Switzerland from 1848 to the present
The year 1848 was a decisive turning point in Swiss history. Although internal conflict was not wholly eliminated thereafter, it was always settled within the framework of the 1848 federal constitution. The liberals and radicals, who completely dominated the state in the 19th century and remained a leading force into the 21st century, gradually and not always willingly integrated other political and social groups into the government: first the conservative Catholics, then the peasants’ party, and finally, during World War II, the socialists. Enjoying internal political stability and spared from war—phenomena unmatched elsewhere in Europe—the Swiss focused much of their attention and efforts on developing industry, agriculture, communications, and the financial sector.
Economic expansion
The unification of Switzerland’s economy was aided by the development of a rail network that rapidly expanded as soon as the new constitution had been approved. In 1847 the first railroad opened between Zürich and Baden. Because of the influence of the “railway barons,” the most prominent of whom was Alfred Escher from Zürich, the railways were built through competition between private entrepreneurs rather than in accordance with some central plan. The result was an extensive network of small and medium-sized lines that were barely coordinated but covered more than 600 miles (1,000 km) of track by 1860 and twice that amount by 1876. The Swiss eventually voted in 1898 to nationalize the main lines, and in 1902 the Swiss Federal Railways (Schweizerische Bundesbahnen) was formed.
To compete with the opening of the trans-Alpine Mount Cenis and Brenner Pass rail links, the Swiss negotiated construction of the St. Gotthard Tunnel with Italian and German interests. After 10 years of excavation, marked by labour unrest and the death of some 167 workers, the 9.3-mile (15-km) tunnel—then the world’s longest—opened in 1882. Thus, the cantons of Uri and Ticino were connected by rail, and a direct line was inaugurated between Zürich and Milan. In the early years of the 20th century, the 12-mile (20-km) Simplon Tunnel and the 9-mile (14.5-km) Lötschberg Tunnel linking Bern to Brig were also opened to rail traffic.
To finance railway construction, Escher in 1856 founded one of Switzerland’s largest and most successful banks, the Kreditanstalt (now Credit Suisse). Six other large commercial banks were also established in the 1850s. Because these banks were mainly interested in large investments, reformers stimulated the creation of cantonal banks to provide credit for the general public. In other areas of economic, internal, and foreign politics too, the radical-democratic middle class opposed the liberal economic elites, whose interaction of industrial, financial, and political power tinged with nepotism was characteristic of the bourgeois capitalism of Escher’s time.
Another effect of the quick development of rail (and maritime) transportation was the growing importation of cheap cereals, which plunged Swiss agriculture into crisis. In 1850 more than half the grain consumed was produced domestically, but by 1914 that measure stood at about one-fifth; in the same period, the number of Swiss employed in agriculture dropped from more than half to one-fourth. In the economic depression of the 1870s, the textile industry also lost its predominant position, while other export industries (e.g., chemicals and machine building) profited from the expanding means of communication.
Internal challenge
In 1856–57 the young republic clashed with Prussia over Neuchâtel, and war seemed inevitable; but ultimately, the Prussian emperor renounced his hereditary rights to the former principality. Yet, despite some smaller incidents (such as the conflict over the territories of Savoy with Napoleon III in 1860 as well as a clash with German chancellor Otto von Bismarck in 1889), Switzerland’s foreign relations were relatively smooth in the second half of the 19th century. Even radical politicians started to regard armed but cautious neutrality as the appropriate role for a small country bounded by bellicose and increasingly stronger monarchies. This neutrality was maintained during the Franco-German War (1870–71), in which the problems of interning a French army on Swiss soil eventually led to military reforms along the Prussian model without abolishing the principle of a militia army.
Domestic challenges rather than foreign ones were typical during this period. Economic development caused a malaise among different social groups; for example, labourers suffered from difficult working conditions, and the precapitalist elites, rural masses, and urban craftsmen all were losing their traditional sources of income. Although they had different needs and goals, they all sought greater popular participation in government. This democratic movement was particularly strong in Zürich, where in 1869 it was able to impose direct elections of the government and popular referendum for all parliamentary bills. After similar success in other cantons, the reform movement passed at the national level the Factory Act of 1877, which heavily involved the federal government in social welfare for the first time. In 1874 an alliance of the new democratic party and the dominant radical-liberal groups secured passage of a revised federal constitution. The 1874 constitution introduced a substantial innovation: direct democracy became possible through referendum and was reinforced in 1891 through initiative, the right for citizens to place an issue before the public if they were able to secure enough signatures.
The new constitution also strengthened federal power over the army and in the areas of social and economic legislation and justice. Such centralist measures met with the opposition of not only the conservative cantons but also the francophone minority; together they managed to defeat a first draft for an amended constitution in 1872. The referendum over the 1874 constitution was won only against the backdrop of the Kulturkampf (German: “cultural struggle”), a Protestant-led movement to limit the influence of the Roman Catholic Church, which was further constrained by new constitutional articles. While the Protestant French-speaking cantons now voted for the changed constitution, the Catholic minority had responded to its defeat by systematically and successfully using the referendum weapon in the name of cantonal rights against any bill that could be deemed a unitarian measure. To avoid such obstruction and to give the bourgeois position more weight against the growing socialist movement, the dominant bloc of liberals, radicals, and democrats approached the conservatives, and in 1891 the first member of the Catholic conservative party joined the Federal Council. In the same year the confederation for the first time celebrated the 1291 treaty as the country’s founding, symbolizing the reconciliation of the former opponents who had fought against each other in the Sonderbund War in 1847.