Mayumbe line

Mayumbe line

The railway line in 1913
Overview
Termini Boma
Tshela
Operation
Opened 1898
Closed 1984
Technical
Line length 140 km (87 mi)
Track gauge 600 mm (1 ft 11 58 in)
Old gauge 610 mm (2 ft)
Route map
Boma Port (Tramway)7 m
0 Boma14 m
(Tramway de Boma)
8 Bangu31 m
15 Lusanga90 m
22 Lovo101 m
30 Luki150 m
39 Lemba165 m
44 Tshisundi
57 Temvo271 m
62 point culminant303 m
68 Moenge169 m
80 Lukula101 m
90 Kiniati130 m
99 Kangu170 m
102 Kangu-Mission175 m
108 Kibenza214 m
114 Loango240 m
127 Luvu170 m
137 Banga150 m
140 Tshela144 m

The Mayumbe line was a 140 km (87 mi) long 610 mm (2 ft) gauge narrow gauge railway in the north west of the Democratic Republic of the Congo between the port of Boma and Tshela.

History

The Société des Chemins de fer vicinaux du Mayumbe (CVM) was created on July 30, 1898,[1] to build and operate a network of railways built at a 2 ft (610 mm) narrow gauge in the province of Lower Congo, in the Congo Free State which became Belgian Congo then Republic of the Congo, with a planned extension to the Republic of Congo.

On 1 January 1936, the CVM was integrated with the Office des Transports Coloniaux (OTRACO).[2]

In 1974, it was merged with the Office National des Transports (ONATRA). The line was dismantled in 1984 under Mobutu Sese Seko, along with the local industry.[3]

Line

Boma - Lukula - Tshela (140 km[4])

In 1932, the Boma Lukula section was converted to 600 mm (1 ft 11 58 in) narrow gauge, the section from Lukula to Tshela in 1938.

Locomotives

References

  1. "Chemin de fer de Boma à Tshela". KANGU - MAYUMBE - BAS-CONGO (in French). February 23, 2009.
  2. "BCK - KDL - Le site des chemins de fer du Katanga". Archived from the original on unknown. Check date values in: |archive-date= (help)
  3. Closed "owing to its lack of profitability" (Inter Rail No. 2/1997); Mobutu also closed the bank branches and industry in this region (Le Potentiel No. 3700/2006)
  4. Durrant, A.E.; Jorgensen, A.A.; Lewis, C.P. (1981). Steam in Africa. London: Hamlyn.
  5. "Garratt locomotives from other builders". Archived from the original on March 13, 2012.
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