Abstract
The 1928 film Fahrt nach
Westerland [Journey to Westerland] combined documentary footage
with a fictional plot to showcase the transportation advantages of the
Hindenburgdamm, a narrow railway
link, completed the previous year, that connected the German mainland to
the German island of Sylt, a popular North Sea vacation destination.
Films like this one, known as
Wirtschaftsfilme [industrial films],
cultivated public appreciation of recent economic and technological
developments. In the narrative, a mother tries to make her daughter
forget a boyfriend by sending the daughter on a journey by boat to the
seemingly isolated destination of Sylt, not realizing that the boyfriend
can—thanks to the new rail connection—get to that island swiftly and
easily. He does exactly that, and the couple happily reunites in
Westerland, a main resort town on Sylt. The film incorporated earlier
footage from the construction work in the tidal mudflats of the North
Sea, which director Friedrich Einar Stier, an engineer by training, had
managed to capture. The causeway was officially opened in June 1927 and
named Hindenburgdamm in honor of the
Reich President.
The 6.8-mile causeway shortened the journey to the island, made it
much more comfortable, and provided year-round access to the mainland.
People no longer had to rely on a tide-dependent ferry service that
could not run during storms or cold snaps when the water froze. Despite
the rail link’s advantages, many islanders opposed the project, fearing
an unwanted influx of people. In the end, though, the economic promise
of a flourishing tourism industry carried the day. The rail connection
also spared German travelers to Sylt the hassle of having to transit
through Danish territory, which even required a visa at one point, in
order to reach the port from which the ferry departed the mainland.
Before the First World War, this ethnically mixed region had been German
territory, but a 1920 referendum, decreed by the Treaty of Versailles,
had passed control of it to Germany’s northern neighbor. That
development lent new urgency to earlier calls for a direct connection
from the German island of Sylt to the German mainland.