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East Indian Railway Regiment

274 bytes added, 06:50, 12 April 2010
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Rudyard Kipling wrote in 1888, in respect of Jamalpur,
:"On Tuesdays and Fridays the volunteers parade. A and B Companies, 150 strong in all, of the E.I.R. Volunteers, are stationed here with the band. Their uniform, grey with red facings, is not lovely, but they know how to shoot and drill. They have to. The ‘Company’ makes it a condition of service that a man must be a volunteer; and volunteer in something more than name he must be, or some one will ask the reason why. Seeing that there are no regulars between Howrah and Dinapore, the ‘Company’ does well in exacting this toll"<ref>Among the Railway Folk by Rudyard Kipling 1888. Web edition published by eBooks@Adelaide</ref>
 
By 1906, the Corps was 2,300 strong, with the Armoury and Head Quarters staff located at Jalampur.<ref> [http://www.archive.org/stream/historyeastindi00huddgoog#page/n297/mode/1up/ History of the East Indian Railway] , page 243 by George Huddleston 1906 Archive.org</ref>
 
==Chronology==
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