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Railway town

A railway town, or railroad town, is a settlement that originated or was greatly developed because of a railway station or junction at its site.

Bereket (Kazandzhik) in Turkmenistan. The town originated from a railway station built in 1885. The city is now an important crossroad of the old Trans-Caspian Railway and new North-South Transnational Railway.

North America edit

During the construction of the First transcontinental railroad in the 1860s, temporary, "Hell on wheels" towns, made mostly of canvas tents, accompanied the Union Pacific Railroad as construction headed west. Most faded away but some became permanent settlements.[1]

 
Prairie railway town (model)

In the 1870s successive boomtowns sprung up in Kansas, each prospering for a year or two as a railhead, and withering when the rail line extended further west and created a new endpoint for the Chisholm Trail.

Becoming rail hubs made Chicago and Los Angeles grow from small towns to large cities.

Sayre, Pennsylvania and Atlanta, Georgia were among the American company towns created by railroads in places where no settlement already existed.

In western Canada, railway towns became associated with brothels and prostitution, and concerned railway companies started a series of YMCAs in the late nineteenth century in response.[2]

Role in land speculation edit

In some cases, a railroad town would be started by the railroad, often using a separate town or land company, even when another town already existed nearby. The population of the existing town would shift to the railroad town. This would create a boon for the town company and its railroad founder, which would sell off lots near the station at a substantial profit, often before the railroad ever arrived at the new townsite.

Such is the case with Durango, Colorado. In the spring of 1880, William Bell of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad scoured the La Plata County area in the vicinity of Animas City, located on the Animas River. When negotiations to acquire land through the local homesteaders fell through, Bell acquired property downstream to the south under more favorable conditions in the name of the Durango Land and Coal Company. By the end of the year, a Durango newspaper reported all of "Animas City is coming to Durango as fast as accommodations can be secured".[3] The population, at the time estimated between 3,000 and 5,000 people, crammed into the little "box town", where the only permanent structures were saloons, dance halls, restaurants and stores.

When the railroad arrived in August 1881, the train stopped in a jubilant Durango, not Animas City. The railroad pushed on up the Animas River, reaching Silverton in July 1882,[3] passing through Animas City without a stop. Animas City subsisted as a de facto suburb of the Durango area before annexation by Durango in 1948.[4] The Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad, a heritage railroad and successor to the Rio Grande in La Plata County, still passes by the townsite.

Europe edit

In Denmark, Sweden and Norway, a related concept is the stationsby or "station town". Stationsbyer are rural towns that grew up around railways, but they were based on agricultural co-operatives and artisan communities rather than on railway industries.[5][6] Among the Swedish towns mostly influenced by railways include Alvesta as a hub for the inland south and Hallsberg as a hub for the interior middle of the country. For Norway, towns such as Bryne on the west coast, Lillestrøm and Ås in the east and south of Oslo are good examples.

United Kingdom edit

In Victorian Britain, the spread of railways greatly affected the fate of many small towns. Peterborough and Swindon became successful due to their status as railway towns; in contrast, towns such as Frome or Kendal remained small after being bypassed by main lines.[7] Some entirely new towns grew up around railway works. Middlesbrough was the first new town to be developed due to the railways, growing from a hamlet of 40 into an industrial port after the Stockton and Darlington Railway was extended in 1830.[8] Wolverton was fields before 1838 and had a population of 1,500 by 1844.[9] Other examples of early railway towns include Ashford (Kent), Doncaster and Neasden.[10] Derby came to be dominated, first by the North Midland Railway, and later the Midland Railway, which based all their engineering works, as well as their company headquarters, in the town; a large area of the town was built by the company architect, Francis Thompson.[11]

Crewe grew greatly after the Grand Junction Railway Company moved there in 1843; the two rural towns that became Crewe had a population of 500 in 1841 and the population had reached more than 40,000 by 1900.[9][12] The railway town of 'New Swindon' displaced the neighbouring pre-existing town after the Great Western Railway moved there; a market town of 2,000 in 1840 became a railway town of 50,000 in 1905.[9][10] Railways became major employers, with 6,000 people employed by them in Crewe in 1877 and 14,000 in Swindon in 1905.[7]

The growth of railway towns was often in the mould of the 'paternalistic employer' providing housing, schools, hospitals, churches and civic buildings for their workers, similar to Cadbury's Bournville;[10][13] there was a "very rigid and unimaginative control" of the workers by GWR in Swindon.[10] Workforces were loyal and obedient; industrial action in railway towns was rare because the workforce depended on the company. Railwaymen dominated local politics in railway towns, particularly Francis Webb's 'Independent Railway Company Party' in Crewe and George Leeman in York. The chief mechanical engineer of GWR, Daniel Gooch, was MP for Swindon for twenty years.[13]

Crewe was a 'company town' for its first few decades as workers moved in their thousands from other parts of the country. Most social amenities and organisations were sponsored by the railway, but moves such as the establishment of a town council in 1877 slowly reduced company influence and the railway company began to consider spending on town amenities as a municipal concern.[12] Workers organised their own institutions such as clubs, trade unions and co-operatives to gain independence from company control; they became the basis for political opposition in railway towns.[13]

Germany edit

Railway towns due to traffic junctions are Aulendorf, Bebra, Betzdorf, Buchloe, Falkenberg/Elster, Freilassing, Hagen, Hamm, Lehrte, Offenburg, Plattling and Treuchtlingen. Railway towns as locations of depots for pusher locomotives at the foot of gradient lines are Altenhundem or Neuenmarkt. Railway towns with large border stations are Freilassing or Weil am Rhein.

Austria edit

Knittelfeld is a railway town based on main workshops, with the Austrian Federal Railways as by far the largest employer. Arnoldstein was once an important border station to Italy.

Switzerland edit

Examples in Switzerland are Olten or as the location of a railway depot for push locomotives Erstfeld. One place with a large border station is Chiasso.

France edit

Examples of railway cities in France are Tergnier and Miramas. Examples of a railway town by its border station is Cerbère, where the tracks of the Spanish broad gauge end.

Belgium edit

In Belgium, the town of Montzen is of outstanding importance in railway transport.

Lithuania edit

As of 2021 Lithuanian census, 8 settlements in Lithuania have the legal clasification of a Railway Station, with the largest of them being Panemunėlis (Railway Station) [lt], which is larger then the nearby town of Panemunėlis.

Luxembourg edit

With its marshalling yard and other railway facilities on the international Brussels/Amsterdam-Luxembourg-Metz line, Bettemburg has gained great importance in transit traffic through Luxembourg.

Poland edit

After World War I, the city of Bentschen (today Zbąszyń) was ceded by Weimar Germany to Poland. Subsequently, the German Reichsbahn established the station Neu Bentschen, which functions as a border station and as a junction for three lines leading to the west. Since there was no larger town near the new station, the Deutsche Reichsbahn had a railway settlement built, which subsequently grew into a town. It was given the name Neu Bentschen (today Zbąszynek).

Portugal edit

An example of a railway town in Portugal is Entroncamento.

Romania edit

Simeria in Romania grew into a city through new railway facilities.

Czech Republic edit

After the First World War, the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy disintegrated and the state of Czechoslovakia was created. In 1920, Czechoslovakia was granted some areas of Austria close to the border, including the railway station of the Lower Austrian town of Gmünd with the surrounding district. From this the new town České Velenice developed. The reason for drawing the border was the meeting of the railway lines to Ceské Budejovice and Prague in České Velenice.

Asia edit

China edit

Zhuzhou used to be a small town that sits next to the Xiang River in Hunan. The mining of Anyuan Coal Mines in Pingxiang, Jiangxi requires a rail line to transport the coals out of the coalfields and Zhuzhou became the destination. The railway transformed Zhuzhou into a prosperous industrial city in Hunan Province and one of the most important rail hubs in China.[14]

Changchun in China was built by the Japanese, then occupying Manchuria, as a 'model town' as part of Japan's imperialist modernisation. The first railway town at Changchun was begun by the Russians in 1898, but it excluded Chinese residents. A second major railway town was designed and built from 1905 by the South Manchuria Railway, inspired by Russian railway towns such as Dalian. It was based on a rectangular system that contrasted with the circular walled town of old Changchun, and grid patterns became the standard for Chinese railway towns. The SMR developed dozens of railway towns in north-east China from 1906 to 1936, such as at Harbin and Mukden.[15][16]

South Korea edit

Daejeon City in South Korea was a small village before the 1900s, the construction of Gyeongbu Line and Honam Line, and the subsequent transfer of the provincial capital from historic city of Gongju made Daejeon grew into a major transportation hub in Korea. Korail's headquarters is located in Daejeon.

Oceania edit

Australia edit

When the Trans-Australian Railway was built across the Nullarbor Plain in the 1910s, a series of towns were erected in South Australia and Western Australia to accommodate Commonwealth Railways' employees.[17] To provide supplies the Tea & Sugar train ran weekly.[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Klein, Maury (2006) [1987]. Union Pacific: Volume I, 1862–1893. U of Minnesota press. pp. 100–101. ISBN 1452908737.
  2. ^ Brown, Ron (2008). The Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore: An Illustrated History of Railway Stations in Canada (3 ed.). Dundurn Press. p. 131. ISBN 978-1-55002-794-5.
  3. ^ a b Athearn, Robert G. (1962). Rebel of the Rockies: A history of the Denver & Rio Grande Western Railroad. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 104–105.
  4. ^ Seyfarth, Jill. "The Rise and Fall of Animas City". The Animas Museum, La Plata County Historic Society. Archived from the original on 16 June 2013. Retrieved 16 May 2013.
  5. ^ Auer, Peter; Hinskens, Frans; Kerswill, Paul (2005). "Process of standardisation in Scandinavia". Dialect change: convergence and divergence in European languages. Cambridge University Press. p. 189. ISBN 0-521-80687-9.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Kristensen, Peer Hull (July 1989). "Denmark: an experimental laboratory for new industrial models". Entrepreneurship & Regional Development. Routledge. 1 (3): 245–55. doi:10.1080/08985628900000021.
  7. ^ a b Dyos, H. J.; Wolff, Michael (1999). The Victorian City. Routledge. p. 292. ISBN 0-415-19323-0.
  8. ^ "Complex birth of first railway town". The Northern Echo. 16 June 2008. Retrieved 3 July 2010.
  9. ^ a b c Darby, Henry Clifford (1973). A new historical geography of England. Vol. 3. CUP Archive. p. 220. ISBN 0-521-20116-0.
  10. ^ a b c d Armstrong, John (2000). "'Railway Town': Swindon". In Philip J Waller (ed.). The English urban landscape. Oxford University Press. p. 217. ISBN 0-19-860117-4.
  11. ^ Biddle, Gordon (2011). Britain's Historic Railway Buildings: A Gazetteer of Structures (Second ed.). Hersham, Surrey: Ian Allan Publishing. pp. 288–289. ISBN 9780711034914.
  12. ^ a b Redfern, Allan (1983). "Crewe: leisure in a railway town". In John K. Walton (ed.). Leisure in Britain, 1780-1939. Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-1946-X.
  13. ^ a b c Charles Harvey; John Turner, eds. (1989). "British railway workshops, 1838-1914". Labour and business in modern Britain. Routledge. ISBN 0-7146-3365-8.
  14. ^ Jeff Hornibrook (2015). A Great Undertaking: Mechanization and Social Change in a Late Imperial Chinese Coalmining Community. SUNY Press. ISBN 9781438456898.
  15. ^ Sewell, Bill (2002). "Railway Outpost and Puppet Capital: Urban Expressions of Japanese Imperialism in Changchun, 1905-1945". In Gregory Blue; Martin P. Bunton; Ralph C. Croizier (eds.). Colonialism and the modern world: selected studies. M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 0-7656-0772-7.
  16. ^ Buck, David D. (2002). "Railway City and National Capital: Two Faces of the Modern in Changchun". In Joseph Esherick (ed.). Remaking the Chinese city: modernity and national identity, 1900-1950. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 0-8248-2518-7.
  17. ^ The Trans-Australian Railway Railway Gazette 7 January 1921 page 15
  18. ^ Australia's Famous Tea & Sugar Train Network August 1974 page 4

railway, town, railway, town, railroad, town, settlement, that, originated, greatly, developed, because, railway, station, junction, site, bereket, kazandzhik, turkmenistan, town, originated, from, railway, station, built, 1885, city, important, crossroad, tra. A railway town or railroad town is a settlement that originated or was greatly developed because of a railway station or junction at its site Bereket Kazandzhik in Turkmenistan The town originated from a railway station built in 1885 The city is now an important crossroad of the old Trans Caspian Railway and new North South Transnational Railway Contents 1 North America 1 1 Role in land speculation 2 Europe 2 1 United Kingdom 2 2 Germany 2 3 Austria 2 4 Switzerland 2 5 France 2 6 Belgium 2 7 Lithuania 2 8 Luxembourg 2 9 Poland 2 10 Portugal 2 11 Romania 2 12 Czech Republic 3 Asia 3 1 China 3 2 South Korea 4 Oceania 4 1 Australia 5 See also 6 ReferencesNorth America editSee also Pacific Railroad Acts During the construction of the First transcontinental railroad in the 1860s temporary Hell on wheels towns made mostly of canvas tents accompanied the Union Pacific Railroad as construction headed west Most faded away but some became permanent settlements 1 nbsp Prairie railway town model In the 1870s successive boomtowns sprung up in Kansas each prospering for a year or two as a railhead and withering when the rail line extended further west and created a new endpoint for the Chisholm Trail Becoming rail hubs made Chicago and Los Angeles grow from small towns to large cities Sayre Pennsylvania and Atlanta Georgia were among the American company towns created by railroads in places where no settlement already existed In western Canada railway towns became associated with brothels and prostitution and concerned railway companies started a series of YMCAs in the late nineteenth century in response 2 Role in land speculation edit See also Speculation In some cases a railroad town would be started by the railroad often using a separate town or land company even when another town already existed nearby The population of the existing town would shift to the railroad town This would create a boon for the town company and its railroad founder which would sell off lots near the station at a substantial profit often before the railroad ever arrived at the new townsite Such is the case with Durango Colorado In the spring of 1880 William Bell of the Denver amp Rio Grande Railroad scoured the La Plata County area in the vicinity of Animas City located on the Animas River When negotiations to acquire land through the local homesteaders fell through Bell acquired property downstream to the south under more favorable conditions in the name of the Durango Land and Coal Company By the end of the year a Durango newspaper reported all of Animas City is coming to Durango as fast as accommodations can be secured 3 The population at the time estimated between 3 000 and 5 000 people crammed into the little box town where the only permanent structures were saloons dance halls restaurants and stores When the railroad arrived in August 1881 the train stopped in a jubilant Durango not Animas City The railroad pushed on up the Animas River reaching Silverton in July 1882 3 passing through Animas City without a stop Animas City subsisted as a de facto suburb of the Durango area before annexation by Durango in 1948 4 The Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad a heritage railroad and successor to the Rio Grande in La Plata County still passes by the townsite Europe editIn Denmark Sweden and Norway a related concept is the stationsby or station town Stationsbyer are rural towns that grew up around railways but they were based on agricultural co operatives and artisan communities rather than on railway industries 5 6 Among the Swedish towns mostly influenced by railways include Alvesta as a hub for the inland south and Hallsberg as a hub for the interior middle of the country For Norway towns such as Bryne on the west coast Lillestrom and As in the east and south of Oslo are good examples United Kingdom edit In Victorian Britain the spread of railways greatly affected the fate of many small towns Peterborough and Swindon became successful due to their status as railway towns in contrast towns such as Frome or Kendal remained small after being bypassed by main lines 7 Some entirely new towns grew up around railway works Middlesbrough was the first new town to be developed due to the railways growing from a hamlet of 40 into an industrial port after the Stockton and Darlington Railway was extended in 1830 8 Wolverton was fields before 1838 and had a population of 1 500 by 1844 9 Other examples of early railway towns include Ashford Kent Doncaster and Neasden 10 Derby came to be dominated first by the North Midland Railway and later the Midland Railway which based all their engineering works as well as their company headquarters in the town a large area of the town was built by the company architect Francis Thompson 11 Crewe grew greatly after the Grand Junction Railway Company moved there in 1843 the two rural towns that became Crewe had a population of 500 in 1841 and the population had reached more than 40 000 by 1900 9 12 The railway town of New Swindon displaced the neighbouring pre existing town after the Great Western Railway moved there a market town of 2 000 in 1840 became a railway town of 50 000 in 1905 9 10 Railways became major employers with 6 000 people employed by them in Crewe in 1877 and 14 000 in Swindon in 1905 7 The growth of railway towns was often in the mould of the paternalistic employer providing housing schools hospitals churches and civic buildings for their workers similar to Cadbury s Bournville 10 13 there was a very rigid and unimaginative control of the workers by GWR in Swindon 10 Workforces were loyal and obedient industrial action in railway towns was rare because the workforce depended on the company Railwaymen dominated local politics in railway towns particularly Francis Webb s Independent Railway Company Party in Crewe and George Leeman in York The chief mechanical engineer of GWR Daniel Gooch was MP for Swindon for twenty years 13 Crewe was a company town for its first few decades as workers moved in their thousands from other parts of the country Most social amenities and organisations were sponsored by the railway but moves such as the establishment of a town council in 1877 slowly reduced company influence and the railway company began to consider spending on town amenities as a municipal concern 12 Workers organised their own institutions such as clubs trade unions and co operatives to gain independence from company control they became the basis for political opposition in railway towns 13 Germany edit Railway towns due to traffic junctions are Aulendorf Bebra Betzdorf Buchloe Falkenberg Elster Freilassing Hagen Hamm Lehrte Offenburg Plattling and Treuchtlingen Railway towns as locations of depots for pusher locomotives at the foot of gradient lines are Altenhundem or Neuenmarkt Railway towns with large border stations are Freilassing or Weil am Rhein Austria edit Knittelfeld is a railway town based on main workshops with the Austrian Federal Railways as by far the largest employer Arnoldstein was once an important border station to Italy Switzerland edit Examples in Switzerland are Olten or as the location of a railway depot for push locomotives Erstfeld One place with a large border station is Chiasso France edit Examples of railway cities in France are Tergnier and Miramas Examples of a railway town by its border station is Cerbere where the tracks of the Spanish broad gauge end Belgium edit In Belgium the town of Montzen is of outstanding importance in railway transport Lithuania edit As of 2021 Lithuanian census 8 settlements in Lithuania have the legal clasification of a Railway Station with the largest of them being Panemunelis Railway Station lt which is larger then the nearby town of Panemunelis Luxembourg edit With its marshalling yard and other railway facilities on the international Brussels Amsterdam Luxembourg Metz line Bettemburg has gained great importance in transit traffic through Luxembourg Poland edit After World War I the city of Bentschen today Zbaszyn was ceded by Weimar Germany to Poland Subsequently the German Reichsbahn established the station Neu Bentschen which functions as a border station and as a junction for three lines leading to the west Since there was no larger town near the new station the Deutsche Reichsbahn had a railway settlement built which subsequently grew into a town It was given the name Neu Bentschen today Zbaszynek Portugal edit An example of a railway town in Portugal is Entroncamento Romania edit Simeria in Romania grew into a city through new railway facilities Czech Republic edit After the First World War the Austro Hungarian Monarchy disintegrated and the state of Czechoslovakia was created In 1920 Czechoslovakia was granted some areas of Austria close to the border including the railway station of the Lower Austrian town of Gmund with the surrounding district From this the new town Ceske Velenice developed The reason for drawing the border was the meeting of the railway lines to Ceske Budejovice and Prague in Ceske Velenice Asia editChina edit Zhuzhou used to be a small town that sits next to the Xiang River in Hunan The mining of Anyuan Coal Mines in Pingxiang Jiangxi requires a rail line to transport the coals out of the coalfields and Zhuzhou became the destination The railway transformed Zhuzhou into a prosperous industrial city in Hunan Province and one of the most important rail hubs in China 14 Changchun in China was built by the Japanese then occupying Manchuria as a model town as part of Japan s imperialist modernisation The first railway town at Changchun was begun by the Russians in 1898 but it excluded Chinese residents A second major railway town was designed and built from 1905 by the South Manchuria Railway inspired by Russian railway towns such as Dalian It was based on a rectangular system that contrasted with the circular walled town of old Changchun and grid patterns became the standard for Chinese railway towns The SMR developed dozens of railway towns in north east China from 1906 to 1936 such as at Harbin and Mukden 15 16 South Korea edit Daejeon City in South Korea was a small village before the 1900s the construction of Gyeongbu Line and Honam Line and the subsequent transfer of the provincial capital from historic city of Gongju made Daejeon grew into a major transportation hub in Korea Korail s headquarters is located in Daejeon Oceania editAustralia edit When the Trans Australian Railway was built across the Nullarbor Plain in the 1910s a series of towns were erected in South Australia and Western Australia to accommodate Commonwealth Railways employees 17 To provide supplies the Tea amp Sugar train ran weekly 18 See also edit nbsp trains portal nbsp geography portalCrossroads village Company town List of railway towns Streetcar suburbReferences edit Klein Maury 2006 1987 Union Pacific Volume I 1862 1893 U of Minnesota press pp 100 101 ISBN 1452908737 Brown Ron 2008 The Train Doesn t Stop Here Anymore An Illustrated History of Railway Stations in Canada 3 ed Dundurn Press p 131 ISBN 978 1 55002 794 5 a b Athearn Robert G 1962 Rebel of the Rockies A history of the Denver amp Rio Grande Western Railroad New Haven and London Yale University Press pp 104 105 Seyfarth Jill The Rise and Fall of Animas City The Animas Museum La Plata County Historic Society Archived from the original on 16 June 2013 Retrieved 16 May 2013 Auer Peter Hinskens Frans Kerswill Paul 2005 Process of standardisation in Scandinavia Dialect change convergence and divergence in European languages Cambridge University Press p 189 ISBN 0 521 80687 9 permanent dead link Kristensen Peer Hull July 1989 Denmark an experimental laboratory for new industrial models Entrepreneurship amp Regional Development Routledge 1 3 245 55 doi 10 1080 08985628900000021 a b Dyos H J Wolff Michael 1999 The Victorian City Routledge p 292 ISBN 0 415 19323 0 Complex birth of first railway town The Northern Echo 16 June 2008 Retrieved 3 July 2010 a b c Darby Henry Clifford 1973 A new historical geography of England Vol 3 CUP Archive p 220 ISBN 0 521 20116 0 a b c d Armstrong John 2000 Railway Town Swindon In Philip J Waller ed The English urban landscape Oxford University Press p 217 ISBN 0 19 860117 4 Biddle Gordon 2011 Britain s Historic Railway Buildings A Gazetteer of Structures Second ed Hersham Surrey Ian Allan Publishing pp 288 289 ISBN 9780711034914 a b Redfern Allan 1983 Crewe leisure in a railway town In John K Walton ed Leisure in Britain 1780 1939 Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 1946 X a b c Charles Harvey John Turner eds 1989 British railway workshops 1838 1914 Labour and business in modern Britain Routledge ISBN 0 7146 3365 8 Jeff Hornibrook 2015 A Great Undertaking Mechanization and Social Change in a Late Imperial Chinese Coalmining Community SUNY Press ISBN 9781438456898 Sewell Bill 2002 Railway Outpost and Puppet Capital Urban Expressions of Japanese Imperialism in Changchun 1905 1945 In Gregory Blue Martin P Bunton Ralph C Croizier eds Colonialism and the modern world selected studies M E Sharpe ISBN 0 7656 0772 7 Buck David D 2002 Railway City and National Capital Two Faces of the Modern in Changchun In Joseph Esherick ed Remaking the Chinese city modernity and national identity 1900 1950 University of Hawaii Press ISBN 0 8248 2518 7 The Trans Australian Railway Railway Gazette 7 January 1921 page 15 Australia s Famous Tea amp Sugar Train Network August 1974 page 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Railway town amp oldid 1192265163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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