Thursday 9 April 2020

The 1948 Show - Quedlinburg

Back to Crossing the Border

Friday, 20th April 1984 (Good Friday) (Continued)

The previous post saw us sitting in the station buffet in Marienborn having missed our connection to Halberstadt. Fortunately Mark had brought along a copy of the DDR railway timetable from which he was able to work out an alternative route:

We left Marienborn on a diesel-hauled train formed of double-deck rolling stock and followed the route of the Berlin express as far as Magdeburg, where we arrived at 17.20.  We were able to have a meal and a coffee in the "grotty" buffet on the station (the standard of catering on the Deutsche Reichsbahn was a big disappointment). I felt that the people around us, by their dress and appearance, would have looked at home in the north of England - although perhaps not in the south! Maybe this photo, taken while doing a bit of tram-spotting outside Magdeburg station, will give you an idea:


Tram spotting in Magdeburg


Our next train was the 18.03 to Halberstadt. On this, we were delayed 20 minutes at Oschersleben - although this did give us the chance to see our first steam locos of the trip: Two "Class 50s" and a Class 44 in use as a stationary boiler.

Two class 50s at Oschersleben

We had an hour to wait in Halberstadt, where there were more steam locos and also a rather charming  narrow-guarge tram system.

A Halberstadt tram
I remember reading a few years later, after reunification, that the tramway authorities in Halberstadt had had to stop the system by which passengers could alight on either side of the tram - i.e. into the middle of the road - due to the increase in car traffic. A sad day!

The final train of a long day (which for us had begun in Ostend at 04.30) was the 20.44 to Quedlinburg. This was also diesel-hauled and although by now it was dark, the carriages were unlit - as was the station platform at Quedlinburg when we arrived. Another great introduction to the DDR!  At least the streets were lit and after seeking directions from the booking clerk in the still-open ticket office,  we made our way to our hotel for the night, arriving just in time for "last orders" at 21.30!


Quedlinburg - and our hotel.
Another view of the centre. Note the TV ariels, needed to pick up West German stations.
 I saw Quedlinburg as "a very nice mediaeval town" and noted that it had "no traffic and no commercialisation".  It's very different today.


Quedlinburg Sehenswürdigkeiten: 7 Orte, die Sie sehen sollten
A recent image of Quedlinburg courtesy of Hotel Domschatz       
The following day we headed for the Harz Mountains...




4 comments:

Nick said...

Jim - just to let you know that I'm really enjoying these. Thank you for taking the time to put them together from your notes and photos.

Fascinating.

Nick

Jim said...

Good to hear that, Nick. There's quite a bit more yet to come!

Mark Doran said...

Thank you Jim. So many memories resurrected. Quedlinburg was trying to be a historic tourist hotspot, but they didn't quite get it right. I love the idea of the deputy assistant Accessibility Manager of the Tramways Authority of the Halberstadt Municipality agonising over his decision to restrict egress from trams in the town! Did he have to seek permission from the Politburo in Berlin?

SteveB said...

Thank you for a bit of time-travel. My trip to Quedlinburg was in 2001 when we were living in Stuttgart. At that time the town was work-in-progress with something like 1500 half-timbered (and many of them half-collapsed) buildings to deal with. I've always wanted to re-visit, because Germany has a good reputation for renovating old buildings...