Saint Petersburg – Warsaw Railway

 Warsaw – St. Petersburg Railway 
Warsaw Wileńska Station (1862–1915)
Track gauge: (WarsawHrodna) 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
(Saint PetersburgHrodna) 1,520 mm (4 ft 11 56 in)
Legend
0,062 Warszawa Wileńska
9,942-14,472 ZIELONKA
37,912 TŁUSZCZ
34 ← Siedlce
87,969 MAŁKINIA
34 → Ostrołęka
127,379 Szepietowo
154,035 Łapy
516 → Białystok Starosielce
closed
173,570 Białystok Wiadukt
38 → Bartoszyce ← Białystok
515 ↑ Białystok Starosielce
Białystok
32 ← Czeremcha ↓ Białystok
176,300 Post. odg. Białystok Towarowy
177,305 BIAŁYSTOK
Reduced to single track
Białystok al. Solidarności676
37Białystok
218,527 SOKÓŁKA
234,349 KUŹNICA BIAŁOSTOCKA
Rzeka Łosośna
Poland
Kuźnica − Grodno Border Crossing
Belarus
GRODNO
Belarus
Uzberezh − Senovė Border Crossing (CLOSED 2004)
Lithuania
VILNIUS
LTLV border
Daugavpils
Rēzekne
LVRU border
from Saint Petersburg-Vitebsky Rail Terminal
Saint Petersburg-Warsaw Rail Terminal (1851–2001)

The Saint Petersburg – Warsaw Railway, Russian "Санкт-Петербурго-Варшавская железная дорога" (transcription: Sankt-Peterburgo–Varshavskaya zheleznaya doroga) is a 1,333 km (828 mi) long railway, built in the 19th century by the Russian Empire to connect Russia with Central Europe. At the time the entire railway was within Russia, as Warsaw was under a Russian partition of Poland. Due to territorial changes, the line now lies within five countries and crosses the eastern border of the European Union three times. Therefore no passenger trains follow the entire route. Travel by passenger train between Saint Petersburg and Warsaw today (2010) passes Brest instead.

History

Construction

In February 1851 the Tsarist Government of Russia made a decision to build the St. Petersburg – Warsaw railway line with a length of approximately 1,250 kilometres. It was built to Russian gauge. Construction was completed in 1862.

The first section of the railway was completed in 1853 between Saint Petersburg and Gatchina, with daily scheduled train service started on October 31, 1853. On July 19, 1858, the first train arrived in Pskov [1].

In May 1858, construction started near Vilnius on the first section of 19 kilometers. On 1 May 1859 the ground works started along the entire route DaugavpilsVilniusLentvarisKaunasKybartai. The end of summer of 1860 marked the end of the construction of the Ostrov-Daugavpils–Vilnius railway. The first train from Daugavpils arrived in Vilnius on 16 September 1860. In 1861, this branch was completed to the Prussian border, and between Verzhbolovo Station in Kybartai and Eydtkuhnen in Prussia (now Chernyshevskoye in Russian Kaliningrad Oblast) the first junction between Russian gauge and standard gauge railwas systems was built, with rails in both gauges between the border stations.

The construction of the section from Lentvaris to Warsaw was completed on December 15, 1862.

The first locomotives for the St. Petersburg – Warsaw railway were bought in England, France, and Belgium. They consisted of two cylinders. Their series was “G” and type – 0-3-0. They were produced in Manchester in 1857, in Paris in 1860, and in Belgium in 1862. The weight of such a locomotive was 30–32 tons.

The portion between Vilnius and Warsaw was rebuilt in the standard gauge in the 1920s when that area belonged to Poland. The railway was partly destroyed during both world wars.


References