Natal Government Railways


The Natal Government Railways was formed in January 1877 in the Colony of Natal.
In 1877, the Natal Government Railways acquired the Natal Railway Company for the sum of £40,000, gaining the line from the Point to Durban and from Durban to Umgeni. This move, inspired in part by the neighbouring Cape Prime Minister John Molteno's 1873 establishment of the Cape Government Railways, was intended to drive the extension of Natal's railways inland, towards the Drakensberg and eventually the Orange Free State. The Natal Government Railways also adopted the Cape gauge. The core line went from Durban to Volksrust, but reached Charlestown in 1891 and was linked to the Witwatersrand in 1895. Other important lines were the one linking with the Orange Free State reaching Harrismith in 1892, as well as the North Coast and South Coast lines.
In 1910, the Union of South Africa was formed and in 1912 the NGR combined with the other colonies' railway companies to form the South African Railways and Harbours.

Lines and business history

The core line connected Durban to the Witwatersrand and was completed in 1895. There were also lines on the northern and southern coasts. The Orange Free State line went over the Drakensberg, connecting Ladysmith to Kroonstad by its completion in 1906. Although more than 80% of the railway was in the OVS, it was built under the auspices of the NGR.
Until Natal gained autonomy in 1893, the long railway from Glencoe to the coal mines of Dundee was the only branch line of the NGR, but when NGR was merged into the broader South African railway network on 1 January 1912, the branch lines occupied 40% of the NGR rail network.
Here is the railway over the years and by the numbers:
YearAverageDistanceFinancialRecord
mikmIncomeExpenses
18602377.573.0
1870610126.3117.0
188095.5154582.7477.1
1889-18902253621507.81393.9
1899-1900567912886.71990.5
1909-1098715884293.73530.3

Construction

The line from Durban to Pietermaritzburg was already proposed in 1862, but it was not surveyed until 1873. Under Natal Law 4 of 1875, Natal Government Railways was authorized to build three lines from the Point Waterfront: one of from Durban to Pietermaritzburg, one along the Natal South Coast to near Isipingo, and one along the North Coast to near Verulam. The Natal colonial government paid for the lines with a £1.2 million loan obtained in London.

Durban to Pietermaritzburg

The line to Pietermaritzburg ran through hills that would have made the 4' 8 1⁄2" NRC gauge prohibitively expensive. Therefore, the 3' 6" Cape gauge was used. Afterwards, the old NRC lines were replaced by ones with the new gauge. The building of the new line between The Point and Umgeni began on 11 May 1878.
The contract with the railway builders specified the minimum radius at and the maximum gradient at 1:30. Construction began on 1 January 1876. On 4 September 1878, the from Durban to Pinetown was operational, and on 1 December 1880, the entire line from Durban to Pietermaritzburg went online. Although the towns were apart, the railway stretched for. The line climbed from sea level to Richmond Road and then declined to Pietermaritzburg. The line followed the contours of the land and there was not one tunnel between the two cities. The current line between the two, by contrast, is long and goes through 15 tunnels.

Pietermaritzburg to Newcastle

While the Voortrekkers had mined coal on a small scale, the North Natal coal rush began in earnest when Frederick Noord published his report in 1881. A report by the British Empire reported that it cost twice as much to transport coal by wagon to Durban as it did to ship it to London. This, together with the opening of the diamond fields in Griqualand West, led the Natal Provincial Council to order the line continued to Newcastle in 1881 with a branch line connecting Natal to the diamond fields through the Drakensberg. After the line reached Ladysmith in 1886, service northward from Pietermaritzburg began. The distance from Pietermaritzburg to Ladysmith is, and the line ranges from its highest point between Mooi River and Estcourt to the bridge over the Tugela River.
Once the line from Ladysmith to Newcastle was completed in 1889, coal could finally be transported economically from North Natal to the coast. A branch line was also built from Glencoe to the coal mine in Dundee.

Connections with the Boer Republics

One of the original purposes of the Pietermaritzburg-Ladysmith line was to serve the diamond mines in Griqualand West. The same year the line reached Ladysmith, gold was discovered in the Witwatersrand, and therefore in 1889, it was decided to extend the line from Newcastle to the border of the Transvaal.
On 7 November 1889, after an agreement was reached between the governments of Natal and the Orange Free State, construction began on the line from Ladysmith to Harrismith. The line reached Van Reenen's Pass in 1891, and on 13 July 1892, service from Ladysmith to Harrismith was formally opened by the Governor of Natal and the State President of the Orange Free State. Although it stretched into the Orange River Colony, the entire length of the line was the property of the NGR. The Free State portion was largely flat, but in Natal the line climbed over the course of. Three zig zags were made to overcome the harsh terrain of the Drakensberg. Harrismith remained the terminus of the railway until after the Second Boer War. Between 1903 and 1906, the link between Harrismith and Kroonstad was opened in several stages.
After the discovery of gold, there was a race between Cape Colony and Natal to connect the Witwatersrand with the coast. Before the line from Ladysmith to Newcastle was completed, an agreement was signed between the governments of Natal and the ZAR to extend the line from Newcastle to the Rand. The line reached Newcastle on 15 May 1890, and was immediately continued on to Charlestown, the last town in Natal before the ZAR border. The line, which climbed over the from Newcastle to Charlestown, was formally opened by President Paul Kruger of the ZAR and the Governor of Natal on 7 April 1891. Where the line crosses Laing's Nek Pass, a tunnel was built.
For political reasons, the rail line was not connected with the Netherlands–South African Railway Company lines until the NZASM line to Maputo Bay was finished. That line went into service on 1 January 1895. By the terms of an agreement made on 3 February 1894 between the SAR government and NGR, the NGR was to build a link from the Natal-ZAR border to NZASM network. The first half, of from between the border and Heidelberg, Gauteng, opened 27 April 1895; the second opened on 15 November 1895. On 1 December 1895, the branch line between the border and Charlestown opened, followed on 15 December by the branch from Heidelberg to Union Junction, from Germiston.

Coast Line and branch lines

When the NGR was founded in 1875, it was authorized to build a line from Durban to Verulam along the northern coast and a line from Durban to Isipingo along the southern coast.
At the time, there was already a line from Durban to Umgeni, but it was in the 1.435-m gauge of the NRC, not the 1.067-m Cape gauge of the NGR. Since that line was already operational, it was retrofitted with a new Cape gauge track in 1877. In 1878, the extension of the North Coast Line to Verulam opened. The South Coast Line began near the Rossburgh station, a depot around from Durban. In 1880, the line to Isipingo opened.
The branch line from Glencoe to Dundee was the only one built in Natal before the colony attained self-government in 1893. Between then and the outbreak of the Second Boer War, the South Coast Line was extended from Isipingo to Park Rynie, a branch line was built along the southern border from the port of Clairwood to Wests, and a branch was built from Thornville Junction to Richmond. Around the same time, the Hullett sugar company extended the North Coast Line from Verulam to the southern bank of the Tugela River. On 25 October 1899, 13 days after the beginning of the Second Boer War, the first of the Pietermaritzburg-Greytown line. Shortly after the British took Pretoria, the last from New Hanover to Greytown were completed. During the war, the South Coast Line was extended to North Shepstone on the northern bank of the Umzimkulu River, a distance of around.
In 1896, JL Hullett & Sons bought the Natal-Zululand Company. Although Zululand was merged with the Colony of Natal in 1897, the Natal-Zululand Company continued to own the North Coast Line from Verulam northward, having leased the line to the NGR. On 18 July 1902, the first line opened, going from the Tugela River by way of Empangeni to near the Mhlathuze River. The following year, the line was extended by way of Mtubatuba to near the coal mine in Somkhele. The coal mined there was poor-quality and the mine was never profitable, so the line ran a deficit of £48,917 during its first year of operation. In April 1904, the government of Natal bought the line for £725,000.
Between 1904 and 1909, a link between the Natal portion of the NGR and the CGR lines in the Cape was built through Griqualand West. The line reached Riverside but was never finished.
In 1884, the Nieuwe Republiek was founded by Lucas Johannes Meyer with its capital at Vryheid. In 1888, the Nieuwe Republiek was absorbed into the ZAR, and in 1902 it was annexed by the British and combined with the Natal colony. The area is rich in coal. In April 1901, the Glencoe-Dundee branch line reached the Buffels River - earlier the border of the Nieuwe Republiek. From 1901 to 1909, the branch line was extended through Vryheid to near Hlobane. At the same time, Utrecht was connected with the main line by a branch line.

Narrow-gauge lines

During the 19th century, a number of narrow-gauge lines were built in the mountains. As in India and elsewhere, such lines were more financially viable in hilly terrain. Such lines included, for instance, the Ffestiniog Railway in Wales and the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway in India.
In 1899, Hullett & Co. obtained permission from the Natal government to build a private narrow-gauge line from Stanger in the tea plantations to the Kearsney tea factory. The line opened to both freight and passengers on 13 March 1901.
In 1904, there were also narrow-gauge railways built in the Natal countryside. Narrow-gauge railways were cheaper than Cape gauge and could also take sharper turns. The trade-off was that locomotives did not run as efficiently on them and therefore less could be hauled. The first narrow-gauge rail line in rural Natal, the Estcourt-Weenen line, opened in April 1907. The following year, the Stuartstown line opened between Donnybrook and Umzinto. The line between Umlaasweg and Mid-Illovo and the line from Port Shepstone to Paddock opened in 1911.

List of lines

The NGR lines established by 1 January 1912, are as follows:
NameTerminusOpening date MilesKm
Main lineCharlestown1878/1895309.25498
North Coast LineSomkhele1898/1903167.25272
South Coast LineSouth Shepstone1901/190780.75130
Bluff LineWests18986.510
Richmond LineRichmond18971727
Greytown LineGreytown190064.25104
Natal Cape LineRiverside1909106.75172
Weenen Line Weenen190728.7546
Bo-Tugela LineWinterton19072439
Main Line Kroonstad1892/1906212.75342
Glencoe-Hlobane LineHlobane1889-190976.25123
Stuartstown Line Donnybrook190897156
Utrecht LineUtrecht19102947
Mid-Illovo Line Mid-Illovo191128.546
Alfred County Line Paddock191124.539
Howick LineHowick19112.754
Total12762053

NGR locomotives

In 1875, when the NGR was founded, two wood-burning locomotives were ordered from the British firm Dübs and Company to replace locomotives from the NRC. The locomotives were named the Durban and Pietermaritzburg and were eventually sold to the NZASM. In 1877, seven 2-6-0 locomotives of the same design were ordered from the firm Beyer, Peacock and Company. The first five were wood-fueled, but the last two used coal - the difference visible in the type of funnel. With the opening of the Durban-Pietermaritzburg line and the decision to extend it to Ladysmith, 37 4-6-0 locomotives were ordered from Kitson. The locomotive had 40% more horsepower than the old 0-6-4 locomotives. In 1979, one of the Kitson locomotives was still in operation near the Rosherville power station.
1886 was an erratic year for the NGR. The opening of the Durban-Ladysmith line and the discovery of gold that year helped the NGR become a profitable company. New locomotives had to be ordered to serve the new line. A single 2-8-2 tank and tender locomotive was built by the NGR in Durban and began service in 1888. The locomotive was the first steam locomotive built in South Africa. At the same time, 100 4-8-2 locomotives wered ordered from Dübs. The locomotives came into service between 1888 and 1899. During the 1890s, these locomotives were the NGR's workhorses.
In the last years of the 19th century, traffic grew on the NGR, requiring more powerful locomotives. The 4-10-2 locomotive was designed by George William Reid, Locomotive Superintendent of the NGR, to achieve this task. To conquer the sharp switchbacks of the NGR, the front and rear wheels of the locomotive lacked flanges. The locomotive was heavier than a tender locomotive, giving it more horsepower. In honor of G.W. Reid, the locomotive was called the "Reid locomotive." Between 1899 and 1903, 101 of these locomotives were ordered. Derailment issues with the Reid "ten-wheelers" were eventually solved by removing the rear drive wheels from the locomotive, making it a 4-8-0 locomotive.
In the 1900s, the NGR began experimenting with tender locomotives. They were especially useful on the plains of northern Natal, the northern and southern coast, the Orange River Colony between Harrismith and Kroonstad, and in the Transvaal Colony from Volksrust to the Witwatersrand. In 1904, 50 4-8-0 "Hendrie B" locomotives were ordered from the North British Locomotive Company, and in 1909, 30 4-8-2 "Henrie D" locomotives were purchased from the same manufacturer. In 1909, the NGR diversified further with the purchase of 6 Mallet locomotives from the American Locomotive Company. The Mallet locomotive was an articulated locomotive that could handle the sharp turns of the Natal Midlands and the Drakensberg. After 1912, South African Railways bought more Mallet-type locomotives, but after 1920, they were replaced by steam-powered Garratt locomotives or electric locomotives. Between 1907 and 1911, of narrow-gauge lines were reopened - between Donnybrook and Kelso and three smaller lines. All four lines used 4-6-2 locomotives.
In 1905, NGR classified its locomotives as classes "A" to "I," "K," and "N." "K" was reserved for various locomotives that did not fit into the other classes, and "N" was reserved for all narrow-gauge locomotives. The following year, the letter "L" was assigned to the locomotives ordered by the Central South African Railways. The classes are shown in the table below.
YearNumberNGR NumberNGR TypeSAR TypeForce Force Manufacturer
18752Durban, Pietermaritzburg2-6-0T449800Kitson and Company
187771-7, 501-507Class K 2-6-0T449800Beyer, Peacock and Company
1879378-14, 16-26, 29-47Class G 4-6-0TClass C6213850Kitson and Company
1880115Class K 0-6-0ST317020Hunslet Engine Company
18881482-8-2TT/4-6-2TT 6414473Natal Government Railways
188810049-148Class D 4-8-2T Class A8318670Dübs and Company
1890589-93, 510-511Class K 0-4-0ST255526Neilson and Company
1899101149-249Class C 4-10-2T Class H12628430Dübs and Company
19011512Class I 2-6-2TClass I347585Baldwin Locomotive Works
19022513, 514Class I 2-6-0Class I5111570Baldwin Locomotive Works
1902101-10Class F 4-6-4TClass E22215230Neilson, Reid and Company
190425250-274Class E 4-8-2TClass G9922280North British Locomotive Company
190450275-324Class B 4-8-0 Class 114031590North British Locomotive Company
19052325-326Class A 4-6-2 Class 210222940North British Locomotive Company
19063327-329Class L 4-8-0Class 7B83.018660Neilson, Reid and Company
190930330-334, 345-369Class B 4-8-2 Class 314733150North British Locomotive Company
19091335Class B 4-8-2 "American D"Class 3A16236460American Locomotive Company
19091336Mallet 2-6-6-0Class MA19944810American Locomotive Company
19104337-341Mallet 2-6-6-0Class MB19944810American Locomotive Company
19062NG1, NG2Class N 4-6-2T Class NG36.38183Hunslet
19076NG4-NG9Class N 4-6-2T Class NG336.38183Hawthorn Leslie and Company
19112NG10, NG11Class N 4-6-2T Class NG436.38183Kerr Stuart and Co.

Business operations

The NGR offered both passenger and freight service and also delivered letters and packages for the post office. The NGR operated at a loss during its early years, but after the Second Boer War, the NGR made around half of the Natal government's income.

Industry facts and figures

The NGR was one of the Natal government's largest investments - around 30% of the Colony's debt was run up to build the lines, but between 1880 and 1910, the railways' income contributed 40-50% of the colonial government's revenues. The greatest driver of this growth was the extension of the rail lines to Johannesburg after gold was discovered there.
Performance Metric 1881189118981909
NGR net worth£1,201£4,528£6,028£14,161
NGR income£173£572£986£2,024
NGR expenses£118£372£589£1,187
NGR profit£54£200£397£837
Profit return on investment4.5%4.4%6.5%5.9%
Colonial income£439£1,355£2,023£4,126
NGR income/Colonial income39.4%42.2%58.6%49.0%
Colonial debt£2,000£7,170£22,685
NGR investment/Colonial debt60.0%31.9%31.0%

Passengers

NRC passenger services were taken over by the NGR in 1877. From 1 December 1880, onward, the NGR offered travel once a day between Durban and Pietermaritzburg. The journey from Durban to Pietermaritzburg lasted 6 hours and 14 minutes with an average speed of, while the return back to Durban lasted 5 hours and 45 minutes with an average speed of. A first-class return ticket at first cost £29 9p, a second-class one £17 6p. In 1903, the cost was still around the same - £26 8p first-class and £17 9p second-class. A first-class ticket to Johannesburg cost £9-5-6 with its second-class equivalent priced at £6-14-0. According to the NGR handbook, there was no official racial discrimination. Harrison and Ingram, editors of the handbook, wrote of the service that it "caters for the requirements of first, second, and third class travellers, although the latter class is almost entirely monopolised by the coloured community." However, Mahatma Gandhi, as a young lawyer, was thrown off a first-class car in Pietermaritzburg in 1892 on account of his race, the turning point of his life.
From 1881 to 1889, the NGR averaged 400,000 passengers a year. With the opening of the line to the border of the ZAR, the figure rose to 600,000, and the opening of the line from Durban to the Rand drove numbers to almost 1.2 million. After the Second Boer War, around 2.5 to 3 million passengers a year used the NGR.

Freight

Initially, NGR trains carried both freight and passengers. In the early years of the NGR, sugar and coal were the most important goods. After the discovery of gold, consumer goods carried between the Port of Durban and the Rand made up one of the leading uses of the NGR. Around the same time, the transport of agricultural products, especially acacia trees shipped to the Witwatersrand mines, grew by leaps and bounds. Between 1970 and 1909, the amount of cultivated land increased dramatically. In 1870, of land were cultivated, but in 1891, of which was owned by whites, were being farmed, and in 1909 that number rose to, of which was owned by whites.

Sugar

One of the main purposes of the line from Durban to The Point was to carry sugar. Although sugarcane was known to the Zulu, they did not grow it. In 1847, 40,000 sugarcane seedlings were imported from Mauritius and Réunion. The settlers experimented with several varieties. Commercial cultivation of sugarcane began in 1850 with the tilling of. By 1859, were under cultivation. Between 1854 and 1858, before the first railway was built, Natal exported on average 41 tons of sugar a year. Between 1859 and 1863, the annual output grew 25-fold to 1,103 tons. Between 1884 and 1888, after the North Coast and South Coast Lines were built, the annual export multiplied tenfold to 11,370 tons.

Coal

In 1840, the members of the Beeskommando under the leadership of Andries Pretorius used local coal to fuel their campfires. In 1860, the Talana Colliery opened on Coalfields farm near the town of Dundee. Thomas Paterson Smith used this coal to manufacture his own bricks.
In 1889, the line from Ladysmith to Newcastle was completed, and a private branch line was built from Glencoe to Dundee. In 1889, the Dundee Coal Company was founded with the NGR as its biggest customer. At the same time, another mine was established near the railway in Elandslaagte. In 1898, the first coal was mined in Vryheid, but the city had to wait until 1906 for the line to arrive. In 1908, the line reached Hlobane, and its mine was opened the following year.
The expansion of the railways fostered immense growth in the Natal coal industry. In 1889, production came to 25,609 tons, but by 1909 it had reached 1,669,583 tons. In 1908, the largest users of coal were the ships that carried 800,000 tons of coal a year out of Durban. The railway itself used 250,000 tons, and other local users consumed 150,000 tons. By then, the export trade had developed significantly - in 1908, 446,915 tons of coal were shipped out of Natal, either overseas or to neighboring states.

Acacia

Black wattle Acacia mearnsii is one of the main crops of the so-called "mistbelt forest" of Natal, a region lying between above sea level. The bark of the wattle was used to make tannin for the leather industry. The wattle wood was also used for mine pillars on the Rand. The first wattle seeds were imported from Australia in the 1860s. Initially, it was planted as a shade tree on farms, but George Sutton recognized its commercial growth potential in 1876. Wattle bark was first exported to England in 1886, and the 10 tons exported the following year fetched a good price. By 1910, were planted with the tree, and 24,000 tons were harvested that year.
This growth was made possible by the construction of rail lines to the planted areas, especially the Greytown Line and the Natal-Cape Line. These railways brought the majority of the wattle crop to the main Natal line.

Farm towns

The Natal Agricultural Development Act of 1904 made crown lands available for purchase by farmers at favorable rates. The legislation was geared toward promoting agriculture for food self-sufficiency in the colony as well as to grow crops for export, particularly to the Rand. Farming towns were established, among other areas, around Weenen, Winterton, and Illovo. Irrigation was set up near Winterton and Weenen. New railway was built at the same time by the Natal government, including the Bo-Tugela Line connecting Winterton to the main line and the narrow-gauge Weenen and Mid-Illovo Lines doing the same for those villages. Another narrow-gauge track, the Alfred County Line, was authorized to connect Harding with the South Coast Line, built in two sections: the first went from Port Shepstone to Paddock and was ordered by the Natal government in 1909, the second the rest of the way ordered by the government of the Union of South Africa in 1913.

War

The NGR transported British soldiers from Durban to Camperdown during the Anglo-Zulu War and to Pietermaritzburg during the First Boer War. In both cases, they made the rest of their journey to the battlefield by horse or by wagon. One of the key goals of Natal during the Second Boer War was control over the rail line between Durban and the ZAR and Orange Free State.
Until 1899, the British had no experience with maintaining rail service in a war zone, especially in terms of the relationship between military planners and civilian railway personnel. If, in October 1899, the British Army had destroyed the Laing's nek tunnel, for instance, the course of the Natal campaign would have gone quite differently.
In the two months before the outbreak of the Second Boer War, 10,000 British soldiers arrived in Durban to reinforce the 2,000 already there. They were deployed by train to Ladysmith and Dundee. The war broke out on 12 October 1899, and on 30 October, while Estcourt became the de facto terminus of the British section of the line. The British sent armored trains toward the Tugela to support their scouts. One of the trains was attacked by a Boer Commando unit near Chievely, in the same raid in which then-journalist Winston Churchill was taken prisoner.
After Ladysmith was relieved, the Boer armies retreated over the Biggarsberg, and for two months they kept hold of the northern portion of the railway. During that time, Paul Kruger took a train ride to encourage Boer soldiers in Glencoe. When the Boers retreated, they damaged many bridges and tunnels, especially the bridge over the Tugela and the Laing's Nek tunnel.
The hallmark of the last phase of the war was the Boer forces' guerrilla warfare and the British forces' building of blockhouses to counter these techniques. Blockhouses were built along three NGR lines - the line between Van Reenen and Harrismith, the line between Glencoe and Utrecht, and the line between Newcastle and the ZAR border.
Despite the war, the NGR expansion program continued all the while, especially on the South Coast Line.

Union of South Africa

On 31 May 1910, the Union of South Africa was founded. One of the main controversies leading up to Union was the ownership and operation of the railways. Natal voters feared that if Natal did not join the Union, Durban-based trade would shift to Delagoa Bay. Natal thus supported unification. On 1 January 1912, the Natal Government Railways, Cape Government Railways, and Central South African Railways merged with the ports of various cities to form South African Railways and Harbours.
Between 31 May 1910, and 31 December 1911, the NGR opened an rail line. Construction of this line was completed by the Natal government in 1906. In 1912, D.A. Hendrie, chief engineer of the NGR, became chief engineer of SARH. He continued experimenting with Mallet locomotives. In 1919, the first Garratt steam locomotive went into service on the former NGR railways, and the main line began electrifying in 1923.