After the development in France of a scheme for a transcontinental railway connection between
Hamburg and
Paris (the so-called "Paris–Hamburg Railway") and continuing to
Scandinavia, the
Prussian government insisted that the section on German territory would be built by a German railway company and the western terminus of the German line would be in the Dutch town of Venlo. As a result, the line became known as the Hamburg–Venlo railway. The Cologne-Minden Railway Company was awarded the contract for the line and began construction of the eastern section from its
Wanne station on its
original trunk line to Hamburg, which continues to have great importance for long-distance and regional passenger and freight traffic as the
Wanne-Eickel–Hamburg railway. Since Prussia required the line to bypass the important strategic and economic industrial area of the
Ruhr to the north, the western part of the line was built from Venlo to Haltern, crossing the Rhine at Wesel and running from Wesel to Haltern along the
Lippe river. Even then it was expected that these parts of the line would not operate profitably. The construction of the bridge over the Rhine at Wesel did not begin until the much-needed and lucrative Elbe Bridge was completed between
Harburg and Hamburg. The rest of the line offered no technical problems. Thus, despite the late start of construction, the Haltern–Wesel section was completed on 1 March 1874; the Wesel-Venlo section was completed three months later on 31 December 1874. On 1 June 1873 the Hamburg–Haltern line was completed with the opening of the Bremen-Hamburg section. Use as a route for long-distance passenger traffic was brief. With the connection of the
Boxtel Railway to the bridge over the Rhine at Wesel before the First World War, a long-distance connection was established on the (London–)
Vlissingen–Wesel–
Osnabrück–
Berlin–Eydtkuhnen (now
Chernyshevskoye)–
Saint Petersburg route. This service was no longer necessary after the First World War due to the lack of passengers as a result of
hyperinflation and the dislocation to operations caused by the
occupation of the Ruhr. Also the line had little significance for local transport, since it bypassed the Ruhr area and there was almost no demand for travel in the directions that it ran. Ironically, the Wesel–Haltern section was later especially important as an access route to new coal mines when mining was extended to the north of the Ruhr. ==Closure ==