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The Story of the Saudi
Government Railroad
By Frederick Haack
Chief Engineer of the Saudi Government Railroad
In 1947, the Arabian American
Oil Company (ARAMCO) was trying to expand at a very rapid rate.
Crude oil production was over 100,000 barrels/day and was
programmed to reach 200,000 barrels/day as soon as possible.
The main obstacle to expansion was the problem of
offloading required material and moving it to required sites.
Cargo vessels were offloaded to barges, which were then
towed to Ras Tanura or Al Khobar for handling. At
the time, there were no roads in El Hasa province. There were only trails in the sand, which required specially
equipped vehicles for moving cargo.
The moving of material was therefore very slow, and cargo
ships were required to remain at anchor for long periods of
time. Not only did
this result in high demurrage rates, but also ship owners were
becoming reluctant to come to Arabia.
Something had to be done, and Aramco decided to build a
new port and a railroad. The
port would be connected to shore with a railroad built on two
miles of steel trestle and five miles of rock causeway.
This distance from shore was required to obtain water
deep enough to accommodate cargo vessels.
There was also a small craft pier for work boats and
barges. From the
shore end, the railroad was to continue to Dhahran and Abqaiq.
When the King heard about the
railroad, he informed Aramco that if there was to be a railroad
built in Saudi Arabia, the government would build it, and
instead of stopping at Abqaiq, it would continue to Hofuf and on
to Riyadh as an important infrastructure project. Aramco had no desire to become involved in a program of this
size, which might divert some of their efforts from their
responsibility for the production of oil.
An agreement was reached where Aramco would recruit
people to form a new organization to construct and operate the
railroad. Aramco
would finance the operation and would be reimbursed by the
government. They
would oversee the operation, audit the expenditures and keep the
government advised as to progress.
Aramco would house and feed the expatriates of the
organization and make the community facilities available to
them. The railroad
organization would be known as the Saudi Government Railroad (SGRR).
It would purchase its own equipment and materials but
was also able to rent equipment from Aramco.
Construction
was started in 1947. Bectel and Fluor were the main contractors on the offshore
portion of the project.
This was a fairly conventional type of
construction. However,
the track was another matter.
| The track was built largely with
local Saudi contractors. The
function of the contractors was basically to furnish labor.
All the labor was unskilled.
Most of the laborers were Bedouin, who had come right off
the desert and whose entire livelihood at that time was based on
livestock. They
would work long enough to earn enough money to buy a camel or
some sheep and then return to their families.
In addition to the Saudi workers, expatriate workers,
largely from the United States, were brought in to operate and
maintain the heavy equipment.
They also acted as straw bosses to lead the labor gangs.
Conditions at the railhead were not ideal, and the heat
and humidity were at times intense.
This resulted in a high turnover of expatriate workers. |

In January 1951, four
bulldozers level sand terrain
along the right-of-way of
the Saudi Government
Railroad during the construction days
of the main
line trackage.
(Photo by Unknown/Aramco/PADIA)
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The construction phase of the
project was filled with unusual problems.
It started with the surveying.
When laying out the line for the track, we would mark the
center line and grade with wooden stakes.
The next morning, the stakes would be gone.
The local Bedouin had found a source for excellent
firewood. We had to
go to the local Emir who supplied us with a tracker who went
around to all the surrounding camps and advised them that the
sticks belonged to the King, and anyone who disturbed them would
be subject to severe punishment.
The Bedouin were well aware of what the Emir’s severe
punishment could be. The
stakes were never touched again.
Safety was a real problem since
we were working with unschooled people, who had come out of the
desert to earn enough money to increase their herds and would
leave once they obtained their objective.
They had no concept of the hazards that they might be
exposed to and had to be watched very closely.
An example of the level of safety regulations was a
poster in Arabic saying, “Do not sleep with your head on the
rail.” It was
comparatively cool under the railroad cars, and the workmen
found the rail a good pillow.
Unfortunately at that time, most of the workers could not
read, so written warning posters were of questionable value.
It was really up to the straw boss to look after his
people.
We were surprised by the rain we
encountered. It did
not rain very often, even during the rainy season, but when it
rained, it rained hard. The hard, dried ground did not absorb much water, and we had
flash floods, which washed out the track.
We were forced to install culverts, which had not been
anticipated. Once,
going through the Dhahana sands, we were flooded for two days.
The camp boss looked over the flooded area and said,
“I’ll be damned. We’ve
had windstorms, sandstorms, and now, we’re having a flood.
The next thing you know, we’ll have a forest fire.”
As might have been expected, the
major problem we encountered was moving sand.
There was not much literature on the subject of building
roads in an area of moving and blowing sand.
Dunes are mobile, and they will move in the direction of
the prevailing wind. It
was not unusual to find the tracks completely covered with sand
after a sandstorm or shimaal, as it was called by the
Arabs. At first, we
tried snow fencing, which was only slightly effective. The moving sand was very much finer than most snow.
For a long time, our only remedy was to clean the track
with heavy equipment. It
was just through trial and error and much experimenting that we
found that by oiling a strip across the upwind side of the dune,
it broke the aerodynamic patter of the dune and slowed it down
or destroyed it. Progress
depended upon the terrain.
In flat areas, we could make as much as 5,000 feet of
track in a day. In
rough country, such as dunes, sometimes we could only make 500
feet. It largely
depended on how much sand we had to move.
The front-end
work was done by a crew living on a work train.
This train consisted of an office car, a kitchen
car, a dining car, refrigerator car, a bath car, and
several sleeping cars. [The picture
at the top shows the end of the caboose
of the work train.]
| The work was hard – sometimes
12 hours a day, seven days a week to maintain schedules.
The train would move with the progress so as to minimize
the travel time from the train to the work site.
The work conditions were noisy and dirty, but the food
was very good, and the pay was excellent.
We experienced some turnover in expatriate workers but no
more than we had expected.
In time, the Arab crews really became efficient.
They formed a rail crew to unload the rail to move to the
site and lay it on the ties.
The tie crew stayed ahead of the rail crew so that the
ties were in a position to lay the rails on. The crew that was remarkable was the ghandi dancers.
These were the men who drove the spikes, and they were
very good at it and very proud of themselves. |

In 1949, a large diesel
locomotive was placed onto
the tracks of the new Saudi
Government Railroad,
which was built in eastern Saudi
Arabia to
connect Dammam on the Persian Gulf with Riyadh,
350 miles away. (Photo by Unknown/Aramco/PADIA)
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The project ran a supply train
to the work site, which brought steel rails and ties every day.
The train stayed overnight and returned the next day.
If two trains were running, the train returning from the
work was required to pull into a siding and allow the
down-coming train to come through.
One day, the engineer of the train returning to Dhahran
tied the throttle of the locomotive in the run position and fell
asleep. He evidently thought he would wake up before he reached the
siding, but instead, he went past it.
The engineer on the down-coming train blew his whistle
and went in reverse to no avail.
We had achieved a head-on collision with the only two
locomotives in the country.
This was difficult to explain to the King.
| The locomotives
for the railroad were diesel-electric and made by General
Electric. These
were for freight service.
For passenger service, Budd cars were chosen.
These were self-propelled units, also
diesel-electric. They had stainless steel bodies and were fully
air-conditioned.
When we approached Riyadh,
anyone who had a car in the area would be driving and racing on
our grade. It was
difficult to get these people off the grade because at that
time, anyone who owned a car had to be rich and influential.
It took the King to clear the track.
The railroad and port were
started in 1948. The
port was completed in July of 1951 and started unloading cargo
with service to Dhahran and Abqaiq.
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Railroad train in Saudi Arabia.
(Photo by William Tracy/Aramco/PADIA)
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The track to Riyadh was
completed in January 1952.
A ceremony was held with the King there to drive the last
spike. It was
gilded gold, and the King took the first blow.
| Frederick
Haack was the Chief Engineer of the Saudi Government Railroad.
He arrived in Saudi Arabia to work for Aramco in
1948 and worked on the railroad from 1949 to
1952. Mr. Haack is retired and lives in New
Orleans, Louisiana. |

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