HISTORY OF RAIL TRANSPORT IN INDIA
The history of rail
transport in India began in the mid-nineteenth century.
Prior to 1850, there were
no railway lines in the country. This changed with the first railway in 1853.
Railways were gradually developed, for a short while by the British East India
Company and subsequently by the Colonial British Government, primarily to
transport troops for their numerous wars, and secondly to transport cotton for
export to mills in UK. Transport of Indian passengers received little interest
till 1947 when India got freedom and started to develop railways in a more
judicious manner.
By 1929, there were 66,000
km (41,000 mi) of railway lines serving most of the districts in the country.
At that point of time, the railways represented a capital value of some £687
million, and carried over 620 million passengers and approximately 90 million
tons of goods a year. The railways in India were a group of privately owned
companies, mostly with British shareholders and whose profits invariably
returned to Britain. The military engineers of the East India Company, later of
the British Indian Army, contributed to the birth and growth of the railways
which gradually became the responsibility of civilian technocrats and
engineers. However, construction and operation of rail transportation in the
North West Frontier Province and in foreign nations during war or for military
purposes was the responsibility of the military engineers.
Electrification
In 1904, the idea to
electrify the railway network was proposed by W.H White, chief engineer of the
then Bombay Presidency government. He proposed the electrification of the two
Bombay-based companies, the Great Indian Peninsula Railway and the Bombay
Baroda and Central India Railway (now known as CR and WR respectively).
Both the companies were in
favour of the proposal. However, it took another year to obtain necessary
permissions from the British government and to upgrade the railway
infrastructure in Bombay city. The government of India appointed Mr Merz as a
consultant to give an opinion on the electrification of railways. But Mr Merz
resigned before making any concrete suggestions, except the replacement of the
first Vasai bridge on the BB&CI by a stronger one.
Moreover, as the project
was in the process of being executed, the First World War broke out and put the
brakes on the project. The First World War placed heavy strain on the railway
infrastructure in India. Railway production in the country was diverted to meet
the needs of British forces outside India. By the end of the war, Indian
Railways were in a state of dilapidation and disrepair.
By 1920, Mr Merz formed a
consultancy firm of his own with a partner, Mr Maclellan. The government
retained his firm for the railway electrification project. Plans were drawn up
for rolling stock and electric infrastructure for Bombay-Poona/Igatpuri/Vasai
and Madras Tambaram routes.
The secretary of state of
India sanctioned these schemes in October 1920. All the inputs for the
electrification, except power supply, were imported from various companies in
England.
And similar to the running
of the first ever railway train from Bombay to Thane on April 16, 1853, the
first-ever electric train in India also ran from Bombay. The debut journey,
however, was a shorter one. The first electric train ran between Bombay
(Victoria Terminus) and Kurla, a distance of 16 km, on February 3, 1925 along
the city’s harbour route.
The section was electrified
on a 1,500 volts DC. The opening ceremony was performed by Sir Leslie Wilson,
the governor of Bombay, at Victoria Terminus station in presence of a very
large and distinguished gathering.
India's first electric
locos (two of them), however, had already made their appearance on the Indian
soil much earlier. They were delivered to the Mysore Gold Fields by Bagnalls
(Stafford) with overhead electrical equipment by Siemens as early as 1910.
Various sections on the
railway network were progressively electrified and commissioned between 1925 to
1930.
In 1956, the government
decided to adopt 25kV AC single-phase traction as a standard for the Indian
Railways to meet the challenge of the growing traffic. An organisation called
the Main Line Electrification Project, which later became the Railway
Electrification Project and still later the Central Organisation for Railway
Electrification, was established. The first 25kV AC traction section in India
is Burdwan-Mughalsarai via the Grand Chord.
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