Bikaner State Railway: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 15:48, 11 August 2020
Bikaner State Railway | ||
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Bikaner State Railway Logo | ||
System timeline | ||
1924 | System formed | |
Constituent companies / lines | ||
1924 | Bikaner section of Jodhpur-Bikaner Railway | |
Key locations | ||
Headquarters | Bikaner | |
Workshops | ||
Major Stations | ||
Successor system / organisation | ||
1952 | Northern Railway (IR zone) | |
System mileage | ||
Metre gauge | 883 miles (1943) | |
Associated auxiliary force | ||
n/a | ||
How to interpret this infobox |
The Bikaner State Railway (BkSR) was created in 1924 and took over responsibility for working the Bikaner section of the Jodhpur-Bikaner Railway.
Background
Originally named the Jodhpur Railway the first section opened as a metre gauge(MG) line in 1882, becoming the Jodhpur-Bikaner Railway (JBR) in 1889.
In 1908 the JBR operated 828 miles(1325km) in the territories of Sind (under British control) and in territories of the States of Jodhpur and Bikaner.
By 1918 the ‘JBR System’ had expanded to 1355 miles(2180km); which comprised 1106 miles(1179km) plus a further 249 miles(401km) which JBR was working and operating under agreements with other railways [1].
A further 210 miles(400km) were sanctioned or under construction by JBR in 1918 [1].
For operational purposes the JBR was divided into two sections:- the 'Bikaner Section' and the 'Jodhpur Section'
Bikaner Section of the JBR - 1918 grand total, 498 miles(1013km)open line inclu[2] as follows:-.
- ‘Main Line’, MG, 249 miles(401km)
- Bhagu(Marwar Frontier)-Bikaner, opened 1891, 48 miles
- Bikaner-Dumera, opened 1898, 42 miles
- Dulmera-Suratgarh, opened 1901,71 miles
- Suratgarh-Bhatinda, opened 1902, 88 miles
- ‘Hisar Extension Line’, MG, 136 miles(219km)
- Marwar Frontier to Ratangarh, opened 1909-10, 30 miles
- Ratangarh-Churu, opened 1910, 26 miles
- Churu-Hisar, opened 1911, 80 miles
- ‘Bikaner-Ratangarh Chord Line’, MG, 85 miles(137km)
- Bikaner-Ratangarh, opened 1912, 85 miles
- ‘Sardarshahr Extension Line’, MG, 27 miles(43km)
- Hudera(2 miles from Ratangarh)- Sardarshahr, opened 1916, 27 miles
With 132 miles(212km) sanctioned for construction
- ‘Hanumangarh-Sadupur Line’, MG, 105 miles(169km)
- Hanumangarh to Sadupur, sanctioned for construction 1915, 105 miles
- ‘Bikaner-Kolayat Line’, MG, 27 miles(43km)
- Bikaner to Kolayat , sanctioned for construction 1915, 27 miles
Bikaner State Railway
In 1924, the JBR was divided into its two constituent parts, with two new systems, the Jodhpur State Railway(JSR) and Bikaner State Railway(BkSR) formed to take over responsibility for working the raiway. The JSR taking the “Jodhpur Section” of the Jodhpur-Bikaner Railway, together with the Jodhpur-Hyderabad Railway(British Section).
The Bikaner State Railway (BkSR) was created in 1924 from the “Bikaner Section” of the Jodhpur-Bikaner Railway, the exact mileage comprising the “Bikaner Section” is not known but in 1918 it was 498 miles(801km) open line and approximately 568 miles(km) open line iby 1924
In 1936-37 the open line route mileage for the BkSR had expanded to 796 miles(1281km) of metre gauge(MG) lines [3] as follows:-
- ‘Main Line’, MG, 249 miles(401km). Bhagu(Marwar Frontier) to Bhatinda - details as above
- ‘Hisar Extension Line’, MG, 136 miles(219km). Marwar Frontier to Hisar - details as above
- ‘Bikaner-Ratangarh Chord Line’, MG, 85 miles(137km). Bikaner to Ratangarh - details as above
- ‘Sardarshahr Extension Line’, MG, 27 miles(43km). Hudera(2 miles from Ratangarh) to Sardarshahr- details as above
- ‘Kolayat Extension Line’, MG, 29 miles(47km). Lalgarh to Kolayat, opened 1922
- ‘Canal Loop Line’, MG, 126 miles(203km)
- Hanumangarh via Sadulshahr to Sri Ganga Nagar, opened 1923, 42 miles
- Sri Ganga Nagar via Kesrisinghpur to Raisinghnagar, opened 1929-27, 49 miles
- Raisinghnagar to Suratgarh, opened 1925, 35 miles
- ‘Hanumangarh-Sadulpur Line’, MG, 107 miles(172km)
- Hanumangarh via Nohar to Tabsil Bhadran, opened 1927-28, 71 miles
- Tabsil Bhadran to Suratpura, opened 1930, 37 miles
- ‘Anupgarh Branch’, MG, 35 miles(56km)
- Sarupsar to Anupgarh , opened 1929, 35 miles
With a further 86 miles (138km) sanctioned for construction
- ‘Sadulpur-Rewari Line’, sanctioned for construction in 1937, 86 miles (138km). “The line will traverse portions of the Bikaner, Loharu, Patiala and Nabha States and the Gurgaon District of the Punjab, and is intende to develop an area rather thinly populated and at present unirrigated” [4]
By 1943 the BkSR was operating a network of 883 miles(1421km)
At Independence in 1947 the western portions of the ‘Bikaner State Railway’, the ‘Jodhpur State Railway ’ and the British section of the ‘Jodhpur-Hyderabad Railway’ were ceded to the government of Pakistan becoming part of ‘Pakistan Railways’[5].
The remaining eastern portions of the ‘Bikaner State Railway’ and the ‘Jodhpur State Railway ’, excluding the ‘Marwar-Phulad Section’ became part of the of ‘Indian Railways - Northern Railway Zone’ in 1952
Further Information
See Jodhpur-Bikaner Railway for period up to 1924
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 “Administration Report on Railways 1918” page185 (pdf194); Retrieved 18 Nov 2016
- ↑ “Administration Report on Railways 1918” page 187 (pdf195)]; Retrieved 18 Nov 2016
- ↑ “Report by the Railway Board on Indian Railways for 1836-37” page 119 (pdf 151)
- ↑ “Report by the Railway Board on Indian Railways for 1936-37. Vol. I; Railway Department, Government of India” Para 37, page 40 pdf 55; Retrieved 8 Jul 2020
- ↑ “History of Rail in Rajasthan” by Dr Mohanlal Gupta, Department of Information and Public Relations, Government of Rajasthan, Jodhpur; Retrieved 18 Nov 2016