Lomé–Kpalimé railway explained

Lomé–Kpalimé railway
Locale:Togo
Map Name:map
Map State:uncollapsed

The Lomé–Kpalimé railway was the second railway line built in today's Togo. It was also called German: Inlandbahn or German: Kakao-Bahn (cocoa railway).

History

The railway line was built during the German colonial era. Planning started in 1902, and construction began in 1904. Construction was financed through a 7.8 million Mark loan to the protectorate, with an interest rate of 3.5%.[1] The german company Maschinenfabrik Augsburg-Nürnberg was entrusted with the construction and the operation left to [2] Noepe was reached in 1905; Kpalimé was reached in 1907.[3] The line opened on 27 January 1907, the birthday of Wilhelm II.[4] It was built in meter gauge, had a length of and was accompanied by a telephone line. The level crossings were equipped with signals to ring bells.[4] The line used the station at Lomé of the Lomé–Aného railway as a terminus. Besides the transport of cocoa, the line also served as transportation method for oil palm products. From 1 April 1908, both lines were leased to the German: Deutsche Kolonial-Eisenbahn Bau- und Betriebsgesellschaft (German colonial railway construction- and operation company; DKEBBG), which operated through trains running over both lines.[4]

Togo was split between the United Kingdom and France after the First World War, with the whole railway network located in the part of the country now handled by France as a League of Nations mandate. During the period of military occupation until 1922, the railway was operated under the Togoland Military Railway (TMR) name, with operations handled by Gold Coast Government Railways, the railway of the neighboring Gold Coast.[5] Only then, from 1922, the railway received its French name French: Chemins de fer de Togo (CFT).

Since it was only a mandate area whose allocation to France under international law did not appear to be permanently secured, France also held back with investments in the railways in Togo. The line continued to operate after Togo gained independence.

See also

References

Literature

Notes and References

  1. Book: Röll, Freiherr von. 1921. Enzyklopädie des Eisenbahnwesens, Band 9.. Berlin; Vienna. 333. German.
  2. Book: 24 February 1906. Deutsche Kolonialzeitung, Volume 23, Number 8.. Frankfurt. 77. German.
  3. Web site: Hannes. Schneider. Die Eisenbahnen in den ehemaligen deutschen Schutzgebieten in Afrika. German. 7 July 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200706203645/http://kolonialgeschichte.de/download/pdf/afrika-eisenbahn.pdf. 6 July 2020. live.
  4. Book: Franz Baltzer. Die Kolonialbahnen mit besonderer Berücksichtigung Afrikas. 62–64. Berlin. 1916. Reprint, Leipzig 2008. 978-3-8262-0233-9. German.
  5. Book: Helmut Schroeter. Roel Ramaer. Die Eisenbahnen in den einst deutschen Schutzgebieten. Damals und heute.. Röhr-Verlag. Krefeld. 1993. 3-88490-184-2. German. 109.