Mainz – Ludwigshafen – (France) (1853) At first, the route to be used was totally unclear. The alternative from Mainz via
Alzey to Worms was soon discarded in favour of a direct route along the Rhine. On 15 August 1845 a licence was granted to the
Mainz-Ludwigshafen Railway Company (
Mainz-Ludwigshafener-Eisenbahngesellschaft). The company was later renamed to the
Hessian Ludwig Railway Company (
Hessische-Ludwigs-Eisenbahngesellschaft) or
HLB – in honour of
Louis III, Grand Duke of Hesse and by Rhine, although he initially opposed the building of the line. In the times following the HLB got increasingly into financial deep water, because several share holders withdrew their money. Construction began in spring 1848. However, as the state purse became empty as a result of the
revolution of 1848, the state could no longer be relied on to provide any support and the construction of the line threatened to grind to a halt. Not until August 1852 did the Hesse-Darmstadt government, decided to support the HLB. In addition a treaty was agreed with
Kingdom of Bavaria for the entire
Mainz–Ludwigshafen line. Whilst the city of Worms would have preferred a station in the vicinity of the port, the HLB, after a degree of toing and froing, built it further west where it is today. Thereafter building proceeded apace and the 46 kilometre long route was opened in several sections from Mainz to Worms during the period 23 March (Mainz –
Oppenheim) to 24 August 1853. From 15 November 1853 trains ran through from Mainz to Ludwigshafen. Initially there were 6 passenger trains daily (2 of which were expresses) in each direction between Mainz and Worms. In Mainz there was a connexion to the steamships of the
Cologne and Düsseldorf Company for Steamships on the Rhine River (
Kölnische und Düsseldorfer Gesellschaft für Rhein-Dampfschiffahrt).
Rhine-Main-Railway On 1 of August 1858 the
Rhine-Main line from Mainz via Darmstadt to
Aschaffenburg in Bavaria was opened. Initially the
Rhine river was crossed by a
train ferry east of the railway station
Mainz Neuthor (today:
Mainz Römisches Theater station) until a newly designed Rhine bridge was constructed by MAN-Werk Gustavsburg and given to traffic on 1 of December 1862. This line not only connected Mainz, second in importance after the grand-ducal capital, with Darmstadt. But it enabled also to run trains through from the Bavarian railways up the Rhine valley to
Cologne and further on to
Belgium.
Expansion of the network Over the succeeding decades the following lines were added to the network and the HLB became the major provider of rail services within the two southern provinces of the grand-duchy (
Rheinhessen and
Starkenburg) as well as one of the largest privately owned railways of Germany. •
West Rhine Railway (
Linksrheinische Bahn) – 1859 (Mainz-
Bingen) •
Frankfurt City Link Line (
Städtische Verbindungsbahn Frankfurt) – 1862 (owned by the City of Frankfurt, rail services provided by HLB) •
Frankfurt-Hanau Railway (
Frankfurt-Hanauer Eisenbahn) - owned by the private
Frankfurt-Hanau Railway Company, rail services were operated by the HLB from 1863. It purchased the line in 1872. •
Main Railway Mainbahn – 1863 (Mainz-Frankfurt) •
Worms–Bingen Stadt railway (
Rheinhessenbahn) – 1864 to 1871 •
Darmstadt–Worms railway Riedbahn - from 1869 (Darmstadt [later: Frankfurt]-Rosengarten [right bank of Rhine river, opposite Worms]) •
Nibelungen Railway Nibelungenbahn – 1869 (Rosengarten-
Bensheim) •
Alzey–Mainz railway (1871) •
Taunus Railway Taunus-Eisenbahn – 1871, sold in 1872 to the
Prussian state railways •
Wiesbachtalbahn - 1871-1895 •
Main-Lahn Railway Main-Lahn-Bahn – 1877 (Frankfurt-
Limburg an der Lahn) •
Ländches Railway (
Ländchesbahn) (
Wiesbaden-
Niedernhausen) - 1879 •
Odenwald Railway (
Odenwaldbahn) – 1882 (Darmstadt / Hanau-
Eberbach) == Route numbers ==