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File 3142/1903 'Hedjaz Railway' [‎59v] (125/488)

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The record is made up of 1 volume (242 folios). It was created in 1901-1908. It was written in English, French and Turkish, Ottoman. The original is part of the British Library: India Office The department of the British Government to which the Government of India reported between 1858 and 1947. The successor to the Court of Directors. Records and Private Papers Documents collected in a private capacity. .

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This is an important feature as all coal is now imported for the line from Cardiff,
only a small quantity being obtained from the Turkish mines of Heraklia on the
Black Sea.
The latter is found too smoky and liable to choke the tubes and is used mixecW
with Cardiff in small quantities. ^
The reserves of coal at Haifa are ridiculously small, and through the improvidence
of the administration it has actually happened that the Haifa-Damascus branch stopped
working for forty-eight hours owing to the non-arrival of a steamer at Haifa. Only
by borrowing from the French Company and from a British steamer in the harbour
could traffic be resumed.
M. Gaudin is now urging the administration to keep a reserve of at least
6,000 tons.
The annual consumption for the line is from 20,000 to 25,000 tons per annum.
A steamer unloading at Haifa Pier can discharge 300 tons of coal a-day in fine
weather, which can only be trusted to occur in the summer months.
' ■
Coal Supply.
Defensive Station Buildings.
The station buildings south of Tebuk are built on a special plan, with loopholes
to enable the ten men usually found at a station to stand a siege from Arab raiders.
The usual building is of stone, 11 metres by 12 metres, containiug four rooms,
others are slightly larger and contain six rooms. The only entrance is by an iron
door leading into a small courtyard on which the windows of the living room open.
In the floor of this is a masonry cistern, or well, if such supply is obtainable.
Provisions for fourteen days are stored in one of the rooms.
The walls are loopholed at a height of 8 feet above the ground.
The building is 5 metres high, and near the roof are some small windows 50 c.m.
square.
The flat roof can be ascended from the courtyard by iron battens let into the wall.
The wall at the top is only 50 c.m. high and is without loopholes, so that firing
would be onlv from the loopholes below.
There is a verandah in front of the door, which seems a weak point.
The latrine is in a loopholed projecting part, and is on the dry earth system.
Receipts.
The receipts last year amounted as far as could be ascertained, to nearly
£ T. 100,000, and it is said that the traffic receipts on the paying sections up to
Amman just balance the working expenses of the whole as far as Maan, the southern
extension to Tebuk not included, this remaining entirely under military control.
Revenue.
The present revenue produced by the Hejaz stamp tax and other sources amounted,
according to Meisner Pasha’s estimate, to £ T. 350,000, or 8,750,000 fr. per annum!
and this amount he counted on as available for construction purposes.
Cost of Construction.—The Section in the Yarmuk Valley.
The cost per kilometre of the present Arabian sections has been kept at £ T. 1.400.
including the purchase of rolling-stock, and it was proposed not to continue building
bridges over the dry wadis of Arabia but trust to the chance of the line being washed
away at long intervals by rain floods, so that now he thought the construction & expenses
might be kept a little below this figure.
Meisner Pasha An Ottoman title used after the names of certain provincial governors, high-ranking officials and military commanders. estimated that £ T. 3,000,000 had been spent on the construction
of the whole line up to the present.
I

About this item

Content

This volume contains copies of correspondence between British officials regarding the construction of the Hedjaz [Hijaz] Railway. The correspondence discusses a number of different aspects of the railway including its route, the progress of its construction and donations made towards its construction by members of the Muslim community in India.

A limited amount of the correspondence in the volume is in French, including a copy of a letter sent by Paul Cambon, the French Ambassador in London, to Sir Edward Grey, the Foreign Secretary (folio 15).

The volume contains a number of reports and related information about the railway. Of particular interest are the following:

  • A report on the Hejaz Railway by Major Francis Richard Maunsell, dated July 1907 (ff 56-69)
  • A memorandum respecting German influence on the Hejaz Railway by George Ambrose Lloyd, 1906 (ff 95-96)
  • A list of the principal stations on the Hejaz Railway with approximate distances between Damascus and each station (f 100)
  • A map of the Hejaz Railway with list of stations (f 106)
  • A report by Mr Teofani Loiso, Vice-Consul at Mersina, based on information provided to him by his son who was employed as an engineer on the railway (ff 105-107)
  • A report by Herr Otto von Kapp Kohlstein, a German engineer who inspected the Haifa-Damascus branch of the route and worked on the construction of the Damascus-Maan branch (ff 107-109).

In addition, the volume contains cuttings (and translations) of press articles related to several aspects of the railway and its construction. Also included are two maps. The Turkish (Ottoman) language material consists of the second of these two maps.

The volume includes a divider which gives the year that the subject file was opened, the subject heading, and a list of correspondence references contained in it arranged by year. This divider is placed at the front of the volume.

Extent and format
1 volume (242 folios)
Arrangement

The papers are arranged in approximate chronological order from the rear to the front of the volume.

Physical characteristics

Foliation: the foliation sequence commences at the first folio with 1, and terminates at the last folio with 240; these numbers are written in pencil, are circled, and are located in the top right corner of the recto The front of a sheet of paper or leaf, often abbreviated to 'r'. side of each folio. It should be noted that the covers of this volume have not been foliated.

Written in
English, French and Turkish, Ottoman in Latin and Arabic script
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File 3142/1903 'Hedjaz Railway' [‎59v] (125/488), British Library: India Office Records and Private Papers, IOR/L/PS/10/12, in Qatar Digital Library <https://www.qdl.qa/archive/81055/vdc_100063527354.0x00007e> [accessed 26 November 2024]

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