the name Carl Railway was applied to the branch from Hümme to Carlshafen. The name of the Frederick William Northern Railway was transferred to the much longer line between Warburg and Gerstungen.

Thus, from the Hessian perspective, the Frederick William Northern Railway was the first stage of a plan to build a rail network in the Electorate. Only the western branch and the Main-Weser Railway were completed during the existence of Hesse-Kassel. The eastern branch from Bebra to Fulda and Hanau (the Frankfurt–Bebra line),—all Hessian cities and thus of highest priority for the Electorate—crossed difficult topography and therefore was not completed until Hesse-Kassel was annexed by Prussia in 1866.

Construction

On 1 July 1845 the groundbreaking ceremony was celebrated for the construction of the line and by 29 December 1849 the entire route was opened to traffic. It connected in Gunterhausen with the Main-Weser Railway and in Kassel with the Carl Railway. Between Guntershausen and Bebra it follows the Fulda Valley.

Sections of track were opened as follows:

The route is now used by several Intercity lines.

References