Railway Sleepers 1914 – 1945

InSCALE WWI WWII Railway Crosstie Wood Types And Sizes

Crosstie Use During WWI & WWII

From original publications and source material:

“It is estimated that there are at present throughout the world about 1,250,000 kilometres of railway track for which approximately 3,000 million railway sleepers (cross-ties) are used, 95 percent of them made of wood. Since railway sleepers are heavy, bulky, and relatively cheap, they do not ordinarily comprise a large portion of the international trade in wood.

Types of railway sleepers – The term railway sleepers refers to the rectangular or approximately rectangular cross section supports laid transversely on the railway roadbed to support the rails. Railway sleepers used in Europe are almost exclusively of wood and are manufactured either in sawmills or in the forest. Production at the felling site in the forest is gradually declining in importance as a result of the disappearance of skilled labour. Axe-hewn, squared railway sleepers, which are frequently used in the Americas and other parts of the world, are not produced in Europe. 

Railway sleepers may be made of hardwoods or softwoods, these being used for different purposes and under different conditions. Hardwood railway sleepers are made chiefly from Oak, Beech, and Hornbeam; softwood railway sleepers from Scots Pine, Maritime Pine (Pinus pinaster), and Larch. In Spain, Eucalyptus is also used to make railway sleepers. Railway sleepers are usually cut from trees of 80 to 120 centimetres in circumference at a height of 1.30 meters from the ground, or from the tops and branches of large trees found in high forest or coppice with standards. 

Standard gauge railway sleepers (1.46 meters) used in Europe may be classified into three different categories:

  • German railway sleepers measure 16 cm. x 26 cm. x 2.6 m. or 2.7 m.
  • French, 14 cm. x 26 cm., x 2.6 m. or 2.7 m.
  • English, 12.5 cm. x 25 cm.

These figures apply to railway sleepers sawn on all four sides. However, a certain amount of latitude is allowed for wane and curvature, there being three or four specifications. There are also the so-called “Swedish” or “Saxon” sleepers, where the upper and lower surfaces are sawn but the sides follow the natural contour of the rough log. 

Switch or crossing railway sleepers vary in length from 2.60 m. to 5 m. or more; industrial railway sleepers are 1.80 m. to 2 m., and crossings generally 1.30 m. to 2 m. 

The useful life of a railway sleeper depends upon its resistance to fungi, insects, and mechanical pressure. Protection against decay is obtained by impregnating with chemicals. The most widely used impregnating material is creosote, but solutions of copper or zinc salts are also used. By impregnation, the useful life of a railway sleeper can be increased from 5-8 years to 25-30 years. Sleepers must have certain required mechanical properties. Damage to railway sleepers due to mechanical defects has become more frequent because both the weight of the loads carried and the speed of trains has increased. Such mechanical damage consists mainly of crushing, splitting, becoming embedded, etc. “

The railway sleeper market from 1918 to 1939.
Data on international trade in railway sleepers between World Wars I and II can be found in the yearbooks of the Comité International du Bois, published first at Vienna and later at Brussels; in the publications of the International Institute of Agriculture, and in Silvae Orbis, referred to in Tables below.

IMPORTS OF RAILWAY SLEEPERS BETWEEN THE TWO WORLD WARS 

Country 

1926-28
Average 

1931-33
Average 

1936-38
Average 

1000 m³ (s) 

Belgium-Luxembourg 

67 

38 

84 

Czechoslovakia 

35 

12 

Denmark 

24 

15 

France 

16 

76 

Germany 

411 

17 

69 

Greece 

Hungary 

57 

34 

Netherlands 

72 

77 

76 

Spain 

160 

30 

… 

Switzerland 

United Kingdom 

346 

337 

540 

China 

41 

135 

105 

Canada 

51 

24 

20 

United States 

94 

37 

32 

TOTAL 

1,386 

803 

993 

SOURCE: Walter Grottian, “Die Umsatzmengen im Weltholzhandel 1925-1938” Silvae Orbit, Berlin: C.I.S., 1942, pp. 140-141. Computed from yearly figures. 

EXPORTS OF RAILWAY SLEEPERS BETWEEN THE TWO WORLD WARS 

Country 

1926-28
Average 

1931-33
Average 

1936-38
Average 

1000 m³ (s) 

Austria 

87 

13 

Czechoslovakia 

30 

… 

Finland 

16 

France 

119 

28 

93 

Germany 

49 

34 

Poland 

364 

157 

255 

Rumania 

27 

Sweden 

47 

19 

11 

Yugoslavia 

281 

80 

90 

Baltic States1 

15 

47 

144 

U.S.S.R. 

96 

282 

186 

Canada 

115 

67 

92 

United States 

336 

153 

173 

Turkey 

… 

TOTAL 

1,567 

874 

1,096 

SOURCE: Walter Grottian, “Die Umsatzmengen im Weltholzhandel 1925-1938,” Silvae Orbis, Berlin: C.I.S. 1942, pp. 140-141. Computed from yearly figures.

The principal exporting countries were Poland, Yugoslavia, the Baltic countries, Rumania, and Soviet Russia. The U.S.S.R. exported as much as 579,000 m³ (s) of railway sleepers in 1930. The United States of America exported large quantities to the European market. France had some exports but was a net importing country. Its exports of hardwood railway sleepers went mainly to Belgium, with lesser quantities to the Netherlands and the French colonies; softwood railway sleepers were shipped principally to the United Kingdom and in small quantities to Spain, Belgium, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands. 

European imports attained a maximum figure of 1,653,000 m³ (s) in 1930 and decreased thereafter. This drop in trade corresponds to a general worldwide trend. Railway sleepers constituted 2.5 percent of all timber exports in 1929 but only 1.9 percent in 1937.

International Crosstie Market after World War II

During the War, most European countries were unable to carry out much track maintenance or lay new railway sleepers. Consequently, the railway sleeper market was quiet and countries attempted to supply their own needs from domestic production. Owing to shortages of chemical products, few impregnated sleepers were used. 

After the end of World War 2, there was a great demand for railway sleepers, due not only to deferred maintenance requirements and the need for replacement of non-treated railway sleepers which had deteriorated rapidly but also to the vast amount of destruction caused in the last year of the war by military action. Such destruction particularly affected France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Italy, and Soviet Russia, but there was also a considerable amount of damage in Africa, from Morocco to Egypt.  

REQUIREMENTS OF WOODEN RAILWAY SLEEPERS AFTER THE 2ND WORLD WAR 

Country 

Requirements 

Length of railway lines 

Railway sleepers 

Round wood 

Requirements

km. 

in thousands

1000 m³ 

 

Germany: French zone 

7,200 

200 

28 

 

Austria 

7,500 

1,100 

150 

 

Belgium 

8,000 

1,500 

1 215 

 

Denmark 

3,000 

455 

1 65 

 

France 

62,000 

7,700 

1,100 

 

Italy 

20,500 

² 3,500 

500 

 

Luxembourg 

500 

41 

 

Norway 

5,000 

450 

1 65 

 

Netherlands 

5,000 

³ 1,000 

1 143 

 

Poland 

35,000 

3,000 

1 430 

 

Czechoslovakia 

14,900 

1,700 

240 

 

Subtotal 

168,600 

20,646 

2,942 

 

Average per km. 

 

122,5 

16,3 

Requirements unknown 

 

 

 

 

Germany: 

 

Bizone 

36,000 

 

 

 

Soviet zone 

15,700 

 

 

 

Bulgaria 

3,400 

 

 

 

Greece 

1,500 

 

 

 

Hungary 

8,500 

 

 

 

Rumania 

10,500 

 

 

 

Sweden 

8,400 

 

 

 

Switzerland 

4,300 

 

 

 

Yugoslavia 

10,100 

 

 

 

Subtotal 

98,400 

 

4 1,600 

 

Total 

267,000 

 

4,542 

 

United Kingdom 

59,100 

5 4,000 

570 

GRAND TOTAL 

326,100 

 

5,112 


EXPORTS OF RAILWAY SLEEPERS AFTER THE 2ND WORLD WAR

Exporting country 

1946 

1947 

Jan.-June 1948 

1000 m³ (s) 

Austria 

– 

– 

– 

Czechoslovakia 

– 

27 

4,9 

Finland 

13 

1,0 

France 

19 

15,1 

Germany: 

 

 

 

 

British zone 

– 

– 

– 

 

French zone 

… 

… 

… 

 

American zone 

… 

… 

… 

 

Russian zone 

… 

… 

… 

Norway 

– 

Poland 

– 

– 

1- 

Portugal 

… 

… 

– 

Sweden 

52 

²36 

12,7 

Switzerland 

… 

… 

Yugoslavia 

… 

… 

… 

Other European countries 

+10 

… 

… 

U.S.S.R. 

… 

… 

… 

Canada 

113 

222 

188,5 

U.S.A. 

+63 

³410 

124,7 

TOTAL 

249 

… 

… 

SOURCE: FAO/ECE, Timber Statistics for the Years 1946-1947, Geneva, March 1948, and Timber Statistics, Quarterly Bulletin, Vol. I, No. 2, Geneva, October 1948. 

IMPORTS OF RAILWAY SLEEPERS AFTER THE 2ND WORLD WAR 

Importing country 

1946 

1947 

Jan.-June 1948 

1000 m³ (s) 

Belgium 

36 

35 

1,5 

Denmark 

12 

7,0 

France 

21 

82 

22,3 

Greece 

0,7 

Hungary 

23,0 

Italy 

– 

– 

28,9 

Netherlands 

48 

80 

120,9 

Poland 

– 

… 

Switzerland 

7,7 

United Kingdom 

84 

297 

120,1 

Other European countries 

14 

16,0 

Egypt 

+14 

… 

13,0 

Other Middle East countries 

… 

French North Africa 

+6 

… 

… 

TOTAL 

226 

– 

… 

SOURCE: FAO/ECE, Timber Statistics for the Years 1946-1947, Geneva, March 1948, and Timber Statistics, Quarterly Bulletin, Vol. I, No. 2, Geneva, October 1948.

United States exports started expanding in April 1947, particularly when non-treated railway sleepers were eliminated from the list of controlled export commodities and were placed on the list of commodities requiring only a license.

Treated railway sleepers remained on the controlled list, and in 1947 only one million treated sleepers were exported. 

In the first quarter of 1948, United States exports of treated and non-treated railway sleepers amounted to 23.6 million board feet – a monthly average of approximately half of that for the year 1947.

UNITED STATES EXPORTS OF RAILWAY SLEEPERS – ANNUAL AVERAGE 1935-1939 

Country of destination 

Quantity 

Value 

Treated sleepers 

Non-treated sleepers 

Total 

Treated sleepers 

Non-treated sleepers 

Total 

1000 board feet 

dollars 

China 

36,459 

36,459 

480,090 

480,090 

Canada 

5,581 

1,573 

7,151 

225,370 

41,006 

266,376 

Guatemala 

5,155 

5,155 

159,092 

159,092 

Costa Rica 

3,767 

3,769 

129,223 

39 

129,268 

Peru 

107 

3,535 

3,642 

1,942 

104,146 

106,088 

Honduras 

3,515 

3,520 

105,404 

107 

105,511 

Cuba 

2,216 

15 

2,231 

83,377 

374 

83,761 

Mexico 

973 

1,181 

2,154 

40,270 

30,589 

70,859 

Panama 

1,964 

1,965 

74,704 

56 

74,760 

Venezuela 

214 

37 

251 

6,754 

776 

7,529 

Netherlands 

184 

184 

2,060 

2,060 

United Kingdom 

99 

37 

 

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