, around 1900 As early as 1869 there was a design for the construction of a
railway to the Brocken, but it was turned down. A resubmission in 1895 succeeded, however, and, on 30 May 1896, the
construction permit was issued once
Prince Otto of Stolberg-Wernigerode had allocated the requisite land. The first section of the Brocken Railway, from Drei Annen Hohne to Schierke, was opened on 20 June 1898 and construction work for the remaining section up to the Brocken was begun on 4 October 1898. Initially services to the Brocken only ran between 30 April to 15 October; during the winter trains terminated at
Schierke station. At the end of the
Second World War significant damage occurred to the track, mainly through
bombs and
artillery shells, in the course of fighting in the Harz, which had been declared a fortress. The section to the Brocken was only reopened, therefore, in 1949. The operator of the Brocken Railway until 5 August 1948 was the
Nordhausen-Wernigerode Railway Company (NWE), after which it belonged from the Association of Publicly Owned Companies (VVB), part of Saxony-Anhalt's transport services, and, from 11 April 1949 to the
Deutsche Reichsbahn in East Germany. Only after the German winter sports championships in 1950, which took place in Schierke, did winter trains run up to the Brocken summit. A railway station at
Eckerloch was also built for the championships which was closed again after they had ended. The location of the former sidings at Eckerloch station can still be easily seen. Goods trains continued to work the Brocken Railway right up to 1987, although since the construction of the
Berlin Wall on 13 August 1961 the Brocken and its station had been part of the out-of-bounds area and thus not accessible to the public. Up to that time the trains transported
coal,
oil and building materials up the mountain for the
East German Border Troops and
Soviet soldiers who were stationed there. Passengers services on the Brocken Railway continued to run from Drei Annen Hohne to Schierke; usually only two pairs of passenger train pairs ran each day; however they could be used with only a special pass, because Schierke lay in the border zone with
West Germany. After
German reunification the continued operation of the Brocken Railway was initially called into question, however united efforts by railway enthusiasts and politicians under the overall control of the then state Minister for the Economy,
Horst Rehberger, helped to give the Brocken Railway a second chance. The German Armed Forces (
Bundeswehr) was also involved, because the Brocken Railway was needed to haul away the obsolete, military facilities on the Brocken. On 15 September 1991, after being renovated, the Brocken Railway was ceremoniously opened to the public with two steam-hauled trains. The trains were headed by locomotive no.
99 5903, a
Mallet locomotive, which had been procured by the NWE in 1897/98, and locomotive no.
99 6001, a prototype developed in 1939 by the firm of
Krupp. Since the privatisation of the narrow gauge lines in the Harz in 1993 the Brocken Railway has been operated by the Harz Narrow Gauges Railways (HSB). The
steam trains on the Brocken Railway have become popular with thousands of tourists every year, offering convenient access to the top of the Brocken. == Current operations ==