The Tramways de Royan (French pronunciation:[tʁamwɛdəʁwajɑ̃]) were two narrow-gauge railways that provided mainly passenger transport in and around the coastal resort town of Royan in western France.
History
In Royan, the Société Générale de Tramway de Royan (SGTR), a subsidiary of the Société Centrale des Chemins de fer et des Tramways, had a 600 mm (1 ft 11+5⁄8 in) gauge steam tramway built by the Decauville company on behalf of the town and operated it until 1894. Trains ran on the first sections in the urban area from 1890, but the branch to the railway station was only used until 1893. At the start of the 1891 bathing season, the railway extended to the north-west as far as the suburb of Pontaillac and to the south-east as far as Saint-Georges-de-Didonne. In the summer season, the trains, which were mainly used by the many tourists, ran every half hour.
The Compagnie du Tramway de La Grande-Côte à Royan was granted a concession for the 6 km (3.7 mi) long extension to the coastal area of La Grande-Côte in the municipality of Saint-Palais-sur-Mer, which opened in 1897. From the outset, the SGTR managed the operation here and also became the owner from 1903. In 1905, the network had reached a length of 17 km (11 mi) with the La Grande-Côte-Saint Palais-Royan-Didonne line, which mainly ran along the coast, with the new branch from Royan-Paradou to the port of Saint-Georges-de-Didonne.
The 27 km (17 mi) long forest tram of the Tramway de Grande-Côte à Ronce-les-Bains (GCR) company along the Côte Sauvage (Wild Coast) began at La Grande-Côte station. It was opened in 1892 by the forestry commission as a metre-gauge (3 ft3+3⁄8in) gauge horse-drawn tram line and was converted to 600 mm (1 ft 11+5⁄8 in) gauge in 1913. In 1925, the SGTR took over operation, so that its network then covered a total of 42 km (26 mi).
In 1933, the Département Charente-Maritime took over from the town of Royan. Instead of forest railway trains, the line from La Grande-Côte was served by buses from 1939. The entire operation, which suffered severe damage during the Second World War, was finally closed to passenger traffic in 1945 and to freight traffic in 1947/48.
Locomotives
Normally, the trains of the Royan steam tramway consisted of a 0-4-2 locomotive (with two coupled axles and one trailing axle) and three open carriages. The more powerful 0-6-2 locomotives could also pull four carriages. Trains with four carriages were a rarity, as there were only two or three of these locomotives. According to the numerous reports from people familiar with the Royan tramway, one of the more powerful locomotives was normally stationed in Pontaillac on peak days as a reserve and possible reinforcement.
The first metre-gauge Decauville railcars (Automotrice) were procured around 1903.[4] From 1924, six petrol-powered Campagne railcars from the 1910s were used on the 600 mm forest railway lines, both of which ran on the Groupe Laborie narrow-gauge lines in 1914 after the outbreak of the First World War and were finally used as light railcars on the metre-gauge lines from Cormeilles to Glos and Montfort-sur-Risle in the Euredepartment around 1933.[5][Note 2][6]
Operation
Several water supply points were accessible along the line, at which the water tanks attached to the sides of the steam locomotives could be filled: Water towers with a water crane were each at the Bureau de Saint-Palais and Casino stations on the Place des Acacias, while only a simple hose was used for this purpose at Pontaillac and Grande Côte.[3]
In the first season, there were fifty trains a day, departing every 15 minutes. By 1 October 1890, 160,000 passengers had been transported and in the following year, traffic even doubled to 357,000 passengers.[1]
Proposal to re-install the forest tramway
In 2020, the association Les Sept Sentinelles (The Seven Guardians) gave serious thought to re-installing the forest tramway and putting it back into operation.[7] It proposed building a 12 to 13-kilometre line along the Vélodyssée route with three stations and six on-demand stops: Pointe-Espagnole - Les Clônes - Négrevaux - Passe Blanche - La Bouverie - Phare de Coubre - Bonne Anse - La Palmyre.[8]
Stations of the forest tramway and steam tramway
From north to south, there were the following stations with a water supply, double-track stops and single-track stops on demand (as well as other landmarks listed in brackets):[2]
Stations of the forest tramway (Tram forestier) steam tramway (Le tramway Decauville)[1]
The Tramway forestier (normally spelt with a capital 'T' and a small 'f') was extended to the road from Ronce-les-Bains to Tremblade by 1913 at the latest. From 1923, it led to the southern outskirts of Ronce-les-Bains. The Organisation Todt extended the line with a military light railway on the road to La Tremblade during the World War II.[11][Note 3][12]
Le Galon d'Or
The forest tramway station Galon d'Or was located on the beach at a long, wooden jetty from which boats could be loaded with wood that was felled in the forest of La Coubre and transported to the jetty by forest railway.[9]
Approximately 1.2 km (0.75 mi) north of the forestry house Maison Forestière des Clones, a branch line merged the main line from the east. It served the forest area la Pointe Espagnole not far from the beach.[Note 4][13][14]
For the construction of the forest railway and the reforestation of "La Coubre", 48 oxen were used, which were housed in the "Bouverie" (oxen stable), whose name is still preserved today in the "Maison Forestière de la Bouverie" and the "Tranchée de la Bouverie". The Bouverie buildings were owned by the water and forestry authorities.[15][9]
The reforestation of La Coubre began in 1867. The sand was first to be fixed by marram grass and then pines were to be planted where the sand layer was very thick, and aspens, alders or poplars in the old marshes that had just silted up. Initially, the work was carried out on private or communal initiative and only subsidised by the state. However, as the reforestation did not progress quickly, the Water and Forestry Administration took over the project in 1862 and laid a metre-gauge forest railway to carry out the work.[9]
At the beginning of the 19th century, the Bréjat marsh (marais de Bréjat) was converted into pastureland. A drainage canal was dug, equipped with a sluice gate (Le Clapet) to prevent salt water from entering at high tide, and the beach was named "Plage du Clapet". From 1824, the dunes were planted with maritime pines. The marsh of Bréjat was eventually flooded by the sea and a sandbank formed at the Pointe de la Coubre, creating the bay of Bonne Anse, which closed, silted up and silted up by the currents.[16]
The forest restaurants at the lighthouse of La Coubre, also known as the Phare de Bonne Anse, and on the beach of Mathes to the south were popular excursion destinations in the post-war period, which could be reached by forest railway at moderate prices.[10]
The forestry house Maison Forestière La Palmyre was located in the area of today's seaside resort of La Palmyre near Les Mathes, not far from the main entrance to today's Zoo de la Palmyre.
The metre-gauge forest railway originally started at the La Combe à Massé quarry in 1868. Initially used mainly by workers and employees for silvicultural work, the forest railway was also used by summer visitors after reforestation was completed. In the newspaper Le Gaulois of 21 July 1884 and 11 August 1884, an advertisement appeared for "visits by forest railway to La Palmyre, La Coubre, the Pavillon Bonne-Anse, the Pointe Espagnole, the Galon d'Or, the forest and dolmens of Combots, the forest of Arvert, etc."[4][17]
Terminus de Tram Forestier
Southern terminus of the forest railway. Passengers could change to the steam tramway here. There were no direct trains (without changing at La Grande Côte) from La Coubre or Ronce-les-Bains to Royan. Although the lines were connected by a switch that was normally padlocked, the tracks were several dozen metres apart.[18] The petrol railcars were too weak on the mountainous routes of the steam tramway and the steam locomotives could not be used in the forest areas due to the risk of forest fires.
Close to the Terre Nègre lighthouse, there was a stop at the Puits de l'Auture, a landmark in the landscape. It was a natural bridge over a washout in the cliffs where the waves broke.
The most important station Le Bureau with diverter track, water tower, siding and pastry shop on the beach of Bureau (Plage du Bureau). The name comes from two offices that were set up there to combat smuggling: an agricultural office (Bureau des Fermes) was set up there in 1729, which was replaced by the customs office (Bureau des Douanes) in 1840.[20]
Leon Trotsky lived during his exile in the villa Les Embruns (the sea spray), a solitary house in the middle of a large garden overlooking a cliff and close to the beach, whose name, where the sea was churning, was well justified. When he first arrived there on 25 July 1933, a fire caused by sparks from a steam locomotive had set fire to the nearby bushes, delaying his arrival and worrying those who came.[21]
Tré la Chasse
Vaux-Nauzan
The 250 metre long Promenade Forestière de Trez-la-Chasse is one of the few places that have remained as they were at the time of the tramway. Between Nauzan (also Nausan or Nauzant) near Vaux-sur-Mer and Pontaillac, the line was laid on its own track. The gradient was 40 ‰ over a length of around 250 metres.
Pontaillac was the northern terminus of the steam tramway from 1890 to 1897. The station had three tracks, which were accessible via a three-way railroad switch. A wagon with coke sacks could be parked on a siding.[22]
The request stop was close to the courts of the Royan Garden Tennis club. The Royan Tournament, however, took place in 1908 on Pontaillac beach at low tide, very close to the steam tramway that can be seen in the background at the top left corner of the picture.
Foncillon
Le Port
The jetty built in 1898 gave passengers travelling by steamship to or from Bordeaux the opportunity to transfer to the steam tramway at the "Port" station on Boulevard Thiers.[23]
The Café des Bains was located at the upper end of La Rampe Lessore. Pablo Picasso captured it in a colourful painting, albeit without the steam tram.[24][25]
(La Rampe Lessore)
At the upper end was the Café des Bains, from where the ramp led down to Boulevard Lessore. Many publications mention a maximum gradient of 40 ‰.
Croix-Blanche (White Cross) was a stop at the points of a turning loop in the city centre. From the turning loop there were branches to the Dépôt and to the station forecourt of the standard-gauge state railway.
Dépôt
Initially, the address was given as "Depot de la Rue de l'Ecluse", although on the 1888 plan it is about 50 metres away (today Rue Colonel Desplats), as Rue des Combes de Mons did not yet exist at the time the specifications were drawn up in 1894.
Boulevard Botton
The boulevard is named after Augustin Botton (* 1818 in Marennes, † 30 April 1882 in Royan), a civil engineer from the road and bridge construction department who was the first to propose a beautification plan for the coastal town after the casino was built in 1847. He was responsible for the structural improvement of the town and harbour of Royan, the construction of the Pontaillac lighthouse and the planting of the dry sand dunes in Pontaillac and Le Parc. He presented his urban development plan on 21 August 1847, describing a new town with a garden, which later became the Cours Botton.[26]
At the station in front of the Casino Municipal on the Place des Acacias, there was a water tower where the steam locomotives could collect water and one and a siding for the SGTR's only covered goods wagon, in which coke was transported from the gas works to the Place des Acacias to heat the locomotives. The locomotives required around 10 kg of coke and 50 litres of water per kilometre.[27][1][28]
The double-track Grand Hôtel stop was opposite the hotel of the same name on Boulevard Saint-Georges. The similarly named Grand-Hotel de Paris was also on the tram line, but did not have a stop named after it.[29]
The station Paradou was named after the villa of the publisher of Emile Zola, whose garden gate can be seen on the right of the photo. When the new line was built in 1890, the line that had previously run in a curve to St. Georges de Didonne (Ville) was extended in a straight line to St. Georges de Didonne (Port) at the harbour near Le Paradou.
The station Parc Façade had a wooden shelter Boulevard de Saint-Georges (now Boulevard Frédéric Garnier)
Vallières
Near the holiday resort Oceanic Parc, which was occupied by German forces in 1941 and subsequently blown up.
Plume la Poule
At the Plume la Poule stop in the vineyards of La Crête de Vallières, the line had to overcome a height difference of 18 metres.
Saint-Georges (Port)
The line to Saint-George (Port) was only put into operation in 1906 as a branch from the south-eastern steam tramway line, which had been in operation since 1890/1891.
The road to St Georges de Didonne (Ville) turns off the coastal road into the park at "Le Paradu" with a small radius.
Le Parc, später Parc-Oasis
In the first half of the 19th century, the town council decided to fortify an area of dunes that had previously not been used for agriculture or forestry by planting trees in a park-like manner. With the growth of the population and the development of seaside tourism, the forests were gradually parcelled out from 1885 onwards. The Le Parc stop was renamed Parc-Oasis when the new railway line to Saint-Georges (Port) was opened.
^ abFrom 1890 to 1894: Champ de Foire, since 1894: Royan-Casino, since 1928: Casino Municipal
^The first batch of Campagne railcars had 24 seats, while the second batch only had 20 seats, albeit with upholstered seats. The sidecars were classic Decauville steam tramcars (Baladeuse, type "KE") with 56 seats (including 48 seats), in their original condition with minor adaptations. There were also short sidecars that the SGTR workshops had built themselves on the chassis of an old closed Decavuville carriage (type "IS"). The railcar pulling the inaugural train of the 600 mm forest railway had been re-gauged from metre gauge to 600 mm gauge in order to operate the re-gauged forest railway lines as an extension of the steam tramways.
^ Surprisingly, a British Admiralty Chart of July 1896 shows already a branch line to La Tremblade and beyond.
^The Maison Forestière de la Pointe Espagnole was, according to contradictory information, probably either identical with the Maison Forestière Roître des Bassets or with the Maison Forestière les Roseaux. In total, there were the following twelve forester's lodges to the right and left of the forest railway from north to south: 1. La Palmyre, 2. Bonne-Anse, 3. Le Requin (demolished), 4. La Grande Courbe (washed away by the sea), 5. La Bouverie, 6. Le Pavillon, 7. Les Brisquettes 8. Roître des Bassets (washed away by the sea), 9. La Passe Blanche, 10. Nègrevaux, 11. Les Clones, 12. Les Roseaux (demolished).
^All Campagne railcars had two driver's cabs, a petrol engine, a transmission with reversing gear, a cone coupling and a chain drive that acted on both axles. A vacuum pump supplied the brakes for the sidecars. The weight was 5 tonnes when empty and 6.5 tonnes in operation and they could pull two tramcars of the Royan tramway (Decauville, type KE with 56 seats). Due to their low power, they could not be used on the Royan tramway, but were taken to the depot for repairs and maintenance during the off-season.
^Route map: Casino Municipal, Grand Hôtel, Le Paradou, Parc Façade, Vallieres und St Georges Port and Le Paradou, Parc Oasis, Rav de Belmont, Parc des Sports, Le Coca und St Georges de Didone