German railways were heavily bombed by Allied
RAF and
USAAF bombers. Marshalling yards, bridges, repair shops, and service facilities were all destroyed.
Fighter-bombers targeted locomotives and bombed them. As a result, trains were at a standstill in the spring of 1945. The cities of Hamburg, Munich, Nuremberg, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf, Berlin, Leipzig, Dresden and others were affected. Stations were completely destroyed and wagons and carriage set on fire and destroyed. Bomb craters and blast seriously damaged the permanent way or rail track. The Allied forces of Occupation were put in charge and instantly had myriad problems regarding food, lack of housing, fuel, displaced persons and people on the move. The Engineering Corps of British and American forces oversaw the partial rebuilding of the lines and cars with local labour from prisoners of war,
rubble women, and de-mobilized soldiers. Temporary wooden bridges were put up over destroyed spans. Multiple tracks were disassembled into one smaller working line, equipment assessed and rebuilt. In three months, the railway was working again in a rudimentary form. The Armies of Occupation needed the railways to move coal and the soon to be gathered agricultural harvest. Deutschebahn had a critical shortage of wagons, carriages and locomotives, so much so that the US gave war surplus engines to ensure the movement of freight.
Breakup of the Reichsbahn With the end of the
Second World War in 1945 those parts of the Deutsche Reichsbahn that were outside the new German borders laid down in the
Potsdam Agreement were transferred to the ownership and administration of the states in whose territory they were situated. For example, on 27 April 1945, the Austrian railways became independent again as the Austrian State Railway ( or ÖStB), later renamed as the Austrian Federal Railways ( or
ÖBB) on 5 August 1947.
Railways in the occupation zones Operational control of the rest of the DR was devolved to the respective
zones of occupation so that the legally existed in four parts until 1949.
US Zone In the
American Zone the Reichsbahn divisions of Augsburg, Frankfurt am Main, Kassel, Munich, Regensburg and Stuttgart (for the railways in
Württemberg-Baden) were subordinated to the Senior Control Office US Zone () in Frankfurt.
British Zone The Reichsbahn divisions of Essen, Hamburg, Hanover, Cologne, Münster (Westfalen) and Wuppertal were grouped into the
in the British Zone under Director General Max Leibbrand in Bielefeld.
French Zone In the French Occupation Zone, the railways were grouped into the Operating Association of the Southwest German Railways () with its headquarters in Speyer. The Operating Association included the railway divisions of Karlsruhe (in the US Zone), Mainz and Saarbrücken. After the
Saarland was transferred from the French Zone and was given its own state railway – the Railways of the Saarland () – the rest of the network of the Saarbrücken division went into the new
Trier division. After the Deutsche Bundesbahn was formed this Operating Association was merged with it.
Soviet Zone The
Soviet zone of occupation became a self-declared socialist state, the
German Democratic Republic (commonly known as East Germany), on 7 October 1949. One month prior, on 7 September 1949, the railway systems in the three western zones (the
Federal Republic of Germany), were reunified and renamed the (DB – German Federal Railways). On the formation of East Germany on 7 October 1949, the railway system in the Soviet Zone retained the name (DR), despite the connotations of the word "Reich". This was due to the designation of the in postwar treaties and military protocols as the railway operator in
West Berlin, a role it retained until the creation of the unified DBAG at the beginning of 1994.
Bizone and creation of the DB To conform to the formation of the
Bizone in 1946 the Head Office of the Railways of the American and British Occupation Regions () was created. In 1947 it moved its headquarters to
Offenbach am Main and called itself the in the United Economic Region (). Following the foundation of the
Federal Republic of Germany, it was renamed
Deutsche Bundesbahn.
East German Deutsche Reichsbahn In the post-war years, the DR in East Germany continued to develop independently of the DB, but very much in parallel. The
locomotive classification scheme, based on that of the
DRG, was extended. The production, conversion and development of
steam locomotives initially continued in earnest; older, especially ex- classes being rationalised and withdrawn from service. A major conversion () programme to update steam locomotives and rectify flawed, mainly
wartime austerity, classes was carried out in the 1950s. Gradually, however, they were replaced by the more economical and easier-to-maintain
diesel and
electric classes. In general this happened rather later than in the West. In 1970, the DR
renumbered its locomotives in order to conform to new computerised data standards. On 3 October 1990, the GDR states acceded to the Federal Republic of Germany. Initially the two railway administrations continued to operate separately, albeit with increasing cooperation, and in 1994 they were merged to form the new
Deutsche Bahn. == See also ==