Scindia State Railway

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The Scindia State Railway was until 1942 known as the Gwalior Light Railway.

The 1918 Administration Reports states “The Gwallior Light Railway was the property of the Gwallior Durbar by whom it was constructed and is maintained, stocked and worked. The working of the trains and traffic of the line was under the control of the Great Indian Peninsula RailwayCompany up to 30 June 1913”[1].

In 1942 the Gwalior Light Railway Lines were a total line length 249 miles(473km)

  • ’Gwalior-Sipri Section’, 2ft (610mm) NG, from Gwalior to Sipri, opened 1899, 74 miles(118km) [1]
  • ’Gwalior-Bhind Section’, 2ft (610mm) NG, from Gwalior to Bhind, opened 1899, 52 miles(83km) [1]
  • ’Gwallior-Sheopur Kalan Section’, 2ft (610mm) NG, Gwallior to Sabalgarh, opened 1904; reaching Sheopur Kalan, 1909, 124 miles(200km) [1]
  • 'Ujjain-Agar Branch Railway', opened 1932 as part of GLR. Approximate line length 44 miles(72km)

The railway was renamed Scindia State Railway in 1942 after the Scindia family who ruled Gwalior until India's independence [2].

Following partition in 1947, the Scindia State Railway came under the control of the Government of India on 1 August 1950 with a route length of 294 miles(473km). The railway became part of the Central Railway Zone of Indian Railways on 5 November 1951 [3].

The ’Gwalior-Sipri Section’; the ’Gwalior-Bhind Section’ and the Ujjain-Agar Branch Railway have apparently all closed.

Modern reports indicate that only the ’Gwallior-Sheopur-Kalan Section’, 2ft (610mm) NG, was working in 2009 as part of the Indian Railways service. A distance of 124 miles through the suburbs of Gwallior to Sheopur Kalan [4].

Further Information

Prior to 1942 see Gwalior Light Railway

References