New Jalpaiguri–New Bongaigaon section

The New Jalpaiguri–New Bongaigaon section of the Barauni–Guwahati line connects New Jalpaiguri in the Indian state of West Bengal and New Bongaigaon in Assam.

New Jalpaiguri–New Bongaigaon Section (including Fakiragram-Dhubri branch line)
Overview
StatusOperational
LocaleNorth Bengal, Assam
TerminiNew Jalpaiguri
New Bongaigaon
Stations31
Operation
Opened2003
OwnerIndian Railways
Operator(s)Northeast Frontier Railway
Technical
Line length248 km (154 mi)
Track gauge1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) broad gauge
Electrificationin progress
Route map

km
136
Abhayapuri
under
construction
124
Boitamari
111
Chapar
under
construction
88
Bilasipara
76
Bagribari
66
Alamganj
Bamnai River
64
Dhubri Ghat
63
Dhubri
56
Gauripur
49
Balajan
New Cooch Behar–Golokganj line
to New Cooch Behar
47
Golokganj
43
Moterjhar
Bamnai River
35
Basbari
26
Monglajhora
16
Tipkai
Gangia River
9
Saptagram
256
New Bongaigaon
251
Dangtal
Kujia River
244
Basugaon
Champabati River
237
Salakati
Tarang River
228
Kokrajhar
Gourang River
223
Sesapani
218
0
Fakiragram Junction
Heli River
Loshka River
212
Pratap Khata
Gangia River
207
Chautara
Pagla River
Mara Jaima River
194
Guabari
189
Gossaigaon Hat
182
Srirampur Assam
172
Jorai
164
Kamakhyaguri
159
Chepani Halt
154
Samuktala Road
New Jalpaiguri–Alipurduar–
Samuktala line
Gadadhar River
144
New Alipurduar
133
New Baneswar
New Cooch Behar–Golokganj line
to Golokganj
Alipurduar-Bamanhat branch line
to Bamanhat
125
New Cooch Behar
Alipurduar-Bamanhat branch line
to Alipurduar Junction
115
Pundibari
111
Sajerpar
103
Ghoksadanga
96
Gumanihat
87
Falakata
83
Khirerkote
78
Salbari
72
Kolaigram
65
Dhupguri
58
Altagram
49
Betgara
45
New Maynaguri
41
New Domohani
33
Jalpaiguri Road
26
Raninagar Jalpaiguri
18
Belakoba
9
Ambari Falakata
New Jalpaiguri–Alipurduar–
Samuktala Road line
0
New Jalpaiguri

History

During British rule, all links from the northern part of Bengal and Assam to the rest of India were through the eastern part of Bengal. The most important connection was the Calcutta–Parbatipur–HaldibariSiliguri link first established in 1878 and then developed in stages[1] (for details see Howrah-New Jalpaiguri Line). During the nineteenth century, Lalmonirhat was linked to the Dooars.[2] In pre-independence days, a metre gauge line running via Radhikapur, Biral, Parbatipur, Tista, Gitaldaha and Golokganj connected Fakiragram in Assam with Katihar in Bihar.[3]

With the partition of India in 1947, all these links were lost. Indian Railways took up the Assam Link Project in 1948 to build a rail link between Fakiragram and Kishanganj. Fakiragram was connected to the Indian railway system in 1950 through the Indian portion of North Bengal with a metre gauge track.[4] The New Jalpaiguri–New Bongaigaon section was partly new construction, partly old line converted to broad gauge in 1966.[5][6] The 265 km (165 mi) long 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) wide broad gauge Siliguri-Jogihopa line was constructed between 1963 and 1965.[7]

Branch lines

The Haldibari–New Jalpaiguri line has gone through two successive gauge changes. As most other railway tracks in the area were metre gauge, the line was converted from broad gauge to metre gauge in 1949. Then in 1960s when broad gauge was introduced in the area, the line was converted back to broad gauge and connected to the new station at New Jalpaiguri.[1]

The metre gauge branch line from Malbazar in Jalpaiguri district to Changrabandha in Cooch Behar district is now an isolated section, with no service, as per the railway time table. In pre-independence days, the line was up to Mogalhat, now in Bangladesh. The present metre gauge line on the Bangladesh side from Burimari to Lalmonirhat is still functional.[8]

The Alipuduar–Bamanhat branch line ends near the India-Bangladesh border across the Dharla River. In pre-independence days, it used to connect to Mogalhat, now in Bangladesh, across the Dharla. The bridge is broken. The line from Golokganj meets the branch line. The New Cooch Behar–Golokganj section is nearing conversion to broad gauge. The line passed through Gitaldaha at some point of time.[3][9]

The 66 km Fakiragram-Dhubri branch line was inaugurated after gauge conversion in September 2010.[10]

Electrification

Electrification of the entire Katihar–Guwahati route is in progress}} [11]

gollark: Apparently there are still four "giannis"es.
gollark: I mostly only use my phone for occasionally taking bad photographs of things and photographing documents, so in my endless search for a new phone (hopefully finishing that tomorrow...) I mostly just ignore cameras.
gollark: I mean, if you care a lot about photography, than obviously buying a phone with good cameras is smart.
gollark: I had a phone with almost identical specs about four years back and it worked *fine*.
gollark: > like the pinephone is just a generic piece of crap with slow CPU, almost no RAM, horrible camera, mediocre battery, etcI mean, it's basically raspberry-pi-level and the battery is standard for phones now, so meh.

References

  1. "India: the complex history of the junctions at Siliguri and New Jalpaiguri". IRFCA. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
  2. "Bengal Dooars Railway". Fibis. Retrieved 20 November 2011.
  3. "Geography - International". IRFCA. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  4. "Indian Railways History". Northeast Frontier Railway. IRSE. Archived from the original on 25 April 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  5. "Some Milestones of NF Railway". Archived from the original on 24 November 2011. Retrieved 28 January 2012.
  6. "Gauge conversion project in Assam". The Hindu Business Line. 24 May 2000. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  7. Moonis Raza & Yash Aggarwal. "Transport Geography of India: Commodity Flow and the Regional Structure of Indian Economy". page 60. Concept Publishing Company, A-15/16 Commercial Block, Mohan Garden, New Delhi - 110059. ISBN 81-7022-089-0. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  8. Mohan Bhuyan. "International Links from India". IRFCA. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  9. "Official pledges rail project by March". The Telegraph. 12 December 2010. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  10. "Mamata flags off two trains- Dhubri-Kamakhya link after 22-year wait". The Telegraph. 14 September 2010. Archived from the original on 26 April 2012. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
  11. "Railway electrification project to touch North East soon". Business Standard. 23 August 2011. Retrieved 10 December 2011.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.