Saarbrücken Railway


The Saarbrücken Railway was a division of the Prussian state railways that was responsible for the construction of the first railways in the Saarland. The Royal Administration of the Saarbrücken Railway was established on 22 May 1852 with the goal of managing and operating the soon to be opened state railway line from the border with Bavaria near Bexbach via Neunkirchen and St. Johann-Saarbrücken to the French border at Forbach. It replaced the Royal Commission for the construction of the Saarbrücken Railway, which had been created at the end of 1847 by the Prussian government with responsibility for the planning and construction of this line.
On 1 July 1859, it was renamed as the Royal Railway Administration at Saarbrücken. At the same time it took over the management of the private Rhine-Nahe Railway Company. In the following years the rail network of the Saarbrücken Railway grew to a total length of 365 km when it became part of the Railway Administration in Frankfurt am Main on 1 July 1880. Shortly later, on 1 April 1881, these lines became part of the Royal Railway Administration in Cologne.

Development of the rail network

The Palatine Ludwig Railway Company opened its main line from Homburg to the Prussian border on 25 August 1849. On 20 October 1850 the Saarbrücken Railway extended the line to Neunkirchen. Two years later, on 16 November 1852, passenger trains ran on the line, known as the Forbach Railway, via Sulzbach, Dudweiler and St. Johann-Saarbrücken to reach the French border at Forbach. Freight trains operated on this line from 1 December 1852.
The next line built was the Saar line down the Saar valley from Saarbrücken to Trier. It was opened on 16 December 1858 to Merzig and on 26 May 1860 to Trier West on the left bank of the Moselle. On 29 August 1861 the Trier western line was opened from a junction at Konz to the Luxembourg border at Wasserbillig. Upstream a line was opened on 1 June 1870 to Sarreguemines in Lorraine, which was occupied by German troops at the time during the Franco-Prussian War.
In 1878/79 several line were opened just before the Saar lines' inclusion of the Railway Administration of Frankfurt: