The Austrian Society for Railway History ( or ÃÂGEG) is an Austrian society that was formed from a group of railway fans, who got together around 1971 in order to look after working steam locomotives at the ÃÂBB depot of Linz.
The society was founded in 1974 in Linz, with the aim of taking into its ownership one of the steam locomotives that it had cared for, as well as preserving the closed railway line, the Florianerbahn, as a heritage railway. In the following years the ÃÂGEG acquired several retired ÃÂBB locomotives. The first one to run again under its own power on ÃÂBB lines was locomotive ÃÂBB 93.1455 in 1978. In succeeding years other locomotives were refurbished in the rented ÃÂBB boiler house at Amstetten, and several were presented to large numbers of the public in 1987 at the 150th anniversary of the railways in Austria at vehicle parades in Strasshof an der Nordbahn and at vehicle shows.
In the 1980s the ÃÂGEG procured a Class 142 locomotive in Romania. This class was a BBÃÂ Class 214 (ÃÂBB Class 12) built under licence in Romania, the largest and most powerful steam locomotive of Austrian design. It was back in service by 1993. After the collapse of the Iron Curtain, numerous well-preserved German locomotives could be bought, particularly from Romania, but also in the former German Democratic Republic. As a result the society was criticised because funding was used to buy several German locomotives without any connexion to the railway history of Austria. These engines were however used commercially for special services with great success. On the retirement of older locomotives from the ÃÂBB in the early 1990s the ÃÂGEG also obtained many electric and diesel traction units.
ÃÂGEG's historical railway vehicles are in service today on the ÃÂBB railway network, on Austrian private railways and also abroad.
The Florianerbahn has since been hived off from the ÃÂGEG and transferred into a separate company.
The ÃÂGEG has two of its own lines today. It runs a long section of the Steyr Valley Railway (Steyrtalbahn) from the Steyr branch line station to Grünburg. The line is the oldest narrow gauge railway in Austria and has a rail gauge of . It was closed in 1982, and reopened in 1985 as a museum railway. The Steyrtalbahn has eight steam locomotives in its operating fleet.
In 1995 the first specials were run on the former coal railway of the WTK (Wolfsegg Traunthaler) from Timelkam to Ampflwang. After that the Ampflwanger Bahn was taken over and is today the ÃÂGEG standard gauge museum line, ferrying visitors to the railway museum at Ampflwang.
In 1995 the ÃÂGEG also acquired the last steam passenger ship of the Austrian Danube shipping fleet, the Schönbrunn.
The railway museum in Ampflwang im Hausruckwald houses the societyâÂÂs extensive steam loco collection. It is located in a former WTK coal and steel works at the terminus of the former coal railway. In 2005 the Ampflwang railway museum acquired the turntable of the former Bahnbetriebswerk at Rosenheim as well as the traverser from the former SGP factory at Vienna-Simmering. In addition a new roundhouse was built around the turntable. The railway museum was the venue for the Upper Austrian State Exhibition (Oberösterreichische Landesausstellung) in 2006 under the motto Kohle und Dampf (coal and steam).