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Are You Ready? Just 147 days 'til Christmas! |
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RARE 1908 UNITED RAILWAYS of the HAVANA & REGLA $10!!!
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Manufacturer:
N/A
| | SKU: |
1634
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Price: $175.00
This item is in stock
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SqueTrade © AP6.0
stwfl *MINT CONDITION!!
UNITED RAILWAYS of the HAVANA and REGLA WAREHOUSES Limited
100 YEARS OLD
VERY RARE
CUBAN
$6,860,000 (Lesser Issue)
WARRANT BEARER FOR 10.DEFERRED ORDINARY STOCK FULLY PAID
AUTHENTIC & ORIGINAL--not a copy!
10"x14"
WOULD LOOK GREAT FRAMED!
SERIAL NUMBERS WILL DIFFER
HISTORY see map
In
addition to its urban system, the Havana area had a network of
suburban, interurban and long-distance rail lines, both steam-powered
and electric. Some of the electric operations were simply along steam
railroads. But three electric lines - to Guanajay, Güines and Matanzas
- were completely new railways.
Steam-powered
trains began carrying passengers from Villanueva station to Bejucal in
1837, from Fesser station to Guanabacoa in 1858, from Cristina station
to Rincón in 1861, and from Concha station to Marianao in 1863 [see
maps of Havana metropolitan area and Havana Province]. An animal-powered line between Regla and Guanabacoa
was converted to steam power in 1884. After the Spanish-American War
the English-owned United Railways of Havana acquired most of these
lines and formed the largest rail empire in Cuba. American capitalists
acquired the Guanabacoa line and the streetcar system in Havana and
formed a new company, Havana Central Railroad, on 4 April 1905.
HCRR
ordered 20 interurban trolley cars from Wason in Massachusetts and
opened an electric railway from the Havana waterfront to Guanajay, 50
km southwest of the capital, on 12 November 1906. This was a completely
new railroad. (A steam line reached Guanajay via Rincón: .)
The English and the Americans competed for control of Havana harbor and
URH forced HCRR to build an elevated line over its piers. That
structure is still there today [pc, col. Christopher Walker]:
(Havana Electric Railway built an elevado farther north in 1904, which was dismantled in 1940.)
Unlike the local streetcars in Havana and Guanabacoa,
the Havana Central vehicles used a single trolley pole and wire. The
photograph below appeared in a United Railways of Havana brochure
published in 1914
Havana
Central Railroad opened a second line to Güines, 56 km southeast of the
capital, on 16 March 1907. This also was a completely new railroad
(Güines was also served by a steam line via Rincón: . Here is one of the 20 Wason/General Electric cars on the Güines line [Electrical World, New York, 15 April 1909, p. 912]:
The
rare postcard below shows a two-car train at Güines station. Havana
Central's electric line continued another 5 km along the tracks on the
left to a sugar mill at Providencia [col. AM]:
The
U.S. stock market crash of 1907 gave the English their chance. United
Railways purchased 51% of the stock of Havana Central Railroad and
thereafter controlled all the rail lines in the Havana area except the Havana Electric Railway
streetcar system. It operated the Havana Central lines as a separate
division and kept that name on its cars. The photograph below, from a
1908 United Railways brochure, shows a festive group on Havana Central
car 100 at the Providencia sugar mill
Havana
Central also operated ten 40-ton locomotives built for it by General
Electric. Transporting sugar cane, tobacco and pineapple from Cuba's
rich farm lands to the docks on Havana Bay constituted a large part of
its business [Tramway & Railway World, London, 1 April 1909, p. 243]:
In
1910 United Railways ordered a fleet of 15-window vehicles from
American Car & Foundry and electrified its steam line from Concha
station to Marianao . The illustration below appeared in a 1912 United Railways brochure :
Central
Station (Estación Central) opened on the harbor in 1912. Villanueva
station closed and the steam railroad tracks were cut back to the
corner of Zanja and Galiano streets [see map].
United Railways ordered three double-truck battery-powered cars from
Federal Storage Battery Co. in New Jersey and inaugurated battery train
service from Galiano St. to Ciénaga on 8 January 1913. This was the
first known use of battery-powered trams in Cuba. It was not successful
and the vehicles were transferred to the San Antonio line [see below].
United Railways carved a tunnel under Calle Reina and extended its
Marianao electric line to Galiano St. in early 1914. In June 1914
Western Railway of Havana, another United subsidiary, electrified its
steam line to Rincón, 20 km south of Havana. (This was not the 1837
route to Rincón, which was never electrified; Western Railway ran
parallel, a few kilometers east; Here is a Rincón train on Calabazar Bridge about 15 km south of the capital [col. AM]:
Using
the three vehicles purchased for its Galiano-Ciénaga operation, United
Railways inaugurated battery tram service on a 14-km extension of the
Rincón line to San Antonio de los Baños in October 1914. The photograph below appeared in a 1914 United Railways brochure]. Note the battery compartment between the trucks - and compare
this photograph to the last photograph on this page, taken at the same
spot 74 years later!
By 1915, United Railways operated electric vehicles with trolley poles on five routes [see maps of Havana and Havana Province]:
from the corner of Zanja and Galiano streets to Marianao, from Central
Station to Guanajay, Rincón and Güines, and from Agua Dulce to
Naranjito. It also operated local tram services in Marianao and
battery-powered trams from Rincón to San Antonio de los Baños. And it
controlled the electric streetcar system in Guanabacoa, which ran a line west to Agua Dulce.
In 1923 United Railways of Havana, renamed Ferrocarriles Unidos de la Habana, ordered steel trolleys like 871 from Wason [Brill Magazine, Philadelphia, November 1924, p. 208]:
Here
is a 1924 view of a "Unidos" freight train on a street near the
Estación Central. The G.E. locomotive seems to be the same type as in
the 1908 photo above [col. Christopher Walker]:
The
decline of tram operation in Cuba, as elsewhere, began with the
Depression. The timetables reproduced below, published in 1914 (left)
and 1929 (right), show the reduction of service on the electric lines
to Guanajay, Güines and Rincón, and on the line from Regla to Guanabacoa [Cuba Review, New York]:
The
Guanajay and Güines lines were de-electrified in 1939 and the Rincón
line reverted to steam traction in 1940. During the 1940s United
Railways operated a special service for its employees: every morning a
steam locomotive and passenger car brought them from Concha station to
its Ciénaga shops; the little train took them back at night. On 24 July
1953 the remaining long-distance operations of Ferrocarriles Unidos
were renamed Ferrocarriles Occidentales de Cuba.
Today,
the Guanajay and Marianao lines have disappeared, but diesel-powered
railcars still run on the former interurban tracks from Havana to
Güines. They also still run on the interurban tracks to Rincón -
although that line now terminates at José Martí International Airport,
which was built just north of Rincón. Diesel trains also run on the
1837 steam line to Rincón, which has been diverted around the airport.
The photograph below shows a "Gas-Car" at San Antonio in 1998 [Bruce
Russell]. Compare it to the earlier photograph of the battery-powered
tram at the same spot in 1914!
In
2004 Daniel López traced the abandoned right-of-way of the
Zanja-Marianao electric railway which had closed in 1940. [The 6th
photograph above shows a train on this line.] The stations are gone,
but some of the track is still intact! He took the following pictures
of the trestle over the Almendares River which separates the cities of Havana and Marianao
The view below was taken on the bridge, looking in the other direction
Images copied from eBay: 963c_12_1302_2.JPG, 98a4_12_1302_3.JPG, 9b4d_12_1302_4.JPG
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