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Crailsheim station

Crailsheim station is a junction station in the German state of Baden-Württemberg where four railway lines converge. It lies at the 30.4 km point (from Goldshöfe) on the Upper Jagst Railway, with the chainage continuing on the Hohenlohe Railway. The chainage on the Tauber Valley Railway and the line to Nuremberg starts at the station. With its four platform tracks and numerous passing tracks and sidings, it is the largest station in the district of Schwäbisch Hall. It is by served by Intercity and regional trains.

Crailsheim
Crossing station
2011
General information
LocationAm Bahnhof 1, Crailsheim, Baden-Württemberg
Germany
Coordinates49°8′16″N 10°3′52″E / 49.13778°N 10.06444°E / 49.13778; 10.06444
Owned byDeutsche Bahn
Operated byDB Station&Service
Line(s)
Platforms4
Other information
Station code1079[1]
DS100 codeTC[2]
IBNR8000067
Category3[1]
Fare zoneKVSH: 50[3]
Websitewww.bahnhof.de
History
Opened15 November 1866; 157 years ago (1866-11-15)
Services
Preceding station DB Fernverkehr Following station
Ellwangen IC 61 Ansbach
towards Leipzig Hbf
Preceding station Following station
Eckartshausen-Ilshofen RE 80 Terminus
Satteldorf RE 87
Satteldorf
towards Wertheim
RB 88
Preceding station Following station
Eckartshausen-Ilshofen RE 90 Schnelldorf
Jagstzell MEX 13 Terminus
Location
Crailsheim
Location in Baden-Württemberg
Crailsheim
Location in Germany
Crailsheim
Location in Europe

History edit

The construction of a railway line from Heilbronn via Schwäbisch Hall to Wasseralfingen (near Aalen) was authorised in a resolution of the parliament of the Kingdom of Württemberg on 17 November 1858. The proponents planned a route along the Jagst to connect the cities of Crailsheim and Ellwangen. The route was in competition with a proposed line from Gaildorf and the upper Kocher valley, which was a much shorter route.

Crailsheim mayor Nagel and the administrator of the Ellwangen district (Oberamt Ellwangen), Karl Weinheimer, founded a railway committee with other citizens, which successfully represented the interests of the leading officials of Crailsheim and Ellwangen. The committee proposed Crailsheim as a possible new hub for lines to Würzburg and Nuremberg, convincing the parliament of its merits. The reason advanced was the higher number of inhabitants of the cities Ellwangen and Crailsheim, compared to Gaildorf, as well as the greater volume of trade.

The Hohenlohe Railway (then called the Kocherbahn, Kocher Railway) reached Schwäbisch Hall on 4 August 1862. Parliament approved the rapid extension of the line to Crailsheim on 13 April 1865. The government of Bavaria also expressed satisfaction with this route.

The Crailsheim council and a citizens' committee now discussed the location of the station. They foresaw the establishment of the station in the Ansbacher district (on the road to Ansbach), between the Wilder-Mann-Keller hotel and the Wasserstall area (now in the area around Gebiet Albert-Schweitzer-Gymnasium, Volksfestplatz and Beuerlbacher Straße, northeast of the centre of the town). However, this was not possible for topographical reasons and the authorities had to choose a site to the west of the town. Initially, a site in the Haller district (on the road to Schwäbisch Hall) was considered but eventually it was decided to build the station directly to the west of central Crailsheim in the Siechenäcker area.

As is still clearly visible, the station has an exact north–south orientation. Worthingtonstraße (formerly Kronprinzstraße), the Alte Postweg, and some other streets were rerouted. Underpasses were built for the roads to Roßfeld and to Altenmünster.

The Royal Württemberg State Railways (Königlich Württembergischen Staats-Eisenbahnen, KWSt.E.) built a monumental entrance building in Crailsheim, as it was the seat of the district (oberamt) with nearly 3,000 inhabitants. The construction work continued from February to November 1866.

The station was formally opened with the commissioning of the Upper Jagst Railway on 15 November 1866. On 10 December 1867, the State Railway completed the Hall–Crailsheim section of the Kocher Railway.

Crailsheim as a border station edit

On 12 December 1868, the Bavarian-Württemberg treaty was signed, which provided for the construction of the Nuremberg–Crailsheim railway. The line was completed on 15 June 1876 with the completion of the Dombühl–border–Crailsheim section. As a result, Crailsheim station won addition importance as a border station.

The station building received a three-story extension in 1874–1875 for the accommodation of the Bavarian staff. In addition, the Royal Bavarian State Railways (Königlich Bayerische Staats-Eisenbahnen) built a roundhouse and a freight shed. This was the beginning of the Crailsheim depot.

Since the KWSt.E. operated on Stuttgart local time and the Bavarian State Railways operated on Munich time, this meant that operations towards Bavaria, had to operate by a tower clock at the northern end of the station which was nine and a half minutes ahead of Stuttgart time. New houses were built near the station for the Bavarian railway workers.

From 1887 to 1890, the KWSt.E. duplicated the line from Heilbronn to the border of Bavaria and Württemberg at Ellrichshausen. This was intended to improve east–west connections between Franconia and the French border for military reasons.

On 1 January 1890, the KWSt.E. took over the operations of the Bavarian State Railways and replaced the Bavarian staff. Only the northern station clock marked the function of the station as a border station, until it along with the other clocks was changed to Central European Time on 1 June 1891.

Deutsche Reichsbahn period edit

On 1 1920 April the Württemberg State Railways was absorbed by Deutsche Reichsbahn. Under the Reichsbahn, Crailsheim station was one of the main stations in Württemberg. Express trains on the BerlinStuttgart, Prague–Stuttgart and FrankfurtFriedrichshafen routes stopped here.

The Crailsheim railway junction and depot had a military role during the Second World War. It is likely, according to the then stationmaster, that more than one million soldiers passed through the station in the six years of the war. On 23 February 1945, Allied bombers attacked Crailsheim in two waves. They destroyed or damaged all the buildings in the station area. Overall, on that day 61 people died in the city and 100 suffered injuries. More air strikes were made on the railways on 1 and 4 April 1945 and rail traffic towards Nuremberg and Lauda was interrupted completely.

Post-war period edit

 
Station's platform in 1965

After the Second World War, many experts were involved in the construction of the city which had suffered from air raids and destructive shelling. Also the city council called for a transformation of the station. A new entrance building would not be rebuilt on an island between the tracks, which was perceived as unfavourable, but at Kronprinzstraße (Worthingtonstraße since 1948).

The railway division (Eisenbahndirektionen) in Stuttgart, agreed with this proposal. In the meantime in 1948 and 1949, it built a one-story facility at the old location that went into service on 24 December 1949. Elaborate plans were made in the 1970s for a new station building and related facilities but Deutsche Bundesbahn finally rejected them in 1981 as unaffordable and the temporary station of 1949 continues to this day.

Modernisation edit

 
Track 1 with Regionalbahn to Aschaffenburg Hbf

The city has lowered Worthingtonstraße and built a bus station and new parking lots. On 2 June 1985, Deutsche Bundesbahn commenced regular electric operations between Ansbach and Goldshöfe. On 31 May 1996, electrification was completed of the Marbach (Neckar)–Crailsheim section.

Entrance building (1866-1945) edit

 
Crailsheim station in 1905

Crailsheim station was designed by building inspector (Bauinspektor) Baumann as a three-story building, which was almost 46 metres long and 17 metres wide. It consisted of two wings and a central structure. The windows and doors on the ground floor were fitted with arches in the Rundbogenstil (round arch style). The facade was made of gray sandstone. The upper floors had a shiny finish. The roof was slate-covered.

A special feature of this building was the northern clock tower, with a height of 28.7 metres. It emphasised the importance of the station as a border station and was adapted also to the silhouette of the city, with the Stadtturm (town tower) and the towers of the churches of Liebfrauenkapelle and Johanneskirche.

The station building was located in an island between the tracks. The access road led—as it still does—from Bahnhofstraße/Haller Straße to the station. It was lined with elms from the beginning. The main entrance was on the north side of the building below the tower. Behind it was a lobby, which was 5.35 metres to 5.16 meters tall and surrounded by the ticket office and baggage counter. Passengers passed through a 45 metre long and 3.16 metre wide corridor to the waiting room, which was still divided into classes.

On 12 December 1868, the KWSt.E. agreed to expand the station to handle border operations and to allow the Royal Bavarian State Railways to operate the Nuremberg–Crailsheim line. The Bavarian building was built to the south and it also had a three-story annex. It was identical to the original building and had a length of 19 metres. Its width was the same.

On 23 February 1945, there was a heavy air raid on Crailsheim, which also targeted the railway junction. The entrance building was burned out and collapsed. Its reconstruction after World War II was considered out of the question, because the city council already wanted to get rid of the island building. Since 1949, a temporary station has stood in its place.

Depot edit

 
Water tower at Crailsheim depot
 
New turntable in Crailsheim depot with museum carriages

Due to the importance of traffic at the station, it was soon necessary to station locomotives there. A locomotive depot was established in 1870 at the southern end of the station between the lines to Hessental and Aalen. A second turntable was established in 1926.

With the opening of the line from Nuremberg, the Bavarian State Railways also needed its own depots, these were built in the eastern part of the station (on the Bavarian side). These depots were not abandoned until 1930, although operations had been handed over to the Württemberg State Railways in 1890.

After the destruction of the Second World War, the depot flourished during the steam era, with up to 70 locomotives stationed there. But with the decline of steam operations, the depot became insignificant. On 30 May 1976, at the end of the winter timetable, the last steam locomotive used the Crailsheim depot. A week later, two class 44 locomotives left Crailsheim depot, making it steam-free, so that there were now only diesel operations. The turntables were dismantled in 1985 with the introduction of electrical operations.

Today not much is left the former locomotive depot and the distinctive water tower now serves as a bar. A portion of the site is used by the DBK Historic Railway association, which has managed to build a new turntable with the assistance of grants.

Rail operations edit

 
Crailsheim station looking west

Crailsheim station is a railway junction at the intersection of the Upper Jagst Railway, the Nuremberg–Crailsheim railway, the Hohenlohe Railway and the Tauber Valley Railway. Track 1, the western “home” platform (next to the station building) is mostly used for train services to Schwäbisch Hall-Hessental and Lauda. Some trains also run towards Ansbach. Track 2, the eastern “home” platform is served by intercity trains to Aalen and some trains in all directions. Track 3 is served by trains to Schwäbisch Hall-Hessental, Ansbach and Lauda. Inter-city trains running to Ansbach and Aalen stop on track 4.

The station is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 3 station.[1]

Long-distance edit

Route Frequency
IC 61 KarlsruhePforzheimStuttgartAalenCrailsheimNurembergBamberg – Saalfeld – Jena Paradies – Leipzig 2 hours

Regional services edit

Regional services as of 2023:

Route Frequency
RE 80 Heilbronn – ÖhringenSchwäbisch Hall – Schwäbisch Hall-Hessental – Crailsheim Every 2 hours
RE 87 Aschaffenburg – Miltenberg – WertheimTauberbischofsheimLaudaBad MergentheimCrailsheim Every 2 hours
RE 90 StuttgartBad CannstattWaiblingenBacknangSchwäbisch Hall-HessentalCrailsheim (– Ansbach – Nuremberg) Every 2 hours
MEX 13 Stuttgart – Aalen – Ellwangen  – Crailsheim Every 2 hours
MEX 90 Stuttgart – Backnang – Gaildorf West – Schwäbisch Hall-Hessental  (– Crailsheim) Individual services
RB 88 Aschaffenburg – Miltenberg – Wertheim – Lauda – Bad Mergentheim – Crailsheim Every 2 hours, Mon–Fri

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c "Stationspreisliste 2024" [Station price list 2024] (PDF) (in German). DB Station&Service. 24 April 2023. Retrieved 29 November 2023.
  2. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland (German railway atlas) (2009/2010 ed.). Schweers + Wall. 2009. ISBN 978-3-89494-139-0.
  3. ^ "Zonenplan RegioTarif für den KreisVerkehr" (PDF). KreisVerkehr Schwäbisch Hall. January 2021. Retrieved 16 March 2021.

References edit

  • Willi Glasbrenner (1994). Die Eisenbahn in Crailsheim (in German). Freiburg (Breisgau): EK-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-88255-718-3.
  • Roland Feitenhansl (2003). Der Bahnhof Heilbronn – seine Empfangsgebäude von 1848, 1874 und 1958 (in German). Hövelhof: DGEG Medien. ISBN 978-3-937189-01-7.
  • Martin Baier (2007). Crailsheimer Chronik 1945–1955. Die Nachkriegs- und Wiederaufbaujahre (in German). Crailsheim: Baier Verlag. ISBN 978-3-929233-71-1.
  • Jürgen Gaßebner, Claus-Jürgen Jacobson (1999). Bahnanlagen aus der Luft (in German). Transpress-Verlag. ISBN 978-3-613-71098-6.

crailsheim, station, junction, station, german, state, baden, württemberg, where, four, railway, lines, converge, lies, point, from, goldshöfe, upper, jagst, railway, with, chainage, continuing, hohenlohe, railway, chainage, tauber, valley, railway, line, nure. Crailsheim station is a junction station in the German state of Baden Wurttemberg where four railway lines converge It lies at the 30 4 km point from Goldshofe on the Upper Jagst Railway with the chainage continuing on the Hohenlohe Railway The chainage on the Tauber Valley Railway and the line to Nuremberg starts at the station With its four platform tracks and numerous passing tracks and sidings it is the largest station in the district of Schwabisch Hall It is by served by Intercity and regional trains CrailsheimCrossing station2011General informationLocationAm Bahnhof 1 Crailsheim Baden WurttembergGermanyCoordinates49 8 16 N 10 3 52 E 49 13778 N 10 06444 E 49 13778 10 06444Owned byDeutsche BahnOperated byDB Station amp ServiceLine s Tauber Valley Railway KBS 782 Hohenlohe Railway KBS 783 KBS 785 Upper Jagst Railway KBS 786 Nuremberg Crailsheim railway KBS 786 Platforms4Other informationStation code1079 1 DS100 codeTC 2 IBNR8000067Category3 1 Fare zoneKVSH 50 3 Websitewww bahnhof deHistoryOpened15 November 1866 157 years ago 1866 11 15 ServicesPreceding station DB Fernverkehr Following stationEllwangentowards Karlsruhe Hbf IC 61 Ansbachtowards Leipzig HbfPreceding station Following stationEckartshausen Ilshofentowards Heilbronn Hbf RE 80 TerminusSatteldorftowards Aschaffenburg Hbf RE 87Satteldorftowards Wertheim RB 88Preceding station Following stationEckartshausen Ilshofentowards Stuttgart Hbf RE 90 Schnelldorftowards Nurnberg HbfJagstzelltowards Stuttgart Hbf MEX 13 TerminusLocationCrailsheimLocation in Baden WurttembergShow map of Baden WurttembergCrailsheimLocation in GermanyShow map of GermanyCrailsheimLocation in EuropeShow map of Europe Contents 1 History 1 1 Crailsheim as a border station 1 2 Deutsche Reichsbahn period 1 3 Post war period 1 4 Modernisation 2 Entrance building 1866 1945 3 Depot 4 Rail operations 4 1 Long distance 4 2 Regional services 5 Notes 6 ReferencesHistory editThe construction of a railway line from Heilbronn via Schwabisch Hall to Wasseralfingen near Aalen was authorised in a resolution of the parliament of the Kingdom of Wurttemberg on 17 November 1858 The proponents planned a route along the Jagst to connect the cities of Crailsheim and Ellwangen The route was in competition with a proposed line from Gaildorf and the upper Kocher valley which was a much shorter route Crailsheim mayor Nagel and the administrator of the Ellwangen district Oberamt Ellwangen Karl Weinheimer founded a railway committee with other citizens which successfully represented the interests of the leading officials of Crailsheim and Ellwangen The committee proposed Crailsheim as a possible new hub for lines to Wurzburg and Nuremberg convincing the parliament of its merits The reason advanced was the higher number of inhabitants of the cities Ellwangen and Crailsheim compared to Gaildorf as well as the greater volume of trade The Hohenlohe Railway then called the Kocherbahn Kocher Railway reached Schwabisch Hall on 4 August 1862 Parliament approved the rapid extension of the line to Crailsheim on 13 April 1865 The government of Bavaria also expressed satisfaction with this route The Crailsheim council and a citizens committee now discussed the location of the station They foresaw the establishment of the station in the Ansbacher district on the road to Ansbach between the Wilder Mann Keller hotel and the Wasserstall area now in the area around Gebiet Albert Schweitzer Gymnasium Volksfestplatz and Beuerlbacher Strasse northeast of the centre of the town However this was not possible for topographical reasons and the authorities had to choose a site to the west of the town Initially a site in the Haller district on the road to Schwabisch Hall was considered but eventually it was decided to build the station directly to the west of central Crailsheim in the Siechenacker area As is still clearly visible the station has an exact north south orientation Worthingtonstrasse formerly Kronprinzstrasse the Alte Postweg and some other streets were rerouted Underpasses were built for the roads to Rossfeld and to Altenmunster The Royal Wurttemberg State Railways Koniglich Wurttembergischen Staats Eisenbahnen KWSt E built a monumental entrance building in Crailsheim as it was the seat of the district oberamt with nearly 3 000 inhabitants The construction work continued from February to November 1866 The station was formally opened with the commissioning of the Upper Jagst Railway on 15 November 1866 On 10 December 1867 the State Railway completed the Hall Crailsheim section of the Kocher Railway Crailsheim as a border station edit On 12 December 1868 the Bavarian Wurttemberg treaty was signed which provided for the construction of the Nuremberg Crailsheim railway The line was completed on 15 June 1876 with the completion of the Dombuhl border Crailsheim section As a result Crailsheim station won addition importance as a border station The station building received a three story extension in 1874 1875 for the accommodation of the Bavarian staff In addition the Royal Bavarian State Railways Koniglich Bayerische Staats Eisenbahnen built a roundhouse and a freight shed This was the beginning of the Crailsheim depot Since the KWSt E operated on Stuttgart local time and the Bavarian State Railways operated on Munich time this meant that operations towards Bavaria had to operate by a tower clock at the northern end of the station which was nine and a half minutes ahead of Stuttgart time New houses were built near the station for the Bavarian railway workers From 1887 to 1890 the KWSt E duplicated the line from Heilbronn to the border of Bavaria and Wurttemberg at Ellrichshausen This was intended to improve east west connections between Franconia and the French border for military reasons On 1 January 1890 the KWSt E took over the operations of the Bavarian State Railways and replaced the Bavarian staff Only the northern station clock marked the function of the station as a border station until it along with the other clocks was changed to Central European Time on 1 June 1891 Deutsche Reichsbahn period edit On 1 1920 April the Wurttemberg State Railways was absorbed by Deutsche Reichsbahn Under the Reichsbahn Crailsheim station was one of the main stations in Wurttemberg Express trains on the Berlin Stuttgart Prague Stuttgart and Frankfurt Friedrichshafen routes stopped here The Crailsheim railway junction and depot had a military role during the Second World War It is likely according to the then stationmaster that more than one million soldiers passed through the station in the six years of the war On 23 February 1945 Allied bombers attacked Crailsheim in two waves They destroyed or damaged all the buildings in the station area Overall on that day 61 people died in the city and 100 suffered injuries More air strikes were made on the railways on 1 and 4 April 1945 and rail traffic towards Nuremberg and Lauda was interrupted completely Post war period edit nbsp Station s platform in 1965After the Second World War many experts were involved in the construction of the city which had suffered from air raids and destructive shelling Also the city council called for a transformation of the station A new entrance building would not be rebuilt on an island between the tracks which was perceived as unfavourable but at Kronprinzstrasse Worthingtonstrasse since 1948 The railway division Eisenbahndirektionen in Stuttgart agreed with this proposal In the meantime in 1948 and 1949 it built a one story facility at the old location that went into service on 24 December 1949 Elaborate plans were made in the 1970s for a new station building and related facilities but Deutsche Bundesbahn finally rejected them in 1981 as unaffordable and the temporary station of 1949 continues to this day Modernisation edit nbsp Track 1 with Regionalbahn to Aschaffenburg HbfThe city has lowered Worthingtonstrasse and built a bus station and new parking lots On 2 June 1985 Deutsche Bundesbahn commenced regular electric operations between Ansbach and Goldshofe On 31 May 1996 electrification was completed of the Marbach Neckar Crailsheim section Entrance building 1866 1945 edit nbsp Crailsheim station in 1905Crailsheim station was designed by building inspector Bauinspektor Baumann as a three story building which was almost 46 metres long and 17 metres wide It consisted of two wings and a central structure The windows and doors on the ground floor were fitted with arches in the Rundbogenstil round arch style The facade was made of gray sandstone The upper floors had a shiny finish The roof was slate covered A special feature of this building was the northern clock tower with a height of 28 7 metres It emphasised the importance of the station as a border station and was adapted also to the silhouette of the city with the Stadtturm town tower and the towers of the churches of Liebfrauenkapelle and Johanneskirche The station building was located in an island between the tracks The access road led as it still does from Bahnhofstrasse Haller Strasse to the station It was lined with elms from the beginning The main entrance was on the north side of the building below the tower Behind it was a lobby which was 5 35 metres to 5 16 meters tall and surrounded by the ticket office and baggage counter Passengers passed through a 45 metre long and 3 16 metre wide corridor to the waiting room which was still divided into classes On 12 December 1868 the KWSt E agreed to expand the station to handle border operations and to allow the Royal Bavarian State Railways to operate the Nuremberg Crailsheim line The Bavarian building was built to the south and it also had a three story annex It was identical to the original building and had a length of 19 metres Its width was the same On 23 February 1945 there was a heavy air raid on Crailsheim which also targeted the railway junction The entrance building was burned out and collapsed Its reconstruction after World War II was considered out of the question because the city council already wanted to get rid of the island building Since 1949 a temporary station has stood in its place Depot edit nbsp Water tower at Crailsheim depot nbsp New turntable in Crailsheim depot with museum carriagesDue to the importance of traffic at the station it was soon necessary to station locomotives there A locomotive depot was established in 1870 at the southern end of the station between the lines to Hessental and Aalen A second turntable was established in 1926 With the opening of the line from Nuremberg the Bavarian State Railways also needed its own depots these were built in the eastern part of the station on the Bavarian side These depots were not abandoned until 1930 although operations had been handed over to the Wurttemberg State Railways in 1890 After the destruction of the Second World War the depot flourished during the steam era with up to 70 locomotives stationed there But with the decline of steam operations the depot became insignificant On 30 May 1976 at the end of the winter timetable the last steam locomotive used the Crailsheim depot A week later two class 44 locomotives left Crailsheim depot making it steam free so that there were now only diesel operations The turntables were dismantled in 1985 with the introduction of electrical operations Today not much is left the former locomotive depot and the distinctive water tower now serves as a bar A portion of the site is used by the DBK Historic Railway association which has managed to build a new turntable with the assistance of grants Rail operations edit nbsp Crailsheim station looking westCrailsheim station is a railway junction at the intersection of the Upper Jagst Railway the Nuremberg Crailsheim railway the Hohenlohe Railway and the Tauber Valley Railway Track 1 the western home platform next to the station building is mostly used for train services to Schwabisch Hall Hessental and Lauda Some trains also run towards Ansbach Track 2 the eastern home platform is served by intercity trains to Aalen and some trains in all directions Track 3 is served by trains to Schwabisch Hall Hessental Ansbach and Lauda Inter city trains running to Ansbach and Aalen stop on track 4 The station is classified by Deutsche Bahn as a category 3 station 1 Long distance edit Route FrequencyIC 61 Karlsruhe Pforzheim Stuttgart Aalen Crailsheim Nuremberg Bamberg Saalfeld Jena Paradies Leipzig 2 hoursRegional services edit Regional services as of 2023 Route FrequencyRE 80 Heilbronn Ohringen Schwabisch Hall Schwabisch Hall Hessental Crailsheim Every 2 hoursRE 87 Aschaffenburg Miltenberg Wertheim Tauberbischofsheim Lauda Bad Mergentheim Crailsheim Every 2 hoursRE 90 Stuttgart Bad Cannstatt Waiblingen Backnang Schwabisch Hall Hessental Crailsheim Ansbach Nuremberg Every 2 hoursMEX 13 Stuttgart Aalen Ellwangen Crailsheim Every 2 hoursMEX 90 Stuttgart Backnang Gaildorf West Schwabisch Hall Hessental Crailsheim Individual servicesRB 88 Aschaffenburg Miltenberg Wertheim Lauda Bad Mergentheim Crailsheim Every 2 hours Mon FriNotes edit a b c Stationspreisliste 2024 Station price list 2024 PDF in German DB Station amp Service 24 April 2023 Retrieved 29 November 2023 Eisenbahnatlas Deutschland German railway atlas 2009 2010 ed Schweers Wall 2009 ISBN 978 3 89494 139 0 Zonenplan RegioTarif fur den KreisVerkehr PDF KreisVerkehr Schwabisch Hall January 2021 Retrieved 16 March 2021 References editWilli Glasbrenner 1994 Die Eisenbahn in Crailsheim in German Freiburg Breisgau EK Verlag ISBN 978 3 88255 718 3 Roland Feitenhansl 2003 Der Bahnhof Heilbronn seine Empfangsgebaude von 1848 1874 und 1958 in German Hovelhof DGEG Medien ISBN 978 3 937189 01 7 Martin Baier 2007 Crailsheimer Chronik 1945 1955 Die Nachkriegs und Wiederaufbaujahre in German Crailsheim Baier Verlag ISBN 978 3 929233 71 1 Jurgen Gassebner Claus Jurgen Jacobson 1999 Bahnanlagen aus der Luft in German Transpress Verlag ISBN 978 3 613 71098 6 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crailsheim station amp oldid 1214624384, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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