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Chemin de fer Froissy-Dompierre

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Vorlage:Coor title dms Vorlage:Heritage Railway The Froissy Dompierre Light Railway (CFCD) is a narrow-gauge light railway near the village of Cappy, in the Somme department, France. It is run as a heritage railway by APPEVA (Association Picarde pour la Préservation et l'Entretien des Véhicules Anciens). It is the last survivor of the Vorlage:RailGauge gauge lines of the World War I battlefields.

History

In 1915, the French Army built a railway along the Somme Canal between Péronne and Froissy. Between 1916 and 1918 the railway was at the Allied front line, and transporting 1,500 tonnes of materials daily. At Froissy, the metre gauge Réseau Albert connected with the CFCD.[1]

After the war, the railway was used in assisting with the reconstruction and also to bring food in to the villages it served. New lines were laid including a zig-zag to reach the Santerre Plateau. The line was by this time being used for the transportation of sugar beet to the sucrerie at Dompierre. In 1927, a further deviation was built to avoid Cappy Port, which necessitated a Vorlage:Convert tunnel. The line was extended to Chaulnes in 1931. The line escaped World War II with little damage, although one train of molasses was attacked by a British aircraft. Two Coferna diesel locomotives were acquired in 1942, working alongside the Feldbahn 0-8-0s. The steam locomotives were retired in 1946 and replace by three Plymouth loco-tracteurs. The extensions to Péronne and Chaulnes had been removed by 1954 and increased competition from road traffice meant that the line ceased operation in 1972, by which time a preservation society had already started operations.[1]

Preservation

APPEVA was formed in 1970 with the aim of preserving a 600mm gauge railway as a working museum. The CFCD was a good location, being between Paris and Lille and close to Amiens. APPEVA operated its first train in June 1971 between Cappy Port and Froissy, a distance of Vorlage:Convert. By 1974 the line was operating as far as the top of the zig-zag and in 1976 the full line to Dompierre was opened to traffic, following improvements to the level crossing on the Santerre Plateau. In 1996, a new museum was opened at Froissy.[1]

The line starts from the Froissy terminus and follows the towpath along the Somme canal to the little station of Cappy. It then runs through a curved tunnel more than Vorlage:Convert long followed by a zig zag which was built after WWI to allow locomotives to climb the very steep slope towards the Santerre upland area. The terminus is located near the former sugar refinery of Dompierre.

APPEVA owns or has in store 13 steam locomotives, of which four are operating and some are considered as a Monument historique, and 25 diesel engines. The Froissy Dompierre Railway operates from April till the end of September, on Sundays and holidays, and every day of the week (except Monday) in July and August. The journey between the Froissy museum and the Dompierre terminus takes one hour. The CFCD is twinned with the Leighton Buzzard Light Railway.

Museum


2-6-2T Alco-Cooke




The Musée des chemins de fer Militaires et Industriels (Military and Industrial railways Museum), located near the line terminus in the hamlet of Froissy (French commune of La Neuville-lès-Bray), features a large collection of 600mm gauge railway material, steam engines, diesel engines and wagons, in a 1800 m² exhibition hall inaugurated in 1996.

It also features an interesting Fairbanks-Morse speeder of 1917, used by the US Army.

0-6-0WT Decauville











Rolling stock

Steam locomotives

No. Name Builder Wheel Arrangement Power Works Number Year Built Origin Notes
1 Floralie Henschel 0-4-0 T Vorlage:Convert 23735 1937 Ex Parc floral de La Source (Orléans)
2 Neumeyer 0-4-0 T Vorlage:Convert 19 1922
3 Decauville 0-4-0 T Vorlage:Convert 1825 1928 Ex CF Roumazières-Charentes.
4 Krauss 0-8-0 T Vorlage:Convert 7373 1917 German Army Operated till end of 2007.
5 Decauville 0-6-0 WT Vorlage:Convert 1652 1916 In working order.
6 Henschel 0-8-0 T Vorlage:Convert 15271 1917
7 Borsig 0-8-0TT Vorlage:Convert 10334 1918 In working order.
8 Vulcan, Stettin 0-8-0 T Vorlage:Convert to Vorlage:Convert 3852 1925 Ex Mecklenburg - Pommersche Bahn No 99-3461. Prototype. Should be next locomotive to be restored to working order.
9 Alco-Cooke 2-6-2T Vorlage:Convert 57148 1917 Ex Tramway de Pithiviers à Toury (TPT) No. 3-20. In working order.
10 Franco-Belge 0-8-0TT Vorlage:Convert to Vorlage:Convert 2836 1945 Ex Sucreries Ternynck, Coucy-le-Château and TPT. In working order.
11 Orenstein & Koppel 0-6-0 T about Vorlage:Convert 8083 1915 ex TPT No. 3-6.
12 Orenstein & Koppel 0-10-0T about Vorlage:Convert 8285 1917 ex TPT No. 5-3.
13 Orenstein & Koppel 0-8-0 T DFB Vorlage:Convert 8627 1918

Diesel locomotives

No. Name Builder Wheel Arrangement Power Works Number Year Built Origin Notes
T23 Plymouth Vorlage:Convert 5117 1946 Loco-tracteur. One of the original CFCD locomotives.
T24 Tatra Société de Construction Ferroviaires et Navales (Coferna) Vorlage:Convert 122 1941 Diesel locomotive. Fitted with a Vorlage:Convert Tatra air-cooled engine, one of the original CFCD locomotives. In working order.
T25 Iveco Coferna Vorlage:Convert 123 1941 Diesel locomotive. Fitted with a Vorlage:Convert Iveco water-cooled engine, one of the original CFCD locomotives. In working order.
T31 Billard Vorlage:Convert 233 T75 G 1958 Diesel locomotive. In working order.
T32 Simplex Motor Rail Ltd Vorlage:Convert 588/191 1917 Tractor.
T37 Simplex Motor Rail Ltd Vorlage:Convert 7433 1939 Tractor. In working order.
T33 Baldwin 0-4-0D Vorlage:Convert 49192 1917 Tractor.
T36 Baldwin Vorlage:Convert 49966 1917 Tractor.
T29 Socofer Vorlage:Convert 333 SCF 303 1968 Tractor. In working order.
Speeder Fairbanks-Morse 1917 Draisine

Passenger stock

The CFCD operates a variety of open and closed passenger stock, most of which is built on chassis of freight vehicles dating from World War One.

Freight stock

The CFCD has a variety of goods wagons, both open and closed, that date from World War One, and also examples of wagons from the industrial use of the line after World War One.

References

Vorlage:Reflist

See also

  1. a b c John Organ: Northern France Narrow Gauge. Middleton Press, Midhurst 2002, ISBN 0 901706 753.