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Offline kimballthurlow  
#1 Posted : 07 September 2015 01:26:15(UTC)
kimballthurlow

Australia   
Joined: 18/03/2007(UTC)
Posts: 6,653
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Hi,
66 years ago today, 6th September, was the first time the wording Deutsche Bundesbahn was ever officially used. Please read the text to find out more.
In this article I wish to trace the manner in which ownership of a typical German goods wagon was clearly marked for administrative and logistical reasons.

A friend of mine has been a modeller since the late 1940s, and his father worked in the Queensland Railways as manager of a wagon and carriage painting shop. He has got some stories to tell – like the methods for applying gold-leaf lettering to Tuscan red passenger cars, and the myriad of stencils and rules to ensure the systematic recognition and utilisation of wagons in a fleet.
Anyway, on my Marklin layout I have quite a collection of German open wagons and coal cars, so I can run a realistically long train for early to mid era III. I discovered a few things about the typical gondola type (rectangular box) German coal and open cars.
All gondola wagons were given the classification O (for offener) by the DRG. If you look closely, some have ends which pivot from the top or bottom, so the car can be tipped and emptied on end. Some have drop-down sides. All appear to have side doors, so material can be shovelled out by hand. I have not noticed any with drop doors in the floor, which was a typically British and US utility.
Here is an example from Marklin, of the well-known 4696 in one of its iterations. (Acknowledgment for the photo to www.wentinkoccasions.nl).

UserPostedImage

Most open cars operating in the 1950s, were products of design from the early 1900s. From that time the provincial German railroads agreed to standard designs, called Verbandsbauart. Wikipedia says of one of these standard types, which were given an engineering design Class nomenclature, “The Class A10 was an open wagon, newly designed in 1909 and built from 1913 to 1928. Over 200,000 of these trucks were built, the largest production run of a class of goods wagon in the world. Also described as an "open coke wagon", it was intended for the transportation of almost all not-hygroscopic goods, especially bulk goods such as coal, sand or agricultural produce.”
These wagons were named in the series Essen or Breslau in DRG times, and also carried the category Om (m = load 15 tonnes) into DB times.
The lettering of all open wagons is quite interesting, and I have included some photos to illustrate, using various examples. One of these is the Halle wagon series in Class A1 of the Verbandsbauart. Over the span of their useful lives, these wagons were used as you can imagine, for anything from machinery or apples, to gravel and waste. Goods wagons were marked by the district railway paint shop with the name of their owner, "Deutsche Reichsbahn", the series designation (in this case Halle), the road or running number, and a category (in this case O).
The photo is of Fleischmann model #5204.

UserPostedImage

You may have noticed so far, that the font of the lettering is uniform, but the styles, form and positions of the lettering is not. This lack of uniformity shows itself in more photos as we progress.

In 1942, the "Deutsche Reichsbahn" lettering began to be replaced by the simple “DR”, so the ownership lettering may have looked like this photo below. The wagon here is of the Breslau series of Class A10 mentioned above, so the designation Breslau, and category O are retained. The model is from Marklin set 47891, but the lettering has been modified by photo editing. (I have seen models with the DR abbreviation, on a version of Fleischmann tinplate open wagon 1205 (early 1950), Marklin closed van 4877, on more modern Brawa #48826, Piko 54113, and Roco 46238 Kuhlwagen). In about 1942-43, the designation came to be abbreviated as well. Without any evidence for confirmation, we might say that Breslau becomes Bre, or Essen becomes Ess, or Halle becomes Ha.

UserPostedImage

From mid-1945, the districts of the DRG were managed in conjunction with interim governments. The markings on wagons continued to be applied using the previous rules or instructions. Early in 1948, the DRG began to add a zonal lettering, to distinguish the area in which the car was normally used. An example is “Zone Fr.” for cars used in the French occupied area, but in this photo the example is for the Russian zone, again from Marklin set 47891.

UserPostedImage

Thomas Landwehr, a documentation expert employed by Marklin at Goppingen, had this to say in 2007 in the Marklin Insider magazine, regarding the following period of railway operation. “The name ‘Deutsche Reichsbahn’ was altered quite without ceremony. In a railroad service telex dated Sept. 6, 1949, the Administrative Director for Traffic notified the Deutsche Reichsbahn headquarters in the British and American zones of occupation, as follows: “Effective Sept 7 1949, the designation ‘Deutsche Reichsbahn’ within the Combined Economic Zone will be changed to ‘Deutsche Bundesbahn’”. This was not an act of foundation; it was simply done to keep the name of the German railroad compatible with the name of the Republic set up in May 1949.”
Think of the bureaucratic formalities, allowing this information to filter down to the district railway paint shops. Again, Thomas says “.....starting in June 1951, it has become necessary to renumber the whole of the freight car fleet of the DB….”. So when a wagon came into a shop for repainting, the lettering and numbering was considered for renewal at the same time.
Any confusion is understandable. Here is a model where the ownership lettering is changed simply from Deutsche Reichsbahn to Deutsche Bundesbahn in full. Note that the series designation (Halle) remains, and the running number is unchanged, as is the O for the wagon category. Compare this with the Halle 7411 (second photo of this article). You can see the progression, if the wagon had never been repainted to DR after 1942, and before any renumbering took place. This photo is of Fleischmann model #5203.

UserPostedImage

Thomas says “Not until October 1954, was the order given that all freight cars were to carry the “DB” ownership markings. So in the early days of the Bundesbahn, it was absolutely typical to see cars carrying zone markings, series designation and old road numbers, running side-by-side with DB lettered cars with new numbers.”
As the wagon fleet was repainted over time, the standard ownership markings became more commonplace, so by the mid-to-late 1950s, the typical open wagon would have looked like this example. It no longer carried a series name (like Halle, or Essen, or Breslau), but it still showed the wagon category of O. For this photo I am indebted to member Perz, it is a car from Marklin set 46021.

UserPostedImage

Article written by Kimball Thurlow 2015. Acknowledgments are shown in the text. Suggestions or corrections are welcome.

Edited by user 05 October 2015 10:39:42(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

HO Scale - Märklin (ep II-III and VI, C Track, digital) - 2 rail HO (Queensland Australia, UK, USA) - 3 rail OO (English Hornby Dublo) - old clockwork O gauge - Live Steam 90mm (3.1/2 inch) gauge.
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Offline Token  
#2 Posted : 07 September 2015 08:51:15(UTC)
Token

Australia   
Joined: 25/01/2009(UTC)
Posts: 300
Location: Sydney, NSW
Kimball - again, many thanks for your insight to a topic close to my heart. I am indeed modelling early to mid era III with a number of my rolling stock displaying wither zones or Deutsche Reichsbahn as shown above. This has often led to misunderstandings regarding the accuracy of running these during the early stages of the DB but I do enjoy incorporating into my layout, the story behind one of the most fascinating periods in late 20th century history - namely the separation of East and West Germany and the Wirtschaftswunder so beautifully depicted in some of M's sets, such as those below (which also demonstrate your point;

Wirtschaftswunder set 48783

Coal car set 46030

"The young DB"set 46021



Regards,

Michael.
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Offline kimballthurlow  
#3 Posted : 07 September 2015 10:01:43(UTC)
kimballthurlow

Australia   
Joined: 18/03/2007(UTC)
Posts: 6,653
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Hi Michael,
Thanks for your post.
The photographs you have added are useful to me.
I am guessing that the middle coal wagon set is 46030.

Interestingly, I have never seen a model of a DRG wagon with the lettering on my third photo.
(Examples now added in the text, 14/09/2015)

regards
Kimball

Edited by user 14 September 2015 09:35:47(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

HO Scale - Märklin (ep II-III and VI, C Track, digital) - 2 rail HO (Queensland Australia, UK, USA) - 3 rail OO (English Hornby Dublo) - old clockwork O gauge - Live Steam 90mm (3.1/2 inch) gauge.
Offline Token  
#4 Posted : 07 September 2015 10:39:37(UTC)
Token

Australia   
Joined: 25/01/2009(UTC)
Posts: 300
Location: Sydney, NSW
Here is another variation which speaks to the interesting situation regarding France's initial reluctance to enter into the DB from M's set 48810;

Set 48810

Similarly, all I can find skin to what you are looking for, contains zone marking such as M's 48812;

48812

Not sure if anyone else can find one? Maybe M deliberately does not produce 1941-1945 models?
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Offline kiwiAlan  
#5 Posted : 07 September 2015 14:13:35(UTC)
kiwiAlan

United Kingdom   
Joined: 23/07/2014(UTC)
Posts: 8,082
Location: ENGLAND, Didcot
Originally Posted by: Token Go to Quoted Post

Not sure if anyone else can find one? Maybe M deliberately does not produce 1941-1945 models?


This may be because it could take them into an area of markings using Nazi symbols which may fall foul of German law. I am not an expert on such stuff, but I beleive that markings on some of the streamlined loco models of the time are fudged so they don't have a swastika, but rather have an eagle.
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Offline kimballthurlow  
#6 Posted : 14 September 2015 09:51:06(UTC)
kimballthurlow

Australia   
Joined: 18/03/2007(UTC)
Posts: 6,653
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Originally Posted by: kiwiAlan Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: Token Go to Quoted Post

Not sure if anyone else can find one? Maybe M deliberately does not produce 1941-1945 models?


This may be because it could take them into an area of markings using Nazi symbols which may fall foul of German law. I am not an expert on such stuff, but I beleive that markings on some of the streamlined loco models of the time are fudged so they don't have a swastika, but rather have an eagle.



Lettering on real freight wagons was never a problem, until in the early 50s, the Deutsche Democratic Republic (East Germany) refused to accept any wagons lettered DB (or Deutsche Bundesbahn) for interchange.
So for quite a few years, the DR and zone marking was continued.
Maybe the issue was diplomatically resolved, because DB was applied rigorously from 1954. (Sourced from Thomas Landwehrs' article).

As regards models, I can't see any problem with legalities.
I have seen models with the 1942 to 1948 DR abbreviation applied.
Examples are a version of the Fleischmann tinplate #1205, supplied to the market post-war into the 50s.
The same shows on a modern issue Brawa, #48826, and a Roco 46238.

regards
Kimball
HO Scale - Märklin (ep II-III and VI, C Track, digital) - 2 rail HO (Queensland Australia, UK, USA) - 3 rail OO (English Hornby Dublo) - old clockwork O gauge - Live Steam 90mm (3.1/2 inch) gauge.
Offline NS1200  
#7 Posted : 29 September 2015 07:43:25(UTC)
NS1200

Netherlands   
Joined: 10/08/2009(UTC)
Posts: 3,443
Perhaps in the period of WW2 not so many wagons were produced at all.
Most wagons used were pre WW2.
M produced the 6 axle heavy load flatcars with DR markings,prototypes were used to move heavy tanks,such as the Tiger and Panther.

Recently i saw M producing flatcars with models of Messerschmidt Me-109 fighterplanes,be it these are the pre war versions without camouflage.

Artitec seem to have no problem in producing WW2 models with full markings,excellent models by the way.
Have more than you show,speak less than you know (Shakespeare).
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Offline kimballthurlow  
#8 Posted : 29 September 2015 12:13:25(UTC)
kimballthurlow

Australia   
Joined: 18/03/2007(UTC)
Posts: 6,653
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Hi Paul,
I have since found also, a Marklin wagon with the 1942-1948 lettering.
It is a Gedekter wagon, #4877, I am not sure when this model was produced.
This photo is sourced from an item on eBay, I might buy one.
With acknowledgment to 123.modellbahnwelt.

http://i.ebayimg.com/00/s/MTA2N1gxNjAw/z/~QIAAOSw~gRVwMAI/$_57.JPG

regards
Kimball

Edited by user 02 October 2015 12:41:10(UTC)  | Reason: Not specified

HO Scale - Märklin (ep II-III and VI, C Track, digital) - 2 rail HO (Queensland Australia, UK, USA) - 3 rail OO (English Hornby Dublo) - old clockwork O gauge - Live Steam 90mm (3.1/2 inch) gauge.
Offline Token  
#9 Posted : 29 September 2015 13:06:19(UTC)
Token

Australia   
Joined: 25/01/2009(UTC)
Posts: 300
Location: Sydney, NSW
Originally Posted by: NS1200 Go to Quoted Post
Perhaps in the period of WW2 not so many wagons were produced at all.
Most wagons used were pre WW2.


For those interested in era II period of German railway history, there is an excellent text available on Amazon entitled "The Most Valuable Asset Of The Reich" by Alfred C. Mierzejewski (The University of North Carolina Press (c) 2000). There are two volumes - the first covering the years 1922-1932 (DRG) and then volume two, covering 1933-1945 (DRB).

In a chapter covering the years of retreat, the book details the number of cards produced in addition to redistribution of locomotives, passenger and freight cars from occupied areas of Europe to satisfy the demands of the German domestic demand as well as the demands of the "Östbahn", servicing the Eastern front and occupied areas East.

It notes that during the height of bombings within Germany in 1943, traffic levels remained high "Indeed, the Reichsbahn moved more freight in 1943 than at any other time in its history". This equated to 675 million tons of which 292.2 million tons were of coal.

A further interesting comment is that "the freight train schedule that had been shaped by Leibbrand during the 1920s and 1930s also remained essentially unchanged until the summer of 1944".

In the first week of August 1943, the DRB owned 808,900 serviceable freight cars. In addition, it was using 253,251 foreign freight cars, either in Germany or elsewhere. Of this total, 321,846 DRB freight cars were outside of Germany, most of them in the East. During this time, the DRB employed 1,529,000 people. It would have been common sight fro vehicles of the SNCF and SNCB to be found in Germany during this time.

The Reichsbahn began overloading its freight cars in short distance services by one ton in March 1937. Despite heavy opposition from the mechanical branch, the ZVL ordered the freight cars be overloaded by two tons each from 22 July 1942. Ore cars were to be overloaded by one ton.

To the question posed above regarding production of rolling stock during the war, Speer (with approval from Hitler) removed responsibility for the production of railway vehicle production from the DRB and established a committee responsible for meeting the "ambitious" target set by Hitler.

The following figures were extracted from the same text;

Reichsbahn Rolling-Stock Acquisitions, 1939–1944
Year Steam Locomotives Passenger Cars Freight Cars
1939 660 544 13,087
1940 982 713 24,544
1941 1,391 104 42,924
1942 2,127 124 43,032
1943 4,533 327 51,969
1944 3,063 256 34,725

It should be noted that a percentage of these were produced in the then occupied countries of France and Belgium however, the quantity and quality from these sources were understandably poor with a strong undercurrent of patriotism from railwaymen in those countries against serving the occupiers.

Anyone seriously looking to model either period of the DRG or DRB would be well advised to read these texts as they provide a fascinating insight to the machinations of railway policy and procedures during this time. I can only hope a similar text is produced for the Wirtschaftswunder (1950-1960) for which I am basing my layout.

Regards,

Michael.
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Offline NS1200  
#10 Posted : 29 September 2015 19:59:17(UTC)
NS1200

Netherlands   
Joined: 10/08/2009(UTC)
Posts: 3,443
The prototype of Marklin 4877 was the socalled Muenchen (Munich) type of 2 axle closed goods wagon.
It was built 120,000 (!) times between 1910 and 1927.
Nicknamed Flachdach (Flatroof).
Many survived WW2 and served for the DB as well as for the DR in the former DDR.

Coming back on goods cars produced during WW2:
Only a few new series were built till 1943.
The six axle Ssyms type Koeln (Cologne) was built in 1942 to cater for the new heavy tanks Tiger and Panther.

Kimball,i will send you a PM on this one.

Paul.
Have more than you show,speak less than you know (Shakespeare).
Offline kimballthurlow  
#11 Posted : 30 September 2015 00:47:58(UTC)
kimballthurlow

Australia   
Joined: 18/03/2007(UTC)
Posts: 6,653
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Originally Posted by: Token Go to Quoted Post
....... during the height of bombings within Germany in 1943, traffic levels remained high "Indeed, the Reichsbahn moved more freight in 1943 than at any other time in its history". ........
regarding production of rolling stock during the war, Speer (with approval from Hitler) removed responsibility for the production of railway vehicle production from the DRB and established a committee responsible for meeting the "ambitious" target set by Hitler......

Regards,

Michael.


Hi Michael,

Thanks very much for that enlightening precis of the railways after 1940.

I had guessed that little new production of railway vehicles occurred, but I was dead wrong.
I wonder if the railway paint shops were occupied more in lettering new vehicles, than refurbishing old ones.
Potentially from the figures quoted, at least 120,000 new freight vehicles after 1942, actually received the simplified DR with the series designation.

How quickly would these have been over-painted with the addition of the zone lettering after 1948?

regards
Kimball
HO Scale - Märklin (ep II-III and VI, C Track, digital) - 2 rail HO (Queensland Australia, UK, USA) - 3 rail OO (English Hornby Dublo) - old clockwork O gauge - Live Steam 90mm (3.1/2 inch) gauge.
Offline kimballthurlow  
#12 Posted : 30 September 2015 00:54:16(UTC)
kimballthurlow

Australia   
Joined: 18/03/2007(UTC)
Posts: 6,653
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Originally Posted by: NS1200 Go to Quoted Post
The prototype of Marklin 4877 was the socalled Muenchen (Munich) type of 2 axle closed goods wagon.
It was built 120,000 (!) times between 1910 and 1927.
Nicknamed Flachdach (Flatroof).
Many survived WW2 and served for the DB as well as for the DR in the former DDR.
.......Paul.


Hi Paul,

The Flachdach was an interesting prototype.
I first read in an old Fleischmann catalogue, it was also known as the "40 and 8 type", meaning that it could carry 40 soldiers or 8 horses.
In fact the French versions of this wagon (same size, not the same detail design) carries the lettering 40 Hommes- 8 Chevalier even to the early 1950s.

It makes you realize that in Europe, the railways were always considered a tool for the prosecution of wars as much as for commerce.
Something that we on the other side of the world, have never experienced except remotely.

regards
Kimball

HO Scale - Märklin (ep II-III and VI, C Track, digital) - 2 rail HO (Queensland Australia, UK, USA) - 3 rail OO (English Hornby Dublo) - old clockwork O gauge - Live Steam 90mm (3.1/2 inch) gauge.
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Offline NS1200  
#13 Posted : 30 September 2015 20:01:22(UTC)
NS1200

Netherlands   
Joined: 10/08/2009(UTC)
Posts: 3,443
Originally Posted by: kimballthurlow Go to Quoted Post
Originally Posted by: NS1200 Go to Quoted Post
The prototype of Marklin 4877 was the socalled Muenchen (Munich) type of 2 axle closed goods wagon.
It was built 120,000 (!) times between 1910 and 1927.
Nicknamed Flachdach (Flatroof).
Many survived WW2 and served for the DB as well as for the DR in the former DDR.
.......Paul.


Hi Paul,

The Flachdach was an interesting prototype.
I first read in an old Fleischmann catalogue, it was also known as the "40 and 8 type", meaning that it could carry 40 soldiers or 8 horses.
In fact the French versions of this wagon (same size, not the same detail design) carries the lettering 40 Hommes- 8 Chevalier even to the early 1950s.

It makes you realize that in Europe, the railways were always considered a tool for the prosecution of wars as much as for commerce.
Something that we on the other side of the world, have never experienced except remotely.

regards
Kimball



Kimball,i will send you a PM on this one.

Have more than you show,speak less than you know (Shakespeare).
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Offline Purellum  
#14 Posted : 15 October 2021 00:02:25(UTC)
Purellum

Denmark   
Joined: 08/11/2005(UTC)
Posts: 3,498
Location: Mullerup, 4200 Slagelse
Cool

I must have missed this topic 6 years ago; but found it now, and find it very interesting Cool

Per.

Cool
If you can dream it, you can do it!

I, the copyright holder of this work, hereby release it into the public domain. This applies worldwide.

In case this is not legally possible:
I grant anyone the right to use this work for any purpose, without any conditions, unless such conditions are required by law.

UserPostedImage
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Offline Mark5  
#15 Posted : 07 March 2023 22:22:03(UTC)
Mark5

Canada   
Joined: 29/01/2012(UTC)
Posts: 1,420
Location: Montreal, Canada
Bump. Great stuff here wrt to Era III livery.
Thank you Kimball.
DB DR FS NS SNCF c. 1950-65, fan of station architecture esp. from 1920-70.
In single point perspective, where do track lines meet?
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Offline kimballthurlow  
#16 Posted : 09 March 2023 00:02:37(UTC)
kimballthurlow

Australia   
Joined: 18/03/2007(UTC)
Posts: 6,653
Location: Brisbane, Australia
Originally Posted by: Mark5 Go to Quoted Post
Bump. Great stuff here wrt to Era III livery.
Thank you Kimball.


Thanks Mark.
After reading your article on the EUROP wagon marking which began about 1953, I realize I did not research this facet of the markings.
That information should probably be added to this topic to make it a little more complete for the 1920 to 1960 period.

I will do that in the next few weeks.

regards
Kimball

HO Scale - Märklin (ep II-III and VI, C Track, digital) - 2 rail HO (Queensland Australia, UK, USA) - 3 rail OO (English Hornby Dublo) - old clockwork O gauge - Live Steam 90mm (3.1/2 inch) gauge.
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