The Sernftal tramway (German: Sernftalbahn, SeTB) was an electric narrow-gauge tramway in the Swiss canton of Glarus, which was operated by a private company. The line linked Schwanden railway station, on the Weesen to Linthal railway line, with communities in the valley of the Sernf river including Engi, Matt and Elm, where the line terminated. The line served a total of 13 stations, and its depot was situated at Engi-Vorderdorf, at roughly the half-way point of the line.[1]

Sernftal tramway
Elm station in 1968
Overview
Native nameSernftalbahn
LocaleCanton of Glarus
Termini
Stations13
Service
Services1
DepotEngi-Vorderdorf
History
Opened7 August 1905
Closed31 May 1969
Technical
Line length13.8 km (8.6 mi)
CharacterRural electric tramway
Track gauge1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in))
Minimum radius39 metres (128 ft)
Electrification750 V / 800 V DC

History

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In 1879, the valley of the Linth river was connected to the Swiss railway network by the opening of the Weesen to Linthal line, but the side-valley of the Sernf river remained unserved. This impacted the local economy, and various proposals were brought forward to provide rail service to the Sernf valley. The eventual result was the Sernftal tramway, which opened on 7 August 1905.[1]

The line was constructed to metre gauge (3 ft 3+38 in gauge) and largely ran immediately alongside the road, with some narrow street running sections through the villages. This resulted in a difficult to operate line, with a minimum curve radius of 39 m (128 ft) and a maximum gradient of 6.8%.[1] It was electrified using direct current (first 750, then 800 V) generated from a hydro-electric power plant in Matt.[2]

The line closed on 31 May 1969. The operating company survived, changing its name to Autobetrieb Sernftal, and still operates the bus service that replaced the railway, as well as several other bus services in the area, under the name Sernftalbus.[1][3][4]

Rolling stock

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The line's original passenger rolling stock was three four-wheel railcars, BCFe 2/2 1–3 and three carriages, B 11–13. For goods traffic there was a four-wheel goods railcar, Fe 2/2 21, four vans and five open wagons. Increasing traffic led to the purchase of a fourth passenger railcar, BCFe 2/2 4, and more goods wagons in 1928. In 1955 Fe 2/2 21, was replaced with a new goods railcar, Fe 2/2 22, built on the chassis of BCFe 2/2 2. [2]

The line was modernised in 1949 with three new bogie railcars, CFe 4/4 (later BDe 4/4) 5–7. Each had 50 seats and a baggage compartment and they allowed the journey time from Schwanden to Elm to be reduced from 52 to 40 minutes.[5] When the Sernftal line closed these railcars were sold to the Aigle–Ollon–Monthey–Champéry railway, and then resold in 1985 to Stern & Hafferl in Austria for use on their Vöcklamarkt to Attersee line. Railcar 7 was destroyed in a fire in 1987, but the other two remained in use until 2016. In 2017 they were acquired by the Verein Sernftalbahn and returned to the Sernf Valley.[2][citation needed]

Museum

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A preservation society, the Verein Sernftalbahn, runs a museum at Engi-Vorderdorf. Their collection includes railcars BDe 4/4 5 and 6, restored to their original condition, and two freight cars from the line (K35 and K36).[1][2][6]

Some rolling stock from the line also still exists at the Blonay–Chamby museum railway: a four-wheeled motor coach of 1928 (BDe 2/2 4),[2] a trailer (B2 13) and a freight car (K31), both of 1905.

References

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  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "Sernftalbahn". www.eingestellte-bahnen.ch (in German). Retrieved 4 November 2025.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Förster, Felix (July 2021). "441 Höhenmeter bergan" [441 vertical metres uphill]. Lok Magazine (in German). Vol. 60, no. 478. pp. 98–103. ISSN 0458-1822.
  3. "Sernftalbus" (in German). Autobetrieb Sernftal AG. Archived from the original on 2015-04-27. Retrieved 2015-04-20.
  4. "Sernftalbus - Fahrplan 2015" [Sernftalbus - Timetable 2015] (PDF) (in German). Autobetrieb Sernftal AG. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-04-27. Retrieved 2015-04-20.
  5. "Die Modernisierung der Sernftalbahn" [The Modernisation of the Sernftal railway]. Schweizerische Bauzeitung (in German). 67 (28): 392. 1949. doi:10.5169/seals-84093.
  6. "Das Sernftalbahn-Museum in Elm" [The Sernftal railway museum in Elm] (in German). Verein Sernftalbahn. Retrieved 4 November 2025.
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