Nederlandsche Rhijnspoorweg-Maatschappij (NRS)
Platform of the Nederlandsche Rhijnspoorweg-Maatschappij in Utrecht in 1866, later Utrecht CS
Overview
HeadquartersUtrecht
LocaleThe Netherlands
Dates of operation18451890
Technical
Length118 km constructed, 240 km operated
Route map

Utrecht - Rotterdam
Gouda - The Hague
Amsterdam - Emmerik
Harmelen - Breukelen
Zevenaar - Cleves

Woerden - Leiden

The Dutch Rhenish Railway or Dutch–Rhenish Railway (Dutch: 'Nederlandsche Rhijnspoorweg' or Nederlandsche Rhijn-Spoorweg) was a Dutch railway company active from 1845 until 1890.

History

107 in the interior area of the Dutch Railway Museum

The Dutch Rhenish Railway Company Limited was founded in Amsterdam on 3 July 1845[1] to take over the state-run Rhenish Railway, which was losing money. The majority of the shareholders were British.[2] In or shortly after 1857, James Staats Forbes was appointed general manager for five years. He remained a permanent adviser to the company until its concession expired and it was nationalised in 1890.[3] The Dutch businessman and politician Hendrik Adriaan van Beuningen started his career at DRR as a clerk, but was soon promoted to freight transport manager.

Locomotive number 107, Sharp Stewart 3563/1889, is preserved in the Utrecht Railway Museum.[4]

Lines

Lines built and operated by the Dutch Rhenish Railway include:

References

  1. Frederick J. Teggart (1895). Catalogue of the Hopkins Railway Library. Palo Alto, CA: Leland Stanford Junior University. p. 132.
  2. Augustus J. Veenendaal, Jr. (1995). State versus Private Enterprise in Railway Building in the Netherlands, 1838-1938. Business and Economic History 24 (1): 186–193. Accessed September 2013.
  3. Charles Welch (2004). Forbes, James Staats (1823–1904). Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/33192.
  4. James Waite ([n.d.]). Narrow Gauge Steam Railways in Holland. The International Steam Pages. Accessed September 2013.
  5. [s.n.] (1 January 1855). The opening of the Dutch Rhenish railway at a temporary station in Rotterdam. Illustrated London News. Accessed September 2013.
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