East Indian Railway

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East Indian Railway
Eir device.gif
East Indian Railway device
Line of route
Gauge / mileage
Broad gauge 1962 miles (1905)
Timeline
Key locations
Presidency Bengal
Stations Agra, Benares, Hooghly, Mirzapur, Patna
System agency
How to interpret this infobox
East Indian Railway
Eir device.gif
East Indian Railway device
System timeline
Constituent companies / lines
1880 East Indian Railway
1889 Delhi-Umballa-Kalka Railway
South Behar Railway
Tarkessur Railway
Jind-Palipat Railway
1925 Oudh and Rohilkhand merged into EIR
Key locations
Headquarters Calcutta
Workshops Jamalpur, Liluah
Major Stations Agra, Benares, Howrah, Patna
Successor system / organisation
System mileage
Broad gauge 2225 miles (1905)
Associated auxiliary force
East Indian Railway Regiment
How to interpret this infobox

Built on the same terms and conditions as the Great Indian Peninsula Railway (GIPR), the East Indian Railway (EIR) was a British company, registered in London, privately owned and financed, operating under license and guarantee from the (British) Board of Control in India and the East India Company (EIC).

By 1859, the arrangements were "the construction and working of lines from Calcutta to Delhi, and from Allahabad to Juppulpore - total, about 1,400 miles. Capital - 12,731,000l. This amount has been sanctioned for the works specified, but it is probable that a larger sum will be required. Rate of Interest Guaranteed - 5 per cent. on 11,553,000l. capital; 4½ per cent. on 1,178,000l. debentures, convertible into shares." (1)

History

Formed in 1845, the EIR was not contracted by the EIC to begin railway construction until 1849 when it became one of the three original guaranteed companies sanctioned to construct experimental lines. It was not until 1854 that the EIR opened its first section from Howrah to Hooghly. By 1864, the EIR had arrived in Delhi although it was not until 1871 that the Bombay-Calcutta route was completed when the GIPR reached Juppulpore.

In 1862, the Jamalpur Locomotive workshops were established. On 15 January 1935, the Jamalpur Workshops along with the entire railway colony was destroyed by an earthquake. It took 3 years to rebuild.

The Government of India (GoI) acquired the assets of the EIR on 31 December 1879 while leaving the management to the private company. The GoI took over the direct running of the EIR on 1 January 1925. In 1952. the EIR was merged with the Bengal-Nagpur Railway (BNR) to form Indian Railways' Eastern Railway. In 1955, BNR was demerged to form South East Railway.


Records

The following are held in the India Office Records at the British Library.

  • L/AG/46/11/133-137 : Contracts of appointment, c1858-1925 (possibly not all included)

The above is indexed in

  • Z/L/AG/46 : Index to UK Appointments to Indian Railways (1849-1925)

The following is not included in the index Z/L/AG/46.

  • L/AG/46/11/138-141 : Half-yearly staff lists, 1861-1890 & 1911-1922 (giving ages from 1886)


External Links

East Indian Railway logo

Science & Society Picture Library

History of Eastern Railway

Notes

(1) "Money Market and City Intelligence", The Times, Wednesday, 15 June 1859, #23333, 7a.