Where was the first European electric tramway operated?

score:9

Accepted answer

KEY POINTS

  • The Lichterfelde line (Berlin, May 1881) was the first long-term, non-experimental electric tram line.
  • Sarajevo's first electric tram was not until 1895 and is definitely not the oldest (as claimed by the Wikipedia source cited by the OP).
  • The Vevey-Montreux-Chillon tram (Switzerland, 1888) is definitely not the 2nd oldest in Europe. There are several which predate this in, for example, Austria and the UK.

DETAILS

This would seem to boil down to whether you count the August - September 1880 Sestroretsk / Miller's line (Fyodor Pirotsky) near St. Petersburg or not. This did carry passengers, but very few it would appear, and it only operated from the 22nd of August to sometime in September 1880. It also appears that it was at least partly experimental (see also here). Christos N. Pyrgidis, in Railway Transportation Systems: Design, Construction and Operation calls Pirotsky's effort the "first prototype of an electric tram".

If not the above, the May 1881 Lichterfelde line (Siemens & Halske) near Berlin was the first. Charles Dunbar, in Buses, Trolleys and Trams describes this as "the first public electric service" while Vukan R. Vuchic, in Urban Transit Systems and Technology calls it "the world's first electric streetcar line". According to The Siemens tram from past to present (pdf),

In the first three months of operation the tram had already carried 12,000 passengers.

Ingrid Radke-Azvedo, who lived on the street used by the tram (though not until the 1930s), also says it was "the first-ever electric streetcar in the world" in her book Out of the Rubble. The Lichterfelde line was operational until 1931.

enter image description here

Lichterfelde tram, photo date: 1882. Source


If Fyodor Pirotsky's line was not the first non-experimental effort, he would appear to deserve at least some credit for the Siemens & Halske tram. According to (among other sources) an 1885 US patent application, the German company had demonstrated their tram at the 1879 Berlin Trade Fair...

enter image description here

At the Berlin Trade Fair, 1879: the world\’s first electric railway (powered from external source), built by Siemens (image from Siemens press materials)

...but Pirotsky had been experimenting since 1875 on Miller's line (in Russia, but run by Finnish railways). Then,

In 1876, the artillery inventor [Pirotsky] published the results of experiments in the “Engineering Journal” and sent it to many physicists and electrical engineers. His observations and ideas pushed his colleagues to work in this direction, and not only in Russia. A representative of Siemens and Halske immediately sent an article to their management in Germany.

(courtesy of Google translate)

Also, after the 1879 Siemens & Halske demonstration but before their 1881 line opened,

On April 12, 1880, at the first special electrical engineering exhibition in St. Petersburg, Pirotsky demonstrated his projects and made a report titled “Transferring power to any distance using galvanic current (conductors - rails and wires)”, including for train traffic.

(courtesy of Google translate)

Pirotsky, it would appear, was undone by a lack of resources in trying to get a tram line operational on a more permanent basis.


What can be said with certainty is that the 1888 Vevey-Montreux-Chillon tram was not the second in Europe; there were several others before it, among which were:

October 1883 Mödling and Hinterbrühl Tram (the first using overhead wires).

enter image description here

"Railcar of the first generation, 1883", Lokalbahn (tram) Mödling–Hinterbrühl. Source

February / April 1884 Frankfurt / Offenbach. This was also a Siemens project.

September 1885 Blackpool Electric Tramway, the first in the UK if one discounts more limited systems at the Crystal Palace (1882-84) and in Edinburgh (1884).

November 1887 Budapest. Plans were approved on the 1st of October and the first tram started at the end of November. Siemens & Halske were involved in the construction.

Upvote:3

Wikipedia is at best a secondary source. If there's any doubt, check its sources.

The French article on tramways mentions Sarajevo as the first electric tram in 1885 without any reference. Right off the bat this is contradictory with the article about the Sarajevo tramway which lists it as horse-drawn from 1885 to 1895. I found these dates on other sites about the history of Sarajevo, e.g. First tramway in Sarajevo, Sarajevo tramways through time.

For Berlin, the date 1881 is mentioned in other secondary sources, such as 150 years of trams in Berlin (“in 1879 (…). Only two years later the first electric tram line in the world was opened”).

Assuming there are no other contenders, Berlin was either first or second, depending on whether you consider Pirotsky's line a first successful experiment that worked technically soon but failed commercially, or a failed experiment that never reached the stage of being an established mode of transportation.

You can look up the history of Wikipedia articles to see when and by whom a passage was added. Sometimes this can give some hints on the reliability of the information, or show how things got deformed by successive edits. WikiBlame can be useful for that. It shows that in the French article on tramways, the mention of Sarajevo in 1885 was added to replace the mention of Budapest in 1887 without any other changes such as adding a reference. Budapest in 1887 had been added in 2004. Apparently the editors involved were not aware of the Berlin precedent at that time.

I have not done any research to validate the references to Berlin 1881 and Saint-Petersburg 1880 or to look for anteriority.

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