File 357/1919 Pt 2 ‘RAILWAYS IN PERSIA’ [188r] (380/1150)
The record is made up of 1 volume (573 folios). It was created in 5 Dec 1921-28 Jan 1931. It was written in English. 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. .
Transcription
This transcription is created automatically. It may contain errors.
[This Document is the Property of His Britannic Majesty's Government. ]
PERSIA.
1 ^
[March 14, 1927.]
confidential.
1 1 5 p
j
r \
Section 7.
, £ 1231/201/34]
No, f,
Sir R. Clin
? to Sir A listen Chamberlain .—
-(Received March 14.)
aT 0 . 93. Confidential.)
Sir, Tehran, February 24, 1927.
WITH reference to my telegram No. 24 of to-day’s date, I have the honour to
transmit to you herewith a translation* of the Bill presented by the Government to
the Majlis under which the former will be authorised at once to construct a trunk
railway from Mohammerah on the
Persian Gulf
The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran.
to Bandar-i-Gaz on the Caspian
Sea. The railway, it appears, will follow the Karun Valley via Ahwaz and
Shushtar to Dizful, from where it will adopt a trace similar to that surveyed by the
Persian Railway Syndicate as far as Khorremabad and from there to Hamadan :
from Hamadan onwards two alternative routes are provisionally suggested, the one
crossing the Aveh pass and making a bend northwards to Kasvin, the other avoiding
the Aveh and cutting straight along the direct caravan route from Hamadan to
Tehran. 1 learn from Mr. Poland, the American engineer in charge of the survey, «
that the Aveh-Kazvin diversion will be too expensive and difficult and that the direct '
route from Hamadan to the capital will almost certainly be adopted. From Tehran
the line will follow the Mazanderan road to Barfarush, Sari, and Bandar-i-Gaz.
It is probable that the eventual terminus will be at Astarabad. It is estimated that
the railway will take seven to ten years to complete.
2. You will observe in the first place that the proposed trace represents the
abandonment of the original scheme for a net-work of provincial railways, as reported
in Sir Percy Loraine’s telegrams Nos. 24 a nd 25 of the 24th and 25th January of last
year. I am informed, indeed, by the Minister of Court that there is no intention to
construct any branch lines to feed the trunk railway and that the provinces will be
connected with the arterial line by a system of metalled roads. If such is the intention
of the Persian Government, it appears strange that the proposed trace should tap so
few of the main centres of population and trade, and that the important districts of s
Isfahan, Shiraz, Bushire, Kerman, Yezd, Seistan, Meshed, Kermanshah, and even
Resht, should, while shouldering the main burden of taxation which the railway will |
involve, enjoy no direct benefit from its construction.
3. In the second place, you will observe that the Bill obliges the Government to
begin construction from both ends simultaneously. 1 cannot conceal from you that
this obligation causes me a certain anxiety. It is possible, it is even probable, that
the whole line will never be completed. I consider, however, that the present wave of
interest and enthusiasm will possess sufficient impetus to secure the construction of at
least a portion of the proposed line. And 1 apprehend that the section most likely to
be completed will be that from Bandar-i-Gaz to Tehran. It is obvious that the
Russians will exercise strong pressure to obtain this advantage, and they may well
make the prior completion of this sector a secret condition for according transit
mghts for German steel. The proposed foundry in which the Shah is interested and
which, if it produces any rails at all, will produce them only for the northern section,
may prove another factor in the prior exploitation of the Mazander an line. We must
also reckon with the fact that the Shah’s most extensive properties, which he is
anxious to develop at the public expense, are situated in the very districts through j
which the northern railway will be made to pass. His Majesty has, in addition,
recently acquired a large proportion of the late Sipahsalar’s forests, and may even be
tempted to reap an early profit by*providing sleepers on the spot. The Shah will
always be the main driving force behind the whole scheme; his motives are partly
patriotic and proceed partly from a desire to identify the new regime with this
ramatic gesture of progress. He is also governed, however, by a desire for personal
profit and I fear that his cupidity may lead him to concentrate primarily on those
sections of the railway which will bring him personal remuneration. The northern
sector will thus find in His Majesty a powerful and impatient supporter. The
southern sector, in the meanwhile, will be creeping very slowly towards the desert
mountains of Dizful. ^ 5
r * Not printed.
[72 o—7]
About this item
- Content
This volume contains papers relating to the construction of the Trans-Persian Railway. It contains material relating to:
- The Persian Railway Syndicate’s attempt to enlist the aid of Rabbi Joseph Saul Kornfeld, the United States Envoy to Persia [Iran], and the British Foreign Office’s subsequent unfavourable attitude towards the Syndicate
- The Persian Railway Syndicate’s proposal to invite American companies for the construction of railways in Persia
- The concessions for the Mohammerah [Khorramshahr]-Khanakin [Khanaqin] and Khanakin-Tehran railways
- The proposed railway from Khanakin to Tehran and the estimated cost for the three principal divisions of the railway
- The restrictions of the British Government on the Persian Railway Syndicate’s grant of a loan to the Persian Government
- The possibility of a ‘fusion of interests’ between the Persian Railway Syndicate and the Stronach Dutton System of Road Rails Limited
- The possible extension of the American Chester Group’s railway concession from Turkey into Persia
- The plans of the Prime Minister of Persia [Rezā Khān Sardār Leader of a tribe or a polity; also refers to a military rank or title given to a commander of an army or division. Sepah] for a railway line extending from Ahwaz [Ahvaz] to Khorramabad, Dizful [Dezful], and Sultanabad [Arak] to Tehran
- The endeavour of an American group to obtain a concession for a line from Mohammerah to Khorramabad and Tehran
- The expenditures of the Persian Railway Syndicate for the Khanakin-Tehran and the Mohamerah-Khoramabad surveys
- The possibility of forming a Railway Syndicate with the Anglo-Persian Oil Company and Standard Oil Company
- The Persian Government’s decision to carry out a survey of the Mohammerah-Tehran-Bandar-i Gez [Bandar-i Gaz] railway line with the assistance of a German engineer
- The Consortium industriel pour l’Orient’s proposal to build a railway connecting Meshed [Mashhad] to the Tripoli-Homs Line
- The preference of the British Army Council and the Air Council for an East-West rather than a North-South railway in Persia for strategic reasons
- The exploitation of coal and iron deposits in Mazanderan [Mazandaran] for the construction of railways in Persia, and the concerns of Russia about a Trans-Persian Railway connecting the Persian Gulf The historical term used to describe the body of water between the Arabian Peninsula and Iran. to the Caspian Sea
- The Act of the Persian Majlis [Parliament] for the construction of the Persian Trunk Railway
- The Persian Majlis’s Passage of the Bill for Railway Survey and Construction
- The Persian Majlis’s passage of the Railway Construction Bill, from Mohammerah and Bandar-i Gez to Tehran
- The Persian Majlis’s passage of a law for constructing a railway between Khor Musa-Mohammerah-Bandar-i Gez;
- The Persian Majlis’s authorisation of the Minister of Public Work to employ foreign experts for the construction of the Railway;
- The inauguration of the Bandar-i Gaz-Tehran-Ahwaz Railway in the presence of the Shah of Persia [Rezā Shāh Pahlavi]
- The British concerns and preference for a British rather than an American firm to build the Southern Section of the Railway
- The passage of the Railway Survey Law by the Persian Majlis and the contract between the Persian Government and the American company Ulen, and two German companies, Philipp Holzmann and Julius Berger-Siemens Union [sic., Siemens Bauunion] to carry out a complete survey of the Railway
- The contract between the Persian Government, represented by Minister of Public Works [General Ḥabib Allāh Khān Shaybānī], and the Persian Railway Syndicate, represented by MD Carrel and MNS Mavrogordato
- The contracts between the Persian Government and the Persian Railway Syndicate for the constructions of ports at Bandar-i Qays and Khor Musa (Bandar-i Shahpur) and a dam over the Karun River at Ahwaz
- The plans for building the line from Bandar Shapur north of Ahwaz, and revival of the line from Hamadan to Tehran
- The construction of the railway lines from Bandar Shah and Khor Musa, the diversion of German resources to the construction of electrical and cement works, and the postponement of building a port at Khor Musa
- The reservations of the British Minister in Persia [Robert Henry Clive] about the construction of the Railway as opposed to motor roads in Persia, and the subsidisation of the enterprise through the tea and sugar monopolies
- The increase in the cost of the Southern Section of the Railway and predicted opposition of the Persian Government
- The visit by the Shah of Persia to the Southern Section of the Railway, his unfavourable impression of the state of the railway, and the American Minister in Persia’s advice to Ulen and Company to stop working on the railway in case of difficulties with the Persian Government
- The cancellation of the contract between the Persian Government and the Persian Railway Syndicate over delayed payments, and the agreement between the German and Ulen groups within the Syndicate to work on the Northern and Southern sections of the Trans-Persian Railway respectively
- The Anglo-Persian Oil Company’s concerns about the Railway providing greater access and mobility to the Russians
- The dispute between the Persian Government and the German-American syndicate for the construction of the Railway
- The negotiations between the Persian Government and the German companies Julius Berger Konsortium, Philipp Holzmann, and Siemens Bauunion for the construction of the Northern Section of the Trans-Persian Railway
- The possible takeover by the Batignolles Construction Company of the building of the Southern Section of the Trans-Persian Railway from the American and British companies Ulen and Company and Stewart and McDonnell
- The Persian Government’s appointment of Suzuki Hajime from the Japanese Railway Department’s Engineering Bureau
- The breakdown of negotiations between the Batignolles Construction Company and the Government of Persia, and the latter’s decision to proceed with the construction of the remaining sections of the railway
- The proposals of the Batignolles Construction Company to the Government of Persia in the absence of a contract
- The extension of the Southern Section of the Railway from Khor Musa to Dizful, Hamadan and Kazvin [Qazvin], and the Northern Section from Tehran to Sari and the southern coast of the Caspian Sea.
The volume also includes the following sketch maps:
- A sketch map of the Trans-Persian Railway, from Khor Musa to Sari and the coast of the Caspian Sea, showing the ‘Line Completed’, ‘Line Surveyed’, and ‘Division between the Northern and Southern Sections’ (f 14)
- A sketch map of the Northern Section of the Railway, showing the routes to Pahlavi, Semnan, and Balfurush [Barfurush], with a second map of the Southern Section, showing alternative routes and termini, running either from Mohammerah or Khor Musa to Dizful and Hamadan (f 156)
- A sketch map showing the existing and projected railways in Persia (f 204).
- Extent and format
- 1 volume (573 folios)
- Arrangement
The papers are arranged in approximate chronological order from the rear to the front of the volume.
The subject 357 (Persia: Railways) consists of two volumes, IOR/L/PS/10/793-794. The volumes are divided into two parts, with each part comprising one volume.
- Physical characteristics
Foliation: The foliation sequence (used for referencing) commences at the inside front cover with 1 and terminates at the inside back cover with 573; 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.
- Written in
- English in Latin script View the complete information for this record
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Copyright: How to use this content
- Reference
- IOR/L/PS/10/794
- Title
- File 357/1919 Pt 2 ‘RAILWAYS IN PERSIA’
- Pages
- front, back, spine, edge, head, tail, front-i, 2r:13v, 15r:18v, 19v:23v, 24v:31v, 35v:38v, 39v:42v, 45v:48v, 56v:57v, 58v:62v, 64r:98v, 99v:106v, 110r:117v, 118v:122v, 123v, 125r:126v, 128r:148v, 150v:155v, 157r:163v, 165r:169v, 171r:173v, 175r:181v, 182v:188v, 190r:203v, 205r:206v, 208r:226r, 227v:266v, 268r:489v, 490v, 494v, 498v, 502v, 507v:523v, 524v:526v, 534v:544v, 545v:546v, 547v, 548v:552v, 553v:555v, 557v:572v, back-i
- Author
- East India Company, the Board of Control, the India Office, or other British Government Department
- Usage terms
- Open Government Licence
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