Neustadt (Aisch)–Demantsfürth-Uehlfeld railway

The Neustadt (Aisch)–Demantsforth-Uehlfeld railway (also known locally as the Aischtalbahn, not to be confused with the Aischgrundbahn) is a branch line in southern Germany that links the market town of Uehlfeld in the Bavarian province of Middle Franconia with Neustadt an der Aisch on the Nuremberg–Würzburg main line.

Neustadt (Aisch)–Demantsforth-Uehlfeld
Overview
Line number5915
Technical
Line length15.4 km (9.6 mi)
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in)
Route map

from Würzburg Hbf
from Steinach (b Rothenburg o d Tauber)
(Neustadt–Steinach)
0,0
Neustadt (Aisch) station
to Nuremberg Hbf
(Nuremberg–Würzburg)
1.5
Neustadt (Aisch) Stadt
3.7
Diespeck
5.8
Gutenstetten
7.8
Pahres
10.2
Forst
11.3
Gerhardshofen
12.5
Dachsbach
15.4
Demantsforth-Uehlfeld

History

The Royal Bavarian State Railways began operations on this single-tracked, standard gauge Lokalbahn through the Aischgrund on 12 July 1904. Leaving Neustadt (Aisch) station the line runs in a northeasterly direction first to the minor station at Neustadt (Aisch) Stadt (km 1.5) and then the along the river as far as the Uehlfeld district of Demantsforth, where the terminus was built, about two kilometres from the centre of Uehlfeld. An extension of the railway down the valley to Höchstadt an der Aisch, which would have proved a through connexion to Forchheim, did not come to fruition.

The number of train pairs rose from 3 in 1904 to 4 in 1914; this level of service was also provided in 1939 again. After the Second World War an even better service was provided on the line: in 1950 there were six pairs of trains during the week, as many as seven on Saturdays and four on Sundays.

As the Deutsche Bundesbahn steadily drew down its services on branch lines, rail traffic on the line was reduced to working days only during the 1970s and, on 30 May 1976, passenger services were withdrawn and replaced by railway-operated buses. Goods traffic continued until 23 September 1993 and the line was officially closed at the end of 1993.

See also

References

    Sources

    • Wolfgang Bleiweis, Ekkehard Martin: Fränkische Nebenbahnen einst and jetzt – Mittel- and Unterfranken. Egglham 1987
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.