Madras Railway
Madras Railway | ||
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Madras Central Railway Station | ||
Line of route | ||
Madras to Mangalore Madras to Raichur Madras to Waltair branch from Jalarpet to Bangalore | ||
Gauge / mileage | ||
Broad gauge | 904 miles (1905) | |
Broad gauge | 497 miles (1905) - North East line | |
Timeline | ||
1845 | Company formed | |
1856 | First section of line open to traffic | |
1907 | Line acquired by State | |
Key locations | ||
Presidency | Madras | |
Stations | Bezwada, Calicut, Coimbatore, Erode, Guntakal, Nellore, Rajahmundry, Renigunta | |
System agency | ||
Worked by Madras Railway | ||
How to interpret this infobox |
Madras Railway | ||
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[[Image:|150px| ]] | ||
System timeline | ||
1907 | Merged with Southern Mahratta Railway to form Madras and Southern Mahratta Railway | |
Constituent companies / lines | ||
Madras Railway | ||
Kolar Gold Fields Railway | ||
Nilgiri Mountain Railway | ||
Shoranur-Cochin Railway | ||
Key locations | ||
Headquarters | Madras | |
Workshops | ||
Major Stations | Bezwada, Calicut, Cochin, Coimbatore, Erode, Guntakal, Nellore, Ootacamund, Rajahmundry, Renigunta | |
Successor system / organisation | ||
1951 | Southern Railway {IR zone) | |
System mileage | ||
Broad gauge | 1411 miles (1905) | |
Metre gauge | 82 miles (1905) | |
Associated auxiliary force | ||
How to interpret this infobox |
The Madras Railway was formed in 1845 although its first section of line, from Madras to Arcot, was not opened to traffic until 1 July 1856. In 1859, its object was given as "the construction and working of a railway from Madras to the western coast at Beypore, with branches to Bangalore and the Neilgherries; also of a line from Madras, via Bellary, to join the line from Bombay - total, about 820 miles."1
History
Headquartered in Madras, whence its lines radiated, the Madras Railway was built to broad guage. It was the last guaranteed railway to fall to Government ownership (31 December 1907). In 1908, it merged with the Southern Mahratta Railway to form the Madras and Southern Mahratta Railway (MSMR). The Government took over the management of the MSMR on 1 April 1944. On 14 April 1951, MSMR together with the South Indian Railway and the Mysore State Railway became the Southern Railway of Indian Railways.
Records
There are no Staff agreements held at the British Library in the India Office Records.
Notes
1 "Money Market and City Intelligence", The Times, Wednesday, 15 June 1859, #23333, 7a.