Darjeeling Himalayan Railway

Darjeeling Himalayan Railway
A Darjeeling Himalayan Railway train on Batasia Loop
A Darjeeling Himalayan Railway train on Batasia Loop
Locale West Bengal, India
Terminus Darjeeling
Commercial operations
Name Darjeeling Himalayan Railway (DHR)
Original gauge 2 ft (610 mm)
Preserved operations
Operated by Indian Railways, supported by Darjeeling Himalayan Railway Society
Stations 13 (New Jalpaiguri, Siliguri Town, Siliguri Junction, Sukna, Rongtong, Tindharia, Gayabari, Mahanadi, Kurseong, Tung, Sonada, Ghum and Darjeeling)
Length 78 km (48 mi) between Siliguri and Darjeeling
Preserved gauge 2 ft (610 mm)
Preservation history

Darjeeling Hill Railway

Legend
Darjeeling Bazaar
0 km
0 mi
Darjeeling
Batasia Loop (Loop Nº 5)
7 km
4 mi
Ghum
Jor Bungalow
Rangbul
16 km
10 mi
Sonada
Dilaram
24 km
15 mi
Tung
Zig zag
31 km
19 mi
Kurseong
38 km
24 mi
Mahanadi
Zig zag Nº 6
44 km
27 mi
Gaya Bari
Agony Point (Loop Nº 4)
Tindharia(P.M.O.)
50 km
31 mi
Tindharia
Zig zag Nº 3
Zig zag Nº 2
Chunbhatti
Loop Nº 3

Zig zag Nº 1 (opened 1942)
Loop Nº 2 (removed 1942)
62 km
39 mi
Rang Tong

Hill Cart Road

Loop Nº 1
(removed 1991;
repl. w/ longer route)

Hill Cart Road

 

Mahananda Wildlife Sanctuary

  Hill Cart Road

70 km
43 mi
NH 31

80 km
50 mi
80 km
50 mi
Mahananda River
Burdwan Road
Vivekananda Road
Hill Cart Road/St. Feeder Road
83 km
52 mi
Bagrakote level crossing
broad gauge lines

88 km
55 mi
New Jalpaiguri
elev. 100 metres (330 ft)
(opened 1964)
broad gauge lines

The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, also known as the "Toy Train", is a 2 ft (610 mm) narrow gauge railway that runs between New Jalpaiguri and Darjeeling in the Indian state of West Bengal, India. Built between 1879 and 1881, the railway is about 78 kilometres (48 mi) long. Its elevation level varies from about 100 metres (328 ft) at New Jalpaiguri to about 2,200 metres (7,218 ft) at Darjeeling. Four modern diesel locomotives handle most of the scheduled services; however the daily Kurseong-Darjeeling return service and the daily tourist trains from Darjeeling to Ghum (India's highest railway station) are handled by the vintage British-built B Class steam locomotives. The railway, along with the Nilgiri Mountain Railway and the Kalka-Shimla Railway, is listed as the Mountain Railways of India World Heritage Site. The headquarters of the railway is in the town of Kurseong. Operations between Siliguri and Kurseong were temporarily suspended since 2010 following a Landslide at Pagla Jhora and another near Tindharia in 2011.[1] However the normal Toy Train service has resumed between New Jalpaiguri (NJP) and Darjeeling from 2 December 2015.

History

Darjeeling Railway, 1895
Logo of the original Darjeeling Himalayan Railway
Darjeeling Himalayan Railway 2014

A broad gauge railway connected Calcutta (now Kolkata) and Siliguri in 1878. Siliguri, at the base of the Himalayas, was connected to Darjeeling by a cart road (the present day Hill Cart Road) on which "Tonga services" (carriage services) were available.[2] Franklin Prestage, an agent of Eastern Bengal Railway Company approached the government with a proposal of laying a steam tramway from Siliguri to Darjeeling.[2] The proposal was accepted in 1879 following the positive report of a committee formed by Sir Ashley Eden, the Lieutenant Governor of Bengal.[2] Construction started the same year.

A Darjeeling reversing station (ca. 1905)

Gillanders Arbuthnot & Co. constructed the railway. The stretch from Siliguri to Kurseong was opened on 23 August 1880, while the official opening of the line up to Darjeeling was on 4 July 1881.[3] Several engineering adjustments were made later in order to ease the gradient of the rails.[2][4] Despite natural calamities, such as an earthquake in 1897 and a major cyclone in 1899,[4] the DHR continued to improve with new extension lines being built in response to growing passenger and freight traffic.[4] However, the DHR started to face competition from bus services that started operating over the Hill Cart Road, offering a shorter journey time. During World War II, the DHR played a vital role transporting military personnel and supplies to the numerous camps around Ghum and Darjeeling.[4]

After the independence of India, the DHR was absorbed into Indian Railways and became a part of the Northeast Frontier Railway zone in 1958.[4] In 1962, the line was realigned at Siliguri and extended by nearly 4 miles (6 km) to New Jalpaiguri (NJP) to meet the new broad gauge line there. DHR remained closed for 18 months during the hostile period of Gorkhaland Movement in 1988-89.[4]

The line closed in 2011 due to a 6.8 Magnitude earthquake.[5] The line is currently loss-making and in 2015, Rajah Banerjee, a local tea estate owner, has called for privatisation to encourage investment, which was fiercely resisted by unions.[6]

World Heritage site

DHR was declared a World Heritage site by UNESCO in 1999, only the second railway to have this honour bestowed upon it,[7] the first one being Semmering Railway of Austria in 1998. To be nominated as World Heritage site on the World Heritage List, the particular site or property needs to fulfill a certain set of criteria, which are expressed in the UNESCO World Heritage Convention[8] and its corresponding Operational Guidelines.[9] The site must be of outstanding universal value and meet at least one out of ten selection criteria. The protection, management, authenticity and integrity of properties are also important considerations.

Criteria for selection

The DHR is justified by the following criteria:

Authenticity and integrity

Loading coal

Since 1881, the original route has been retained in a remarkable condition. Only minimal interventions of an evolutionary nature, such as the reduction of loops, have been carried out. Most of the original steam locomotives are still in use.[7] Like Tea and the Ghurka culture, the DHR has become not only an essential feature of the landscape but also an enduring part of the identity of Darjeeling.[11]

Management and legal status

The DHR and all its movable and immovable assets, including the authentic railway stations, the line, and the track vehicles, belong to the Government of India entrusted to the Ministry of Railways. The Northeast Frontier Railway documented all the elements of the DHR in a comprehensive register. Apart from that, it handles the day-to-day maintenance and management. But moreover, several programs, divisions and departments of the Indian Railways are responsible for operating, maintaining and repairing the DHR. This includes technical as well as non-technical work. In principle, the only two legal protection mechanisms that apply to the conservation of the DHR are the provisions of the 1989 Railway Act and that it is a public property which is state-owned and therefore protected.[12]

The route

UNESCO World Heritage Site
Mountain Railways of India
Name as inscribed on the World Heritage List

Typical roadside scenery. The train is rolling through a fruit shop.

Type Cultural
Criteria ii, iv
Reference 944
UNESCO region Asia-Pacific
Inscription history
Inscription 1999 (23rd Session)
Extensions 2005; 2008
A tight loop (Agony Point) on the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway.
Toy Train approaching Darjeeling, taking water.
Distance Chart of DHR
Darjeeling train in shed. 1979

The railway line basically follows the Hill Cart Road which is partially the same as National Highway 55. Usually, the track is simply on the road side. In case of landslides both track and road might be affected. As long parts of the road are flanked with buildings, the railway line often rather resembles urban tramway tracks than an overland line.

To warn residents and car drivers about the approaching train, engines are equipped with very loud horns that even drown horns of Indian trucks and buses. Trains honk almost without pause.

Loops and Z-Reverses (or "zig-zag"s)

One of the main difficulties faced by the DHR was the steepness of the climb. Features called loops and Z-Reverses were designed as an integral part of the system at different points along the route to achieve a comfortable gradient for the stretches in between them. When the train moves forwards, reverses and then moves forward again, climbing a slope each time while doing so, it gains height along the side of the hill.

Stations

New Jalpaiguri Junction (NJP)

New Jalpaiguri is the railway station which was extended to the south in 1964 to meet the new broad gauge to Assam. Where the two met, New Jalpaiguri was created.

DHR Terminal at New Jalpaiguri Junction Railway Station
Siliguri Town Station

Siliguri Town was original southern terminus of the line.

Siliguri Junction

Siliguri Junction became a major station only when a new metre-gauge line was built to Assam in the early 1950s

From New Jalpaiguri Junction (NJP) till Siliguri Junction the 1676 mm, 5' 6" broad gauge line from New Jalpaiguri to Siliguri Junction runs parallel to DHR.

Sukna Station

This station marks the change in the landscape from the flat plains to the wooded lower slopes of the mountains. The gradient of the railway changes dramatically.

Loop 1 (now removed)

Loop No.1 was in the woods above Sukna. It was removed after flood damage in 1991. The site is now lost in the forest.

Rangtong station

A short distance above Rangtong there is a water tank. This was a better position for the tank than in the station, both in terms of water supply and distance between other water tanks.

Loop 2 (now removed)

When Loop 2 was removed in 1942, again following flood damage, a new reverse, No.1, was added, creating the longest reverse run.

Reverse 1
Loop 3

Loop No.3 is at Chunbatti. This is now the lowest loop.

Reverse 2 & 3

Reverses No.2 & 3 are between Chunbatti and Tindharia.

Tindharia Station

This is a major station on the line as below the station is the workshops. There is also an office for the engineers and a large locomotive shed, all on a separate site.

Immediately above the station are three sidings; these were used to inspect the carriage while the locomotive was changed, before the train continued towards Darjeeling.

Loop 4

Agony Point is the name given to loop No.4. It comes from the shape of the loop which comes to an apex which is the tightest curve on the line.

Gayabari
Reverse 6

Reverse No.6 is the last reverse on the climb.

Mahanadi Station
Kurseong Station

There is a shed here and a few sidings adjacent to the main line, but the station proper is a dead end. Up trains must reverse out of the station (across a busy road junction) before they can continue on their climb. It is said that the station was built this way so that the train could enter a secure yard and stay there while the passengers left the train for refreshments.

Above Kurseong station, the railway runs through the bazaar. Trains skirt the front of shops and market stalls on this busy stretch of road.

Tung Station
Tung Station
Sonada Station

Sonada is a small station which serves town of sonada on Darjeeling Himalayan railway. It is on Siliguri - Darjeeling national highway (NH 55).

Sonada Station
Rangbul Station
Jorebungalow Station

This is a small location near Darjeeling and a railway station on Darjeeling Himalayan railway. Jorebungalow was store point for tea to Calcutta. This is a strategical place to connect Darjeeling to rest of the country.

Ghum Station

Ghum, summit of the line and highest station in India. Now includes a museum on the first floor of the station building with larger exhibits in the old goods yard. Once this was the railway station at highest altitude overall and is the highest altitude station for narrow gauge railway.

Ghum Station
Batasia Loop
Main article: Batasia Loop

The loop is 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) from Darjeeling, below Ghum. There is also a memorial to the Gorkha soldiers of the Indian Army who sacrificed their lives after the Indian Independence in 1947. From the Batasia Loop one can get a panoramic view of Darjeeling town with the Kanchenjunga and other snowy mountains in the back-drop.

Batasia Loop, Darjeeling Himalayan Railway
Darjeeling Station

The farthest reach of the line was to Darjeeling Bazaar, a goods-only line and now lost under the road surface and small buildings.

Darjeeling Station
Darjeeling railway station

Locomotives

Current

No.787 after conversion to oil firing.
No.778 hauling a train on the Ffestiniog Railway.
Steam

All the steam locomotives currently in use on the railway are of the "B" Class, a design built by Sharp, Stewart and Company and later the North British Locomotive Company, between 1889 and 1925. A total of 34 were built, but by 2005 only 12 remained on the railway and in use (or under repair).

In 2002, No. 787 was rebuilt with oil firing. This was originally installed to work on the same principle as that used on Nilgiri Mountain Railway No.37395. A diesel-powered generator was fitted to operate the oil burner and an electrically driven feed pump, and a diesel-powered compressor was fitted to power the braking system. Additionally, the locomotive was fitted with a feedwater heater. The overall result was a dramatic change in the appearance of the locomotive. However, the trials of the locomotive were disappointing and it never entered regular service. In early 2011, it was in Tindharia Works awaiting reconversion to coal-firing.

In March 2001, No.794 was transferred to the Matheran Hill Railway to allow a "Joy Train"[13] (steam-hauled tourist train) to be operated on that railway. It did not, however, enter service there until May 2002.

Diesel

Four diesel locomotives are in use: Nos. 601-2, 604 and 605 of the NDM6 class transferred from the Matheran Hill Railway.

Past

Garratt class D of the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway

In 1910 the railway purchased the third Garratt locomotive built, a D Class 0-4-0+0-4-0.

Only one DHR steam locomotive has been taken out of India, No.778 (originally No.19). After many years out of use at the Hesston Steam Railway, it was sold to an enthusiast in the UK and restored to working order. It is now based on a private railway (The Beeches Light Railway) in Oxfordshire but has run on the Ffestiniog Railway, the Launceston Steam Railway and the Leighton Buzzard Light Railway.

In popular culture

The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway has long been viewed with affection and enthusiasm by travellers to the region and the Earl of Ronaldshay gave the following description of a journey in the early 1920s:

"Siliguri is palpably a place of meeting... The discovery that here the metre gauge system ends and the two foot gauge of the Darjeeling-Himalayan railway begins, confirms what all these things hint at... One steps into a railway carriage which might easily be mistaken for a toy, and the whimsical idea seizes hold of one that one has accidentally stumbled into Lilliput. With a noisy fuss out of all proportion to its size the engine gives a jerk— and starts... No special mechanical device such as a rack is employed— unless, indeed, one can so describe the squat and stolid hill-man who sits perched over the forward buffers of the engine and scatters sand on the rails when the wheels of the engine lose their grip of the metals and race, with the noise of a giant spring running down when the control has been removed. Sometimes we cross our own track after completing the circuit of a cone, at others we zigzag backwards and forwards; but always we climb at a steady gradient— so steady that if one embarks in a trolley at Ghum, the highest point on the line, the initial push supplies all the energy necessary to carry one to the bottom."[14]
Toy Train Cabin
Second Class Cabin

The trip up to Darjeeling on railway has changed little since that time, and continues to delight travellers and rail enthusiasts, so much so that it has its own preservation and support group, the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway Society.[15]

Several films have portrayed the railway. Especially popular was the song Mere sapno ki rani from the film Aradhana where the protagonist Rajesh Khanna tries to woo heroine Sharmila Tagore who was riding in the train.[16][17] Other notable films include Barfi!, Parineeta and Raju Ban Gaya Gentleman. The Darjeeling Limited, a film directed by Wes Anderson, features a trip by three brothers on a fictional long-distance train based very loosely on the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway.

Television

The BBC made a series of three documentaries[18] dealing with Indian Hill Railways, shown in February 2010. The first film covers the Darjeeling-Himalayan Railway, the second the Nilgiri Mountain Railway and the third the Kalka-Shimla Railway. The films were directed by Tarun Bhartiya, Hugo Smith and Nick Mattingly and produced by Gerry Troyna. The series won the UK Royal Television Society Award in June 2010.[19] Wes Anderson's film The Darjeeling Limited also showcases three brothers riding the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway.[20]

Other tourist trains in India

See also

References

  1. "Historic Toy Train of Darjeeling to start rolling again". Retrieved 1 October 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "DHR History". darjeelingnews.net. Darjeelingnews. Retrieved 24 February 2007.
  3. "DHR and Its Development". About DHR,dhr.in. Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, NF Railway, India. Retrieved 24 February 2007.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Whittle, Paul; Terry Martin. "A Brief History of the DHR". History and A Trip Up the Line. Darjeeling Himalayan Railway Society. Archived from the original on 8 February 2007. Retrieved 24 February 2007.
  5. "Earthquake hits Darjeeling toy train services : East, News - India Today". indiatoday.intoday.in. Retrieved 2015-06-08.
  6. "The Himalayan tea train that's running out of steam". BBC News. Retrieved 2015-06-08.
  7. 1 2 "Mountain Railways of India". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved 30 April 2006.
  8. UNESCO (1972) Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage. Paris: World Heritage Centre.
  9. UNESCO (2011) Operational Guidelines for the Implementation of the World Heritage Convention. Paris: World Heritage Centre.
  10. ICOMOS (1999). "Advisory Body Evaluation. Darjeeling Railway (India) No. 944." (PDF). ICOMOS. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
  11. "The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway". Indian HillRailways. BBC. Retrieved 14 August 2012.
  12. "1989 Railway Act" (PDF). Rct.indianrail.gov.in. Retrieved 5 October 2012.
  13. "Darjeeling Himalayan Railway". Hill Railways. Indian Railways Fan Club. Retrieved 3 September 2008.
  14. The Earl of Ronaldshay Lands of the Thunderbolt. Sikhim, Chumbi and Bhutan (London: Constable & Company) 1923 pp10-12
  15. "Welcome to the DHRS". Darjeeling Himalayan Railway Society. Archived from the original on 28 February 2007. Retrieved 9 March 2007.
  16. Mahalingam, Sudha (March 2001). "Darjeeling: Where the journey is the destination". Travelogues. Outlook Traveller. Outlook Publishing (India) Private Limited. Archived from the original on 10 December 2006. Retrieved 9 March 2007.
  17. "Darjeeling Toy Train". Theme India: Train Tourism in India. IndiaLine. Retrieved 9 March 2007. External link in |work= (help)
  18. "Indian Hill Railways". BBC. Retrieved 28 February 2010.
  19. "Documentary on Hill railways of India bags UK award". Express India. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  20. . The Telegraph http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/film/starsandstories/3669334/The-Darjeeling-Limited-Who-needs-a-film-set-in-LA-when-you-have-a-speeding-train-in-India.html. Retrieved 19 July 2015. Missing or empty |title= (help)

Bibliography

  • Badawy, Emile D.; Crow, Lindsay, eds. (1999). The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway: A photographic profile – 1962–1998. Studfield, Vic, Australia: Train Hobby Publications. ISBN 1876249250. 
  • Barrie, David; Charlesworth, David (2005). Going Loopy. Darjeeling Mail extra, no. 2. Doncaster, South Yorkshire, UK: Darjeeling Himalayan Railway Society. ISBN 0954160223. 
  • Cable, Bob (2011). Darjeeling Revisited: A journey on the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway. Narrow Gauge Branch Lines series. Midhurst, West Sussex, UK: Middleton Press. ISBN 9781908174093. 
  • Krieg, Allan D (January 1946). "The Darjeeling Himalayan: take a ride into the clouds on a two-foot gauge railway with which many of our GI's have become familiar while in India". Trains. 6 (3): 42–49. ISSN 0041-0934. OCLC 31296210. 
  • Martin, Terry (2000). Halfway to Heaven. Chester, Cheshire, UK: RailRomances. ISBN 1900622033. 
  • Martin, Terry (2006). The Iron Sherpa: the story of the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, 1879-2006. 1. Chester, Cheshire, UK: RailRomances. ISBN 1900622106. 
  • Martin, Terry (2010). The Iron Sherpa: the history of the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway. 2. Chester, Cheshire, UK: RailRomances. ISBN 9781900622127. 
  • Smith, J Burlington; Lasell, Eldridge L; Lasell, David; Lasell, Diane L; Lasell Iltis, Sarah; Iltis, Ron (c. 1911). The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway: an illustrated guide to the railway & Darjeeling. Middlesbrough, England: Hood & Co. OCLC 43293759. 
  • Thomas, John (2010). Himalayan Journey. London: British Overseas Railways Historical Trust. ISBN 9781901613032. 
  • Thornton Jones, Frank (2003). Darjeeling Christmas, 1945: the Darjeeling photographs of Frank Thornton Jones. Darjeeling Mail extra, no. 1. Nottinghamshire: Darjeeling Himalayan Railway Society. ISBN 0954160215. 
  • Wallace, Richard (2009). The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway: A Guide to the DHR, Darjeeling and its Tea (2nd ed.). Kenilworth, Warwickshire, UK: Friends of the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway. ISBN 9780954160234. 
  • Darjeeling and its Mountain Railway. Kolkata, India: Nava Udyog. 2002. ISBN 8185971951.  (Facsimile reprint. Originally published: Kurseong: Darjeeling Himalayan Railway, 1921.)
  • Darjeeling Himalayan Railway: World Heritage Area: bringing people and their heritage together. National Rail Museum & UNESCO Stakeholder Workshop report, 11th-18th January 2002. New Delhi: National Rail Museum. 2002. OCLC 84649417. 
  • The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway: Illustrated Guide for Tourists. Bath, Somerset, UK: Pagoda Tree Press. 2004. ISBN 1904289037.  (Facsimile reprint of the 1st edition, originally published in 1896 by the Darjeeling Himalayan Railway Company, Darjeeling, India.)

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Darjeeling Himalayan Railway.

Coordinates: 27°2′42″N 88°16′2″E / 27.04500°N 88.26722°E / 27.04500; 88.26722

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.