The San Cristóbal to Tucumán Railway (in Spanish: Ferrocarril San Cristóbal a Tucumán) was a French-owned railway company founded in 1888 which built a 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+3⁄8 in) metre gauge railway from San Cristóbal to Tucumán in Argentina.
History
Originally granted in concession to Portalis frères, Charbonnier & Co. on October 21, 1887,[1] it was transferred to Fives-Lille company one year later and transferred again to "Compagnie française des Chemins de Fer en Argentine" (colloquially known as La Francesa)[2] in July 1889, which finally built the rail line.[3]
The section from San Cristóbal in Santa Fe Province to Fortín Inca, just over the border in Santiago del Estero Province, was opened on 27 April 1891.[4] From there construction continued across the province and into neighbouring Tucumán Province where San Miguel de Tucumán, the provincial capital, was reached on 6 July 1892.[5][6] A 13-km branch line from Colombres to Guzmán and another from Pacará to Rio Salí were opened later the same year.