The Fayoum Light Railway (FLR) was a 750 mm (2 ft 5+1⁄2 in) gauge Egyptian light railway. Founded by a group of Egyptian Coptic investors, it operated in the first half of the twentieth century.[2]
Technical | |
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Track gauge | 750 mm (2 ft 5½ in) |
Length | 106 mi (171 km) |
Construction
editConstruction began in 1898. The railway served an irrigation district south of Cairo, centred on the provincial capital of Medinet-el-Fayoum. The track network comprised seven, mostly roadside, branch lines with a total length of 106 miles (171 km).[3] British railway engineer Everard Calthrop was a consultant on this railway.[4]
Operation
editThe railway was mainly used for transporting sugar cane and other agricultural produce,[5] but it also transported passengers. In 1904 a total of 618,000 passengers and 145,000 tons of goods were carried.[3]
The Government Inspector reported in 1904 very unfavourably on the Fayoum Company, which was managed for the first five years after its incorporation by S. Sandison de Bilinski. The railway was apparently in need of a competent manager. "The Staff" the inspector wrote, "appear to be entirely out of hand, and the Traffic and Locomotive Departments have both apparently been left to run by themselves."[3]
In 1936, the company owned 17 locomotives, 2 railcars, 52 coaches and 248 goods wagons.[6]
Fossils
editThe American vertebrate paleontologist Walter Granger used the railway in April 1907 during his expedition, which was sponsored by the American Museum of Natural History in New York for transporting the fossils that he had found from Tamieh (Tamia) to Cairo.[7]
Anthrosol
editThe railway tracks were probably also used by a company that harvested a rich anthrosol, locally called sibakh, which consists of decomposed organic debris, left by the ancient Egyptians. The workers, who dug pits for removing the soil, found well preserved papyri, which were sold to collectors and museums. This caused some interest by archeologists, who closed a deal with the Italian managers of the company that sold the compost, by which the team of the archeologists had to dig-out a sufficient amount of compost to keep the company and their rail vehicles busy, while they were searching for the papyri from 1928 to 1935.[8]
Takeover and continuing use
editThe majority of the shares in the Fayoum company (80%) was transferred in 1906 to the Anglo-Belgian Company of Egypt, which had been organized in the same year in London for this purpose. It also owned some properties in the centre of Cairo, for instance the garden of the Ghezireh Palace Hotel and the ground of the French Institute. Baron Georges de Reuter became the first president of the company. He was a relative of Baron Paul Julius von Reuter, the founder of the news agency Reuters Telegraphic Co.[9]
Joseph Kfoury, who owned and operated already some coach lines in the Fayoum province, acquired a significant part of the shares of the Fayoum Light Railways Company in 1939, and was nominated to be its manager. Its headquarters were located in the al-Immobilia building at this time.[10]
Some of the stock exchange certificates were re-issued on 1 May 1944, which demonstrates that the company still existed during World War II,[11] although no time tables for passenger transport had been issued since 1938.[12] After the war, operations ceased, although the government's concession would have been valid for 70 years, i.e., up to 1972.[10]
Lines and stations
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130.
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131.
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132.
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133.
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134.
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135.
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136.
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137. MITTERTARIS — RODAH
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References
edit- ^ Vincent L. Morgan and Spencer G. Lucas: Notes From Diary – Fayum Trip, 1907. New Mexico Museum of Natural History, 2002.
- ^ Marilyn Booth and Gorman Anthony: The Long 1890s in Egypt: Colonial Quiescence, Subterranean Resistance. Edinburgh University Press, 2014. Page 84.
- ^ a b c London Standard Newspaper Archives of March 20, 1906 – Page 1.
- ^ Gratton, Robert, 2005,The Leek & Manifold Valley Light Railway, RCL Publications.
- ^ R. Neil Hewison: The Fayoum: History and Guide. American University in Cairo Press, 2008. Page 26.
- ^ World Survey of Foreign Railways. Transportation Division, Bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, Washington D.C. 1936. p. 153.
- ^ Walter Granger's 1907 Fayoum Expedition Dairy. Part III.
- ^ Jimmy Dunn: Karanis in the Fayoum of Egypt.
- ^ Gutoski: 44. Accessed 12 July 2010.
- ^ a b Ola R. Seif: Winter destination series 4: Fayoum, The City of the Crocodile. Accessed 11 February 2015.
- ^ Historic stock exchange certificate of the Fayoum Light Railways Company issued on 1 October 1899 and rubber stamped on 1 May 1944.
- ^ a b c Jim Fergusson: Railway stations lists.