Travers–Buttes Railway
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The Travers–Buttes railway is a railway line in the Swiss
canton of Neuchâtel The Republic and Canton of Neuchâtel (french: République et Canton de Neuchâtel); rm, Chantun Neuchâtel; it, Cantone di Neuchâtel is a French-speaking canton in western Switzerland. In 2007, its population was 169,782, of whom 39,654 (o ...
. It was built by the Régional du Val-de-Travers (RVT), officially the ''Compagnie du Chemin de fer Régional du Val-de-Travers'' (Val-de-Travers Regional Railway Company), which operated an almost 14 km-long Y-shaped RVT line from Travers via Fleurier to St-Sulpice and
Buttes __NOTOC__ In geomorphology, a butte () is an isolated hill with steep, often vertical sides and a small, relatively flat top; buttes are smaller landforms than mesas, plateaus, and tablelands. The word ''butte'' comes from a French word mea ...
. Today the line is owned and operated by the Transports publics Neuchâtelois.


History

The ''Compagnie du Chemin de fer régional du Val-de-Travers'' was founded in Fleurier in 1881 with the aim of providing rail access to the villages in the
Val de Travers Val-de-Travers District was one of the six districts of the canton of Neuchâtel, Switzerland, until the district level was eliminated on 1 January 2018. It is famous for its clock industry. The Canton is largely rural and farming remains importa ...
. Although the
Franco-Swiss Company The Franco-Swiss Company (French: ''Compagnie Franco-Suisse'', FS) was a former railway company in Switzerland, formed in 1859 and absorbed into the Western Swiss Railways in 1872. It built the Neuchâtel-Pontarlier railway. History The Fr ...
(''Compagnie Franco-Suisse'') had already opened a railway line through the Val-de-Travers on 25 July 1860, this ran through the higher ground of the valley of
Les Verrières Les Verrières () is a municipality in the canton of Neuchâtel in Switzerland. History Les Verrières is first mentioned in 1344 as ''villa de Verreriis''. Jt was here that General Charles-Denis Bourbaki crossed the Swiss border with the rem ...
and on to Pontarlier. In order to reach the necessary altitude, the line was built from Travers on a hillside, far from the settlements on the valley floor. The line of the ''Régional du Val-de-Travers'' was therefore built largely parallel to that of the ''Franco-Suisse'' and ran on the valley floor from Travers. The Travers–Fleurier railway was opened to St-Sulpice (the seat of the company and the location of the depot) on 24 September 1883. The Fleurier–Buttes railway was opened on 11 September 1886. When the RVT was founded, the Franco-Suisse already had changed its name for the second time due to mergers and was called the
Jura–Simplon Railways The Jura–Simplon Railways (JS), ( French: Compagnie des ''Chemins de Fer Jura–Simplon'') was a railway company that was formed in 1890. It was nationalised in 1903 as the largest railway company in Switzerland and integrated into the Swiss Fe ...
(''Jura-Simplon-Bahn'', JS) when it was nationalised to become part of the
Swiss Federal Railways Swiss Federal Railways (german: link=no, Schweizerische Bundesbahnen, ''SBB''; french: link=no, Chemins de fer fédéraux suisses, ''CFF''; it, Ferrovie federali svizzere, ''FFS'') is the national railway company of Switzerland. It is usuall ...
(SBB) in 1903, but the RVT still retained its original name. The shortage of coal during the Second World War led to the virtual complete electrification of the Swiss railway network. Travers station lies on the (Neuchâtel–)Auvernier–Les Verrières route, on which was electrification was completed on 22 November 1942. The RVT adopted the SBB electrification system ( 15 kV 16⅔ Hz) and began electrical operations on its line on 4 May 1944. The final step to electric traction was marked at the RVT with the demolition of its last steam locomotive in 1951. On the basis of the so-called ''Privatbahnhilfegesetz'' (private railway assistance act), the rolling stock was renewed around 1965. In accordance with the concept for standardized types of rolling stock developed by the
Federal Office of Transport The Federal Office of Transport (FOT, german: Bundesamt für Verkehr (BAV); french: Office fédéral des transports (OFT); it, Ufficio federale dei trasporti (UFT); rm, Uffizi federal da traffic (UFT)) is a division of the Swiss Federal Depart ...
(EAV) and the Swiss rolling stock industry, the RVT procured a so-called ''EAV-Triebwagen'' ("EAV railcar", which was numbered 103), three matching control cars (201–203) and two standard cars, class 1 (''Einheitswagen I'', nos 301–302), that made possible the operation of push-pull trains. Passenger operations on the more than 1.6 kilometre-long Fleurier–St-Sulpice section was finally abandoned on 2 June 1973 and they were replaced by a bus route. Since then the former branch line to Buttes has formed the last part of the RVT main line. The line to St-Sulpice, where an RVT carriage shed once stood, was officially retained for goods traffic and service traffic. The catenary was dismantled in 2001. The disused section was revived for its 100th anniversary in 1983 to carry nostalgic trips, which benefitted from the founding of the
Vapeur Val-de-Travers Vapeur Val-de-Travers is a heritage railway and railway museum based in Saint-Sulpice (Neuchâtel , neighboring_municipalities= Auvernier, Boudry, Chabrey (VD), Colombier, Cressier, Cudrefin (VD), Delley-Portalban (FR), Enges, Fenin-Vilars ...
(VVT) steam railway club in 1984. The VVT now maintains the depot at the end of the line in St-Sulpice and uses the line for steam rides. The concession for the Fleurier–St-Sulpice section was transferred to the ''Vapeur Val-de-Travers'' in 2012. Parallel with the gradually introduction of the integrated regular interval timetable starting from 1980, two new railcars were procured, which corresponded to those of the new BLS push-pull trains and were procured for cost reasons by various private railways in pooled orders. Two ''Privatbahn-NPZ'' railcars ( Neuer Pendelzug—"new push-pull train"—for private railways; 104–105) with two driver's cabs, which were delivered in 1983, replaced the 1965 EAV railcar 103, which was sold to the
Martigny–Orsières Railway The Martigny–Orsières Railway (''Chemin de fer Martigny–Orsières''; MO) was a railway company in the Canton of Valais in Switzerland. It merged in 2000 with the Martigny-Châtelard Railway (''Chemin de fer Martigny-Châtelard'', MC) to form ...
(''Chemins de fer Martigny–Orsières''; MO), but the EAV control cars (202–203) were reused with the new railcars. Between 1985 and 1991, additional rolling stock was procured, including two newer ''Privatbahn-NPZ'' sets (106–107) with only one cab, three matching control cars (204–206) and four new intermediate cars (304–307). The RABDe 104 was sold to the Gruyère–Fribourg–Morat Railway (''Chemins de fer fribourgeois Gruyère–Fribourg–Morat''; GFM). In 1991, BLS sold its three ABDe 4/8 railcars (741–743) to the Oensingen-Balsthal Railway (''Oensingen-Balsthal-Bahn''; OeBB), which in turn sold no. 743 to the RVT in 1994, which renumbered it 313 under a new numbering scheme. In 1999, RVT was merged with neighbouring companies, in which the canton of Neuchâtel also held considerable holdings—the railway company and the ''Compagnie des Transports du Val-de-Ruz'' (VR) bus company, formerly the
Régional du Val-de-Ruz Régional was a subsidiary airline wholly owned by Air France which connected hubs at Paris, Lyon to 49 airports in Europe. The airline operated in Air France livery, retaining its name in small titles and logo on the front fuselage and engines. ...
(VR) railway company, to form the (TRN). The TRN merged with the
Compagnie des Transports en commun de Neuchâtel et environs The Compagnie des Transports en commun de Neuchâtel et environs (TN) was a public transport operator in and around the Swiss city of Neuchâtel. It operated the city's network of trams, trolleybuses and motor buses, under the marketing name Trans ...
in 2012 to form the Transports publics Neuchâtelois, the current operator.


Rolling stock

The RVT tended to match its rolling stock purchases with that of the neighbouring standard-gauge private railways. Some rolling stock therefore either formed part of follow-up orders, originate from joint orders coordinated by the
Federal Office of Transport The Federal Office of Transport (FOT, german: Bundesamt für Verkehr (BAV); french: Office fédéral des transports (OFT); it, Ufficio federale dei trasporti (UFT); rm, Uffizi federal da traffic (UFT)) is a division of the Swiss Federal Depart ...
or were "exchanged" with other companies.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Travers-Buttes railway Railway lines in Switzerland Standard gauge railways in Switzerland Railway lines opened in 1883 Defunct railway companies of Switzerland 1881 establishments in Switzerland 1999 disestablishments in Switzerland Buildings and structures in the canton of Neuchâtel