Planning and construction The
Württemberg railway Commission Michael Knoll was charged with the planning and implementation of the construction of the railway link between
Stuttgart and
Ulm. Knoll and his colleague
Karl Etzel constructed the Geislinger Steige and foresaw that all trains would have to be assisted by pusher locomotives up this five and a half kilometre-long ramp in order to climb the
Swabian Jura (
Schwäbische Alb). The railway needed a station as close as possible above the Steige for the uncoupling of the pusher locomotives. Knoll chose a location about one kilometre west of Amstetten. The village at that time was, with some 300 inhabitants, one of the smaller settlements in the Oberamt (district) of Geislingen.
State Railways period On 29 June 1850,
Royal Württemberg State Railways (
Königlich Württembergische Staats-Eisenbahnen) opened the
Geislingen–Ulm section. Amstetten station had two crossing tracks and a siding. A two-storey entrance building with arched windows on the ground floor faced the track towards Geislingen. It had a
turntable and a shed for storing pusher locomotives. The station building initially stood by itself in the countryside. Only an inn, which had been opened in 1814, on
Staatsstraße (now Hauptstraße 21–23), called
Zum Rößle since 1835, and three farmhouses built in 1845 (now Hauptstraße 8; 15-17 and 19) also existed. On maps they were listed as the hamlet of
Neuhaus. The State Railway built a residential building for their staff at the station in 1851 and a freight shed with a caretaker apartment in 1860. The Eastern Railway (
Ostbahn) was double-tracked between
Plochingen and Ulm from 1859 to 1862. An Amstetten farmer founded the
Steighof in 1862. A timber merchant from Ulm opened the
Bahnhofswirtschaft (now Hauptstraße 96) in 1866. The State Railway no longer needed the turntable and removed it in 1875. Also in 1875, a timber merchant moved from Hofstett-Emerbuch and established the Zum Rößle inn to a new building (now Hauptstraße 62). The citizens of
Laichingen,
Merklingen and
Nellingen joined forces to form a railway committee in 1888. They planned a line that would branch from the Eastern Railway at Amstetten,
Lonsee,
Westerstetten or
Beimerstetten. But it soon became clear that, only Laichingen could get a connection with a branch starting at any of the latter three stations. The State Railways classified the project as unprofitable, so the track was built and operated by the private
Württembergische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft (Württemberg Railway Company, WEG). The
metre-gauge railway was opened on 20 October 1901. The WEG built a narrow gauge railway station with a turntable and a
Rollbock pit on the western side of Amstetten station. The residents of
Gerstetten also wanted a railway connection. In 1896, they founded a civic association for this purpose. They preferred a connection via
Herbrechtingen on the
Brenz Railway. But in 1901, the WEG suggested that a railway line should first be built from Amstetten to Gerstetten and then possibly extended to Herbrechtingen. The civic association agreed to this. The first scheduled train ran on 1 July 1906. The continuation to Herbrechtingen was never built.
The foundation of the Amstetten-Bahnhof settlement In 1925, the inhabitants of Neuhaus applied that their place of residence should not be considered separately as a hamlet, but instead it should also be considered as part of Amstetten. Meanwhile, only 265 people lived in the village and 264 people already lived around the station. On 9 April 1926, the Ministry of Interior united the hamlet of Neuhaus, the residential area near the station and the hamlet of Steighof as
Amstetten-Bahnhof ("Amstetten station"). The completion of the electrification of the Eastern Railway on 1 June 1933 ended the need for the pushing of trains between Geislingen and Amstetten. The movement of heavy freight trains is an exception today.
Deutsche Bundesbahn period and closure of branch lines After the Second World War, the local population grew almost exclusively at Amstetten-Bahnhof. In 1961, the Amstetten-Bahnhof had 1,090 inhabitants, while 306 people lived in Amstetten village. In 1970,
Deutsche Bundesbahn demolished the historic station building and replaced it with a simple structure with a flat roof. Passenger traffic on the
Albbähnle (Amstetten–Laichingen line) was abandoned by 31 August 1985. After the discontinuation of freight on 14 September 1985, the WEG dismantled much of the line. The last section between Amstetten and Oppingen has been preserved. On 1 March 1996, the scheduled passenger services ended on the Amstetten–Gerstetten line. The
Ulm Railway Society (
Ulmer Eisenbahnfreunde) bought both lines and used them for the operation of historical trains and railcars. == Operations==