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Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds Railway

The Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds Railway (French: Chemin de fer Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds; SC) was a railway company that operated a metre-gauge railway from Saignelégier to La Chaux-de-Fonds in western Switzerland. In 1944, the railway was merged to form the Chemins de fer du Jura (CJ), which electrified it at 1500 Volt DC in 1953. Its line is now part of the La Chaux-de-Fonds–Glovelier line.

Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds Railway
SC train hauled by Mallet locomotive G 2x2/2 no. 4 in Saignelégier
Overview
LocaleSwitzerland
Service
Route number236
Technical
Line length26.44 km (16.43 mi)
Track gauge1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge
Electrificationsince 1953: 1500 V DC overhead catenary
Maximum incline4.0%
Route map

km
5.39
Saignelégier
982 m
transporter wagon
yard, 1915–1953
3.76
Muriaux
962 m
2.37
Les Emibois
954 m
0.00
22.98
Le Noirmont
969 m
26.02
Le Creux-des-Biches
1013 m
27.77
Le Boéchet
1033 m
30.18
Les Bois
1029 m
32.12
La Large-Journée
1016 m
33.45
La Chaux-d'Abel
994 m
34.93
La Ferrière
1005 m
Ferrière bridge (129 m)
36.36
Le Seignat
(until 2012)
1027 m
37.95
La Cibourg
1036 m
chainage break −0.02
40.27
Bellevue
(until 2012)
1073 m
42.95
La Chaux-de-Fonds-Est
1012 m
Hôtel-de-Ville bridge (40 m)
44.03
La Chaux-de-Fonds
1012 m
1915–2010 transporter wagon yard
Source: Swiss railway atlas[1]

History edit

The first main lines in the Jura were built primarily to connect to France and did not serve the Franches-Montagnes. The then Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds Railway opened its metre-gauge line from Saignelégier via Le Noirmont to La Chaux-de-Fonds-Est on 7 December 1892. The extension to La Chaux-de-Fonds on the Jura–Simplon Railways had to wait until 28 November 1893, when the Hotel de Ville rail and road bridge was finished. This also created a connection to the also narrow-gauge Ponts–Sagne–La Chaux-de-Fonds Railway (PSC). The railway originally had no significant engineering structures except for the Hotel-de-Ville bridge.

Connection of other lines edit

 
By 1904, Saignelégier was the terminus of the narrow gauge railway from La Chaux-de-Fonds.
 
With the opening of the standard gauge RSG, Saignelégier became an interchange station with a complicated track layout.

In 1904, the Régional Saignelégier–Glovelier (RSG) took over operations, creating an important connection to the BaselDelémont–Glovelier–Porrentruy main line, which continued to France. However, the Saignelégier–Glovelier line was built as standard gauge to facilitate its extensive livestock and timber transportation. Saignelégier became a transhipment station with an intricate system of tracks. To overcome the different gauges, transporter wagons were used on the Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds line from May 1915.

The neighbouring Ponts–Sagne–La Chaux-de-Fonds railway (PSC) did not have the best connections despite having the same gauge and a shared station. Nevertheless, the Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds Railway provided PCS services after 1 July 1913 when the Jura neuchâtelois (JN) was nationalised and incorporated into the SBB.

The TramelanBreuleuxNoirmont tramway (TBN) was opened on 15 November 1913. It was an extension of the Tramelan–Tavannes railway (TT), which had opened in 1884. Because unlike the SC, the TBN has been electrically operated since its opening, continuous services between La Chaux -de-Fonds-Bahn and Tavannes were limited. The TBN and TT were merged in 1927 to form the Tavannes–Noirmont Railway (Chemin de fer Tavannes-Noirmontm, CTN).

Operating results edit

The main source of income for the Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds Railway was passenger transport, although freight transport also played an important role. After the second year of operation, the operating results always showed a profit, which was invested as a reserve. The First World War did not affect the financial position either. After the war, however, operating costs rose sharply and its financial situation became precarious. In addition Alsace was returned to France after the war, which made the Basel–Delle line much less important. After 1918, the railway remained in deficit and the facilities and rolling stock became obsolete. To enable a thorough renewal of the line, it merged with the RSC, the CTN and the Régional Porrentruy–Bonfol (RPB) to form the Chemins de fer du Jura (CJ) in 1944.

Operation by the Chemins de fer du Jura edit

 
Le Noirment station in 1977. On the left the commuter service to Glovelier, on the right the connecting train to Tavannes.
 
CJ push-pull train of the second generation near Saignelégier.

To simplify operations, the CJ converted the Saignelégier–Glovelier line to metre gauge. After that standard gauge freight wagons were loaded on transporter wagon in Glovelier instead of Saignelégier or alternatively until 2010 in La Chaux-de-Fonds.

The CJ has operated its entire metre-gauge network with 1500 volts DC since 4 October 1953. The rolling stock was replaced almost completely by new sets. The two substations in La Ferrière and Le Noirmont supply the line with electricity.[2]

Although the CJ has the same electricity system as the neighbouring La Chaux-de-Fonds–Les Ponts-de-Martel railway, only a few vehicles are exchanged between the CJ and Transports Régionaux Neuchâtelois (TRN). TRN vehicles regularly access the CJ network in order to reprofile their wheels on the underfloor lathe in the CJ Tramelan workshop. In La Chaux-de-Fonds, the CJ and TRN catenaries can be interconnected via a coupling switch to provide power to the neighboring railway in case of emergency.[3]

In 1959, the CJ replaced the steel Hotel-de-Ville Bridge with a concrete structure. The 129 metre-long Ferrière bridge between La Ferrière and Le Seignat was opened in 1979. It replaces an old, very tortuous route.[4]

Current operations edit

 
Waste train attached to an ABe 4/4 railcar acquired from the RhB at La Ferrière.
 
G 2x2/2 E 164 steam locomotive, used by La Traction for steam haulage.

The La Chaux-de-Fonds–Saignelégier–Glovelier passenger trains run almost continuously every hour.[4] In Le Noirment, they connect with trains to Tavannes. The Marché-Concours national de chevaux horse race takes place in Saignelégier in August.

Freight trains run regularly on the line from Monday to Friday. Garbage has been carried from Glovelier to the incinerator in La Chaux-de-Fonds since 2000. In addition, standard-gauge wagons are carried on transporter wagons, which primarily carry timber logs, fuel oil, gravel and road salt.[4] Scheduled steam trains are operated by La Traction from Pré-Petitjean to Glovelier, Tavannes or La Chaux-de-Fonds from July to September.[5]

In Saignelégier there is a depot for the maintenance of rolling stock used in regular traffic. Construction service vehicles are maintained at a single-track carriage shed in Le Noirmont.[4]

Route description edit

 
Modern GTW train of the CJ on the on-street section in La Chaux-de-Fonds.

The 27-kilometre-long line connects Saignelégier in the Canton of Jura with the watchmaking town of La Chaux-de-Fonds in the Neuchâtel. Shortly after leaving Saignelégier, passengers see the deep valley of the Doubs and behind it the high plateau of Maîche, which is in France. Passing the small towns of Muriaux and Les Emibois, the trains reach Le Noirmont, where the line from Tavannes joins on the left. A cardiac clinic is visible on the ridges to the right.

The line to Les Bois crosses forest pastures at around 1000 metres above sea level. The belfry of the church of Les Bois is typical of the neighboring Franche-Comté. Between La Large-Journée and La Chaux d'Abel, the railway crosses the cantonal border to reach La Ferrière in the Canton of Bern. The line reaches the Canton of Neuchâtel immediately before the former halt of Le Seignat. After passing through the crossing station of La Cibourg, the trains run along a winding stretch of line to reach the highest point of the line at Bellevue at 1072 metres above sea level. The line then runs through a pine forest to La Chaux-de-Fonds, where trains run through the street to the station.[6] Just before the La Chaux-de-Fonds station, the line moves off the street and the railway runs parallel to the SBB lines from Neuchâtel and Biel and the metre-gauge line from Les Ponts-de-Martel to the terminus.

Rolling stock of the Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds Railway edit

Locomotives of the SC G 2x2/2 G 3/3
Numbering: 4 – 6 7 9
Wheel arrangement: B'B C
Length over buffer: 7480 mm 7740 mm 6140 mm
Fixed wheelbase: 1150 mm 1150 mm 2200 mm
Total wheelbase: 4000 mm 4050 mm 2200 mm
Service weight: 24.0 t 27.1 t 20 t
Adhesive weight: 24.0 t 27.1 t 20 t
Maximum speed: 30 km/h 35 km/h
Driving wheel diameter: 900 mm 750 mm
Inside cylinder diameter: 250 mm 300 mm
Outside cylinder diameter: 380 mm
Piston stroke: 460 mm 350 mm
Boiler pressure: 12 atm 14 atm 13 atm
Grate area: 0.7 m2 0.7 m2
Superheater area: 3.8 m2 3.7 m2 7.5 m2
Total heating surface: 42.0 m2 45.3 m2 38.5 m2
Water supply: 3.0 m³ 2.2 m³
Coal supply: 0.6 t 0.9 t 0.6 t

G 2x2/2 no. 4 – 7 edit

The Arnold Jung Lokomotivfabrik in Jungenthal, Germany delivered two four-axle Mallet locomotive G 2x2/2 no. 4 and 5 with the names of Pouillerel and Spiegelberg for the commencement of operations of the Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds line in 1892. The first revision was obtained in 1894, when a third locomotive Franches-Montagnes was procured and given the number 6. In 1900, Jung delivered the last locomotive, no. 7, Jura. The numbers 4 to 7 continued on from the locomotive numbers of the Ponts–Sagne–La Chaux-de-Fonds Railway, as the two companies had an operating arrangement.

The G 2x2/2 had an axle load of only 6 tonnes. Apparently it ordered the first locomotive to handle bad track conditions, because the operating program of the Mallet locomotives could also have been achieved this with a simpler 3/3-coupled locomotive.

Locomotive no. 5 was destroyed on 29 October 1944 during an allied air raid on Le Noirmont, despite Switzerland's neutrality. The other three Mallet locomotives were taken out of service after electrification in 1953 and scrapped in 1954.[7]

G 3/3 No. 9 edit

 
G 3/3 no. 9, previously locomotive no. 6 of the PSC

After the bombing of the locomotive 5, the SC needed a replacement. In 1951 it was able to acquire steam locomotive G 3/3 6 from the Ponts-Sagne-La Chaux-de-Fonds Railway, which became redundant after the electrification of 1950. It was delivered by the Swiss Locomotive and Machine Works (SLM) in 1915. Since the company had already used number 6, the number plates were turned upside down to produce a 9. With the electrification of the Chemins de fer du Jura, locomotive 9 became surplus and was scrapped in 1956.[7]

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Eisenbahnatlas Schweiz [Swiss railway atlas]. Schweers + Wall. 2012. pp. 9, 17. ISBN 978-3-89494-130-7.
  2. ^ "Geschichte" (in German). Chemins de fer du Jura. from the original on 17 November 2015. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  3. ^ Stolz, Theo. "TRN - Meterspurnetz" (in German). TRN Transports régionaux neuchâtelois. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  4. ^ a b c d Stolz, Theo. "CJ - Meterspurnetz" (in German). CJ Chemins de fer du Jura. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  5. ^ "Mit dem Dampfzug durch die Freiberge" (in German). La Traction. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  6. ^ "Die Fahrt von Glovelier nach Saignelégier (25 km)" (in German). La Traction – Train à vapeur des Franches-Montagnes. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  7. ^ a b Stolz, Theo. "Die Dampftriebfahrzeuge der Chemins de fer du Jura" (in German). Retrieved 2 December 2019.

Sources edit

  • Frey, Thomas; Schiedt, Hans-Ulrich (eds.). "Saignelégier–La-Chaux-de-Fonds". bahndaten.ch. Daten zu den Schweizer Eisenbahnen 1847–1920 (in German). Via Storia, Zentrum für Verkehrsgeschichte. Retrieved 1 December 2019.
  • Kocher, Jean-Claude (2017). "Les 125 ans de la ligne Saignelégier–La Chaux-de-Fonds". Eisenbahn Amateur (in German) (12): 540–542.
  • Moser, Alfred (1967). Der Dampfbetrieb der Schweizerischen Eisenbahnen 1847–1966 (in German) (4; revised ed.). Basel and Stuttgart: Birkhäuser Verlag.
  • Wägli, Hans G. (2010). Schienennetz Schweiz und Bahnprofil Schweiz CH+ (in German). AS Verlag. ISBN 978-3-909111-74-9.
  • Willen, Peter (1972). Lokomotiven der Schweiz, Normalspur Triebfahrzeuge (in German). Zürich: Orell Füssli Verlag.
  • 1884-1984, 100 ans des Chemins de fer du Jura (in German). Tavannes: Eigenverlag Chemins de fer du Jura. 1984.

saignelégier, chaux, fonds, railway, french, chemin, saignelégier, chaux, fonds, railway, company, that, operated, metre, gauge, railway, from, saignelégier, chaux, fonds, western, switzerland, 1944, railway, merged, form, chemins, jura, which, electrified, 15. The Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds Railway French Chemin de fer Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds SC was a railway company that operated a metre gauge railway from Saignelegier to La Chaux de Fonds in western Switzerland In 1944 the railway was merged to form the Chemins de fer du Jura CJ which electrified it at 1500 Volt DC in 1953 Its line is now part of the La Chaux de Fonds Glovelier line Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds RailwaySC train hauled by Mallet locomotive G 2x2 2 no 4 in SaignelegierOverviewLocaleSwitzerlandServiceRoute number236TechnicalLine length26 44 km 16 43 mi Track gauge1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in metre gaugeElectrificationsince 1953 1500 V DC overhead catenaryMaximum incline4 0 Route mapLegend km elev RSG from Glovelier 5 39 Saignelegier 982 m transporter wagonyard 1915 1953 3 76 Muriaux 962 m 2 37 Les Emibois 954 m TBN TT from Tavannes 0 0022 98 Le Noirmont 969 m 26 02 Le Creux des Biches 1013 m 27 77 Le Boechet 1033 m 30 18 Les Bois 1029 m 32 12 La Large Journee 1016 m 33 45 La Chaux d Abel 994 m 34 93 La Ferriere 1005 m Ferriere bridge 129 m 36 36 Le Seignat until 2012 1027 m 37 95 La Cibourg 1036 m chainage break 0 02 40 27 Bellevue until 2012 1073 m 42 95 La Chaux de Fonds Est 1012 m Hotel de Ville bridge 40 m transN from Les Ponts de Martel SBB lines from Neuchateland from Biel Bienne 44 03 La Chaux de Fonds 1012 m 1915 2010 transporter wagon yard SBB line to Le Locle Source Swiss railway atlas 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 Connection of other lines 1 2 Operating results 2 Operation by the Chemins de fer du Jura 2 1 Current operations 3 Route description 4 Rolling stock of the Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds Railway 4 1 G 2x2 2 no 4 7 4 2 G 3 3 No 9 5 References 5 1 Footnotes 5 2 SourcesHistory editThe first main lines in the Jura were built primarily to connect to France and did not serve the Franches Montagnes The then Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds Railway opened its metre gauge line from Saignelegier via Le Noirmont to La Chaux de Fonds Est on 7 December 1892 The extension to La Chaux de Fonds on the Jura Simplon Railways had to wait until 28 November 1893 when the Hotel de Ville rail and road bridge was finished This also created a connection to the also narrow gauge Ponts Sagne La Chaux de Fonds Railway PSC The railway originally had no significant engineering structures except for the Hotel de Ville bridge Connection of other lines edit nbsp By 1904 Saignelegier was the terminus of the narrow gauge railway from La Chaux de Fonds nbsp With the opening of the standard gauge RSG Saignelegier became an interchange station with a complicated track layout In 1904 the Regional Saignelegier Glovelier RSG took over operations creating an important connection to the Basel Delemont Glovelier Porrentruy main line which continued to France However the Saignelegier Glovelier line was built as standard gauge to facilitate its extensive livestock and timber transportation Saignelegier became a transhipment station with an intricate system of tracks To overcome the different gauges transporter wagons were used on the Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds line from May 1915 The neighbouring Ponts Sagne La Chaux de Fonds railway PSC did not have the best connections despite having the same gauge and a shared station Nevertheless the Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds Railway provided PCS services after 1 July 1913 when the Jura neuchatelois JN was nationalised and incorporated into the SBB The Tramelan Breuleux Noirmont tramway TBN was opened on 15 November 1913 It was an extension of the Tramelan Tavannes railway TT which had opened in 1884 Because unlike the SC the TBN has been electrically operated since its opening continuous services between La Chaux de Fonds Bahn and Tavannes were limited The TBN and TT were merged in 1927 to form the Tavannes Noirmont Railway Chemin de fer Tavannes Noirmontm CTN Operating results edit The main source of income for the Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds Railway was passenger transport although freight transport also played an important role After the second year of operation the operating results always showed a profit which was invested as a reserve The First World War did not affect the financial position either After the war however operating costs rose sharply and its financial situation became precarious In addition Alsace was returned to France after the war which made the Basel Delle line much less important After 1918 the railway remained in deficit and the facilities and rolling stock became obsolete To enable a thorough renewal of the line it merged with the RSC the CTN and the Regional Porrentruy Bonfol RPB to form the Chemins de fer du Jura CJ in 1944 Operation by the Chemins de fer du Jura edit nbsp Le Noirment station in 1977 On the left the commuter service to Glovelier on the right the connecting train to Tavannes nbsp CJ push pull train of the second generation near Saignelegier To simplify operations the CJ converted the Saignelegier Glovelier line to metre gauge After that standard gauge freight wagons were loaded on transporter wagon in Glovelier instead of Saignelegier or alternatively until 2010 in La Chaux de Fonds The CJ has operated its entire metre gauge network with 1500 volts DC since 4 October 1953 The rolling stock was replaced almost completely by new sets The two substations in La Ferriere and Le Noirmont supply the line with electricity 2 Although the CJ has the same electricity system as the neighbouring La Chaux de Fonds Les Ponts de Martel railway only a few vehicles are exchanged between the CJ and Transports Regionaux Neuchatelois TRN TRN vehicles regularly access the CJ network in order to reprofile their wheels on the underfloor lathe in the CJ Tramelan workshop In La Chaux de Fonds the CJ and TRN catenaries can be interconnected via a coupling switch to provide power to the neighboring railway in case of emergency 3 In 1959 the CJ replaced the steel Hotel de Ville Bridge with a concrete structure The 129 metre long Ferriere bridge between La Ferriere and Le Seignat was opened in 1979 It replaces an old very tortuous route 4 Current operations edit nbsp Waste train attached to an ABe 4 4 railcar acquired from the RhB at La Ferriere nbsp G 2x2 2 E 164 steam locomotive used by La Traction for steam haulage The La Chaux de Fonds Saignelegier Glovelier passenger trains run almost continuously every hour 4 In Le Noirment they connect with trains to Tavannes The Marche Concours national de chevaux horse race takes place in Saignelegier in August Freight trains run regularly on the line from Monday to Friday Garbage has been carried from Glovelier to the incinerator in La Chaux de Fonds since 2000 In addition standard gauge wagons are carried on transporter wagons which primarily carry timber logs fuel oil gravel and road salt 4 Scheduled steam trains are operated by La Traction from Pre Petitjean to Glovelier Tavannes or La Chaux de Fonds from July to September 5 In Saignelegier there is a depot for the maintenance of rolling stock used in regular traffic Construction service vehicles are maintained at a single track carriage shed in Le Noirmont 4 Route description edit nbsp Modern GTW train of the CJ on the on street section in La Chaux de Fonds The 27 kilometre long line connects Saignelegier in the Canton of Jura with the watchmaking town of La Chaux de Fonds in the Neuchatel Shortly after leaving Saignelegier passengers see the deep valley of the Doubs and behind it the high plateau of Maiche which is in France Passing the small towns of Muriaux and Les Emibois the trains reach Le Noirmont where the line from Tavannes joins on the left A cardiac clinic is visible on the ridges to the right The line to Les Bois crosses forest pastures at around 1000 metres above sea level The belfry of the church of Les Bois is typical of the neighboring Franche Comte Between La Large Journee and La Chaux d Abel the railway crosses the cantonal border to reach La Ferriere in the Canton of Bern The line reaches the Canton of Neuchatel immediately before the former halt of Le Seignat After passing through the crossing station of La Cibourg the trains run along a winding stretch of line to reach the highest point of the line at Bellevue at 1072 metres above sea level The line then runs through a pine forest to La Chaux de Fonds where trains run through the street to the station 6 Just before the La Chaux de Fonds station the line moves off the street and the railway runs parallel to the SBB lines from Neuchatel and Biel and the metre gauge line from Les Ponts de Martel to the terminus Rolling stock of the Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds Railway editLocomotives of the SC G 2x2 2 G 3 3 Numbering 4 6 7 9 Wheel arrangement B B C Length over buffer 7480 mm 7740 mm 6140 mm Fixed wheelbase 1150 mm 1150 mm 2200 mm Total wheelbase 4000 mm 4050 mm 2200 mm Service weight 24 0 t 27 1 t 20 t Adhesive weight 24 0 t 27 1 t 20 t Maximum speed 30 km h 35 km h Driving wheel diameter 900 mm 750 mm Inside cylinder diameter 250 mm 300 mm Outside cylinder diameter 380 mm Piston stroke 460 mm 350 mm Boiler pressure 12 atm 14 atm 13 atm Grate area 0 7 m2 0 7 m2 Superheater area 3 8 m2 3 7 m2 7 5 m2 Total heating surface 42 0 m2 45 3 m2 38 5 m2 Water supply 3 0 m 2 2 m Coal supply 0 6 t 0 9 t 0 6 t G 2x2 2 no 4 7 edit The Arnold Jung Lokomotivfabrik in Jungenthal Germany delivered two four axle Mallet locomotive G 2x2 2 no 4 and 5 with the names of Pouillerel and Spiegelberg for the commencement of operations of the Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds line in 1892 The first revision was obtained in 1894 when a third locomotive Franches Montagnes was procured and given the number 6 In 1900 Jung delivered the last locomotive no 7 Jura The numbers 4 to 7 continued on from the locomotive numbers of the Ponts Sagne La Chaux de Fonds Railway as the two companies had an operating arrangement The G 2x2 2 had an axle load of only 6 tonnes Apparently it ordered the first locomotive to handle bad track conditions because the operating program of the Mallet locomotives could also have been achieved this with a simpler 3 3 coupled locomotive Locomotive no 5 was destroyed on 29 October 1944 during an allied air raid on Le Noirmont despite Switzerland s neutrality The other three Mallet locomotives were taken out of service after electrification in 1953 and scrapped in 1954 7 G 3 3 No 9 edit nbsp G 3 3 no 9 previously locomotive no 6 of the PSC After the bombing of the locomotive 5 the SC needed a replacement In 1951 it was able to acquire steam locomotive G 3 3 6 from the Ponts Sagne La Chaux de Fonds Railway which became redundant after the electrification of 1950 It was delivered by the Swiss Locomotive and Machine Works SLM in 1915 Since the company had already used number 6 the number plates were turned upside down to produce a 9 With the electrification of the Chemins de fer du Jura locomotive 9 became surplus and was scrapped in 1956 7 References editFootnotes edit Eisenbahnatlas Schweiz Swiss railway atlas Schweers Wall 2012 pp 9 17 ISBN 978 3 89494 130 7 Geschichte in German Chemins de fer du Jura Archived from the original on 17 November 2015 Retrieved 2 December 2019 Stolz Theo TRN Meterspurnetz in German TRN Transports regionaux neuchatelois Retrieved 2 December 2019 a b c d Stolz Theo CJ Meterspurnetz in German CJ Chemins de fer du Jura Retrieved 2 December 2019 Mit dem Dampfzug durch die Freiberge in German La Traction Retrieved 2 December 2019 Die Fahrt von Glovelier nach Saignelegier 25 km in German La Traction Train a vapeur des Franches Montagnes Retrieved 2 December 2019 a b Stolz Theo Die Dampftriebfahrzeuge der Chemins de fer du Jura in German Retrieved 2 December 2019 Sources edit Frey Thomas Schiedt Hans Ulrich eds Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds bahndaten ch Daten zu den Schweizer Eisenbahnen 1847 1920 in German Via Storia Zentrum fur Verkehrsgeschichte Retrieved 1 December 2019 Kocher Jean Claude 2017 Les 125 ans de la ligne Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds Eisenbahn Amateur in German 12 540 542 Moser Alfred 1967 Der Dampfbetrieb der Schweizerischen Eisenbahnen 1847 1966 in German 4 revised ed Basel and Stuttgart Birkhauser Verlag Wagli Hans G 2010 Schienennetz Schweiz und Bahnprofil Schweiz CH in German AS Verlag ISBN 978 3 909111 74 9 Willen Peter 1972 Lokomotiven der Schweiz Normalspur Triebfahrzeuge in German Zurich Orell Fussli Verlag 1884 1984 100 ans des Chemins de fer du Jura in German Tavannes Eigenverlag Chemins de fer du Jura 1984 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Saignelegier La Chaux de Fonds Railway amp oldid 1167370658, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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