Burdwan Katwa Railway

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Burdwan Katwa Railway is a narrow gauge line, built and operated as part of McLeod’s Light Railways, in Bardhaman district in the Indian state of West Bengal. The narrow gauge track is being converted to broad gauge.

McLeod & Company was the subsidiary of a London-based company of managing agents, McLeod Russell & Co. Ltd, formed to build and operate four narrow gauge railways (McLeod's Light Railways) – Burdwan Katwa Railway, Bankura Damodar Railway, Kalighat Falta Railway and Ahmedpur Katwa Railway.[1] The 53 kilometres (33 mi) long Burdwan Katwa Railway connecting Bardhaman (earlier known as Burdwan) and Katwa, built on 760 millimetres (30 in), was opened to traffic on 1 December 1915. In 1966, ownership of the BKR was transferred Eastern Railway which continues to operate the BKR as a narrow-gauge operation.[2] As of 2004 five trains plied each way. There is a crossing point at Bolgona station. The Up and Down trains have to reach the crossing on time to facilitate crossing. The rail journey takes 2.45 hours, the engines chugging along at the maximum speed of 30 km per hour.[3]

Here is a description of the journey in 2007, “The train waited for less than an hour before it returned to Katwa. Engine BK1 made little puffs of steam as it shunted, while a beggar peered in at the open swinging carriage doors, alternately moaning his distress and slurping an icy pole. The broad gauge could be heard – electric toots and diesel growlings – but was hidden by sheds. The land west of the Hooghly, though still alluvial and flat, is not as wet as riverine Bengal. Its fields, though usually covered with close-cropped green grass, bear but one crop a year and lie open, instead of being divided by watercourses and frequent villages. Altogether they do nothing to prevent the BK Railway from following a straight surveyed line, or to stop its trains from traveling at an even pace marked by the measured clunking of four-wheeled carriages on rail joints. My train from Burdwan stopped regularly, sometimes to shunt or to cross a southbound service. At each station the passenger load increased, so that after two stops the man opposite had to give up sleeping on the seat, and after several more there were fowls underfoot and small boys and women sitting on the floor and young men hanging on while standing on the footboards. So we rounded the curve into Katwa – doors open, dhotis flapping, all bound for Katwa market.” [4]

References

  1. "McLeod's Light Railways". Retrieved 2009-08-22. 
  2. "Burdwan-Katwa Railway". Retrieved 2009-08-22. 
  3. "Narrow gauge gets a new lease of life". The Statesman, 14 October 2004. Retrieved 2009-08-22. 
  4. Manning, Ian. "The Katwa Railways". From Bengal Towards Nagpur. Indian Railway Fan Club. Retrieved 2009-08-22. 
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