Chemins de Fer du Calvados

Chemins de Fer du Calvados
Legend
Isigny-sur-Mer 168 km
Osmanville
Cardonville
Géfosse-Fontenay
Douet-de-Maisy
Maisy
Grandchamp-le-Château 158 km
Cricqueville-en-Bessin
St. Pierre-du-Mont
Englesqueville-la-Percée
Louvières
Vierville-sur-Mer
St. Laurent-sur-Mer 146 km
Formigny
Trévières
Rubercy
Le Molay-Littry 126 km
St. Martin-des-Besaces 142 km
Les Petits Carreaux
Caumont
L'Embranchement
Cormolain
Balleroy 117 km
Castillon
Le Tronquay
Noron
Subles
Bayeux 101 km
Sully
Maisons
Commes
Port-en-Bessin-Huppain 112 km
Arromanches-les-Bains
Ryes
Courseulles-sur-Mer 79 km
Dives-Cabourg 73 km
St. Aubin-sur-Mer
Sallenelles
Luc-sur-Mer 71 km
Ranville
Ouistreham 62 km
Bénouville 58 km
Blainville-sur-Orne
Herouville
Caen St. Pierre 48 km
Caen Ouest 46 km
Urville-Langannerie
Iron ore mines
St. Germain-le-Vasson
Fontaine-le-Pin
Soumont-Saint-Quentin
Falaise Château 2 km
Falaise Gare 0 km
Gare de Courseulles, with the narrow gauge railway in the foreground.

The Chemins de Fer du Calvados was a 600 mm (1 ft 11 58 in) narrow gauge railway in the département of Calvados.

History

Caen station.

The Chemins de Fer du Calvados (CFC) was originally planned as a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3 38 in) metre gauge line. The département had actually accepted a tender for the construction of such a line but with interest in 600 mm (1 ft 11 58 in) narrow gauge lines rising the département had a rethink and the line was built to 600 mm gauge.[1]

Paul Decauville was approached following his success at the Paris Exhibition. In October 1890 he was asked to build a line on a similar basis to that already under construction at Royan. Initially, two separate lines were envisaged. A 29 kilometres (18 mi) line between Dives and Luc-sur-Mer and a 10 kilometres (6.2 mi) line between Isigny and Grandcamp-le-Château.[1]

Ouistreham – Luc-sur-Mer opened to traffic on 15 August 1891, with an official opening date of 15 October. Dives – Sallenelles opened to traffic on 15 July 1892 and Sallenelles – Ouistreham opened on 24 August, following completion of swing bridges at Ranville and Bénouville. The former was designed by Gustave Eiffel.[1] The latter was to become famous as Pegasus Bridge.[2]

Bénouville – Caen opened to traffic on 4 July 1893, having been held up by the financial situation of the Société Decauville. The construction of the Isigny – Grandcamp line was delayed for this reason too.[1]

With the demise of Decauville, the Société Anonyme des Chemins de Fer Du Calvados (CFC) took over the lines on 1 August 1895. The CFC used rails laid on wooden sleepers, and Westinghouse continuous braking, quite an advanced piece of technology on such a small gauge.[1] Decauville referred to the line as the Tramway du Calvados but the new company were quite sure that they were running a railway, offering 1st, 2nd and 3rd class accommodation on its trains.[2]

Isigny – Grandcamp-les-Bains opened to traffic on 27 July 1896. On 15 June 1897, authorisation was given for more lines to be constructed in the Calvados département:- a 32 kilometres (20 mi) line between Grandcamp and Le-Morlay-Littry; a 26 kilometres (16 mi) line between Corseulles and Bayeux, with a branch to Arromanches-les-Bains; a 45 kilometres (28 mi) line between Caen and Falaise; and an 11 kilometres (6.8 mi) line between Bayeux and Port-en-Bessin. These lines opened between 1899 and 1902.[1]

On 18 January 1904, a short extension opened between Falaise-Château and Falaise Gare, connecting with the standard gauge main line. Between 1904 and 1906 further extensions were added, a 9.5 kilometres (5.9 mi) line between Molay de Littry and Balleroy, and a 40.5 kilometres (25.2 mi) line between Bayeux and St. Martin-les-Besaces.[1]

This left two isolated systems, which were joined by laying a dual gauge track on the standard gauge Chemin de Fer de Caen à la Mer for 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) between Luc-sur-Mer and Courseulles, with a passing loop at St. Aubin-sur-Mer. This link opened to traffic on 1 July 1900.[1] Because of the terms provided in the agreement allowing the construction of the link, it was mainly used for the transfer of stock between each part of the system, which was in effect run as two separate systems.[2] The CFC had a total extent of 234 kilometres (145 mi). There were plans to add a further 369 kilometres (229 mi) of lines, but these plans were abandoned due to improvements in the road system in the département and the extensive network of standard gauge lines.[1]

The CFC hoped to benefit from transporting coal. Mines at Littry had been in operation from 1743 to 1880, when they were closed due to flooding. There were frequent proposals to reopen the mine, but it was not until 1941 that an exploratory pit was opened by the Société Métallurgique de Normandie. Full production started in 1945, by which time the CFC had closed and finished in 1950.[2]

Another source of traffic for the CFC was iron ore deposits between Caen and Falaise. Long sidings were laid to enable the transport of iron ore to the blast furnaces at Caen, which was developed c1910 by the Société des Hauts-Fourneaux de Caen, which later became the Société Métallurgique de Normandie (SMN). Three thousand tonnes of ore were required per day, which the CFC handled, would have meant thirty trains per day. The Chemin de Fer du Nord proposed a standard gauge line to carry the traffic. The CFC argued that they could carry all the traffic and proposed to double the line south of Caen, but later decided against this. The CFC agreed to handle 25% of the traffic and accept compensation of 35 centimes per tonne carried by the SMN for "lost" revenue. This compensation continued to be paid after the line south of Caen closed.[2][3]

The coastal routes provided the CFC with good returns but the inland routes did not. Despite the introduction of railcars in the 1920s, the line from Isigny to Balleroy closed on 2 December 1929. The rails were lifted c.1933. and the stations sold to be converted to dwellings. Vierville station was burned down on 7 June 1944 during the D-Day landings.[4] The lines from Bayeux closed between 1930 and 1933, and the section south of Caen closed in 1930. The line between Bénouville and Dives closed in 1932 as the swing bridge needed replacement and it wasn't thought viable to lay tracks on the new bridge.[1]

This left just the Caen – Luc-sur-Mer line open after 1932, operating a summer only service. There was a proposal to convert the line to metre gauge and electrify it at 1500V. With the introduction of paid holidays for French workers in 1936, the line saw a large increase in passenger numbers. The line was transferred to the Société des Courriers Normands, which was primarily a bus company, in 1937.[2] Following the outbreak of World War II in 1939, an all year round service was reinstated. The line closed on 6 June 1944, after the track was destroyed during the D-Day landings. The first train of the day, hauled by No. 10, was abandoned at Luc-sur-Mer, never to complete its journey.[1][2]

Construction

The first lines built, linking Caen with the coast used 15 kg/m rails. The loading gauge allowed a width of 1.88 metres (6 ft 2 in) and height of 2.80 metres (9 ft 2 in). Gradients were to be no steeper than 30mm/m (1 in 33). Trains were to be restricted to 20 kilometres per hour (12 mph) with a maximum length of 60 metres (200 ft). Later lines were built with rails of 18 or 20 kg/m and the earlier lines were upgraded in the 1930s. Many of the lines were laid alongside roads or canals. [2]

Line openings

Opened Section Length (km) Closed
Luc-sur-MerDives-sur-Mer
1891 Luc-sur-MerOuistreham 9 1944
1892 OuistrehamBénouville 4 1944
1892 BénouvilleDives-sur-Mer 15 1932
Luc-sur-MerBayeux
1900 Luc-sur-MerCourseulles-sur-Mer (addition of a third track onto the track of the CF de Caen à la Mer) 8 1931
1899 Courseulles-sur-MerBayeux 22 1931
1899 RyesArromanches 4 1930
BénouvilleCaen
1893 Bénouville – Caen Saint-Pierre 10 1944
1904 Caen Saint-Pierre – Caen Ouest 2 1944
Isigny-sur-MerBalleroy
1896 Isigny-sur-Mer – Grandcamp 10 1929
1900 GrandcampSaint-Laurent-sur-Mer 12 1929
1901 Saint-Laurent-sur-MerLa mine de Littry 20 1929
1904 La mine de LittryBalleroy 9 1929
Port-en-BessinSaint-Martin-des-Besaces
1899 BayeuxPort-en-Bessin 11 1932
1904 BayeuxBalleroy 16 1930
1906 BalleroySaint-Martin-des-Besaces 25 1930
CaenFalaise
1902 Caen OuestPotigny 32 1933
1902 Potigny – Falaise Château 12 1932
1904 Falaise Château – Falaise 2 1932

Network

Plan of the Chemins de Fer du Calvados.

Accidents

On one occasion, the driver of a train failed to see that Pegasus Bridge was open, and the locomotive went over the edge into the Orne, fortunately without serious damage or injury.[2]

Rolling stock

The CFC operated the following rolling stock.[1]

Locomotives

Railcars

Passenger stock

The CFC had the following passenger stock.[1][2]

Freight stock

The CFC operated the following freight stock.[1][2]
Four wheeled open wagons and closed vans, with a capacity of 10 tonnes, but restricted to 7 tonnes on the lines laid with the lighter rails. also ten bogie lowside wagons by Decauville. There were some unsprung, dumb buffered ballast wagons and some bogie flat wagons. There were two couverts surbaissés, which were low floor bogie wagons for conveying cattle or horses. For mineral traffic four wheeled steel sided dropside open wagons were used. Some had brake-huts. There were also ten bogie opens. Another fifty bogie wagons were ordered by the Mines de Barbery in 1914, but it is not known if these were delivered.

Architecture

A sense of identity

As many railway companies, Calvados adopted its own architecture. Due to relative small size of the company, despite its large network, the company never built large stations. Instead, Calvados built small but efficient and practical buildings in a mock Norman style.

Calvados built stations in a range of sizes, some being nothing more than a bus shelter, others fully functional railway stations, similar to Ouest BV5 stations.

Station photos

The line today

Station buildings survive at Luc-sur-Mer, which is used by the local Gendarmerie. St. Aubin, which is used as a bus station. Bernières-sur-Mer, which is used as the local tourist office. St. Côme and Sommervieu are private dwellings. Arromanches is used as a bus terminus. Bayeux station building also survives and is used as offices by a bus company.[2] St. Laurence Englesqueville station survives, converted to a dwelling.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Organ, John (2002). Northern France Narrow Gauge. Midhurst: Middleton Press. ISBN 1-901706-75-3.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 "UN P'TIT CALVA". Andy Hart/SNCF Society. Archived from the original on 30 October 2007. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
  3. "Les hauts-fourneaux de Caen". Normannia. Retrieved 2008-02-21. (fr)
  4. 1 2 "Les "carosses", le tramway, puis les Courriers Normands". Vierville-sur-Mer. Retrieved 2008-02-21.(fr)
  5. 1 2 "The Industrial Railway Record". Industrial Railway Society. Retrieved 2008-02-21.
  6. 1 2 Davies, W J K (February 2008). "Standard Decauville Stock". Continental Modeller. 30 (2): 88–91. ISSN 0955-1298.
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