in 1907 When the Congo Free State was formed in 1885, King
Leopold II of Belgium thought of appointing
Albert Thys (1849–1915), his secretary for colonial affairs, to head the new state. Thys dissuaded him, but proposed to create the
Compagnie du Congo pour le Commerce et l’Industrie (CCCI) and to go to the lower Congo in person to look into building a railway from
Matadi to
Léopoldville, and to set engineers to work on technical studies. The railway would bypass the rapids between the navigable lower and upper sections of the
Congo River. The CCCI was created on 27 December 1886, the first Belgian colonial society to be involved in exploration and exploitation of the Congo. The financier
Georges Brugmann (1829–1900) was one of the founders. King Leopold granted the CCCI extensive trading privileges since the enterprise was seen as a bastion against British interests. On 26 March 1887 the CCCI made an agreement with the Congo Free State that gave it favorable conditions for studying a railway from the lower
Congo River to Stanley Pool (
Pool Malebo), the option to build the railway and operate it for 99 years, concession of all the lands needed for the railway, and concession of of freehold land. Thys organized two expeditions. One, under Captain Ernest Cambier, would consist of engineers and topographers who would determine the best route from Matadi to Léopldville. The other, under
Alexandre Delcommune, would be responsible for commercial exploration of the navigable waterways of the upper Congo. As managing director of the CCCI, Thys was in charge of launching the two projects in the Congo. As a member of the king's cabinet, he was responsible for confidentially advising the king on the organization of the Congo Free State. Thys' first trip to the Congo lasted from May 1887 to April 1888. On 2 June 1887 Thys arrived at the house in
Boma on the lower Congo of
Louis Valcke, director of the navy and transport of the Congo Free State. He was accompanied by members of the CCCI, and by engineers who were to study construction of the first railway in the Congo. On 8 August 1887 Valcke and Thys directed transport of five carts weighing to Stanley Pool, which took hundreds of local laborers a month to achieve. The heavily loaded carts carried spare parts for the
Roi des Belges and
Ville de Bruxelles boats. In March 1888 the Léopoldville shipyards organized by
Charles Liebrechts launched the
Roi des Belges on the upper
Congo River for the CCCI. The first three subsidiaries of the CCCI were the
Compagnie des Magasins généraux du Congo (22 October 1888), which would establish hotels and retail outlets for imports, mainly in Boma and Matadi; the
Compagnie des Produits du Congo (29 November 1889), based on the
Île de Mateba, which would breed cattle and trade in agricultural products; and the
Société anonyme belge pour le commerce du Haut-Congo (SAB), which would take over existing companies in the upper Congo and engage in the ivory and rubber trade. In 1889 Thys founded the
Banque d’Outremer, with CCCI participation, to support Belgian interests throughout the world. In July 1889 the
Compagnie du chemin de fer du Congo (CCCF) was founded in Brussels with capital of 25 million francs. The Belgian government invested 6 million francs, and Belgian and foreign private investors provided the rest. ==Matadi-Léopoldville Railway==