Transnistrian Railway is the railway operator of Transnistria.
History
The first railway line on the territory of Transnistria was built in 1867, from Kuchurhan station to Tiraspol, and in 1871 to Chișinău.
In early November 1877, the Bender–Galați line, with a length of 305 km, was opened for military traffic.
In August 1894, the section from Rîbnița to Bălți with a bridge across the Dniester and a 165-meter tunnel on the Lipceni–Mateuți stretch was put into operation.
In June 1917, the Bender locomotive depot had 253 locomotives and was the largest on the South-Western railway.
In World War II, the railroad provided access to the front line and the entire combat area for the Soviet war effort. Using the railway, industrial facilities were evacuated and troops and ammunition were brought to the front line. Track gauge on the main lines was changed three times: in July 1940 to 1524 mm, in August 1941 to 1435 mm, between May and the end of 1944 back to 1524 mm. During the war, over 20% of the network, 30 stations, 50% of the buildings, major bridges on the Dniester and Prut rivers, 90% of the machinery, 30% of the communication lines and more were destroyed and 100 km of tracks were dismantled and removed.[1]