Barkakana–Son Nagar line explained

Box Width:28em
Barkakana–Son Nagar line (including Ranchi–Tori line and Garhwa Road–Billi line)
Color:800000
System:Electrified
Status:Operational
Locale:Bihar, Jharkhand
Stations:41
Open:1907
Owner:Indian Railways
Operator:East Central Railway
Linelength:3130NaN0
Tracks:2
Gauge: broad gauge
Electrification:electrified in 1962
Speed:up to 110km/h
Map State:collapsed

The Barkakana–Son Nagar line is an Indian railway line connecting Barkakana and Son Nagar on the Gaya–Mughalsarai section of the Grand Chord. This 313adj=onNaNadj=on track is under the jurisdiction of East Central Railway.

History

In 1902, a branch line of EIR was opened from Sone East Bank (later renamed Son Nagar) to Daltonganj. With the development of South Karanpura Coalfield, the Central India Coalfields Railway opened a line from Gomoh to Barkakana in 1927 and from Barkakana to Daltonganj in 1929. These lines were subsequently taken over by EIR.[1]

Bridging the Soane/Son

The total length of the Upper Soane Bridge across the Soane, as the river was then called, over abutments is .[2] It was opened for traffic on 27 February 1900. When it was built, it was the longest bridge in India and was believed to be the second-longest bridge in the world, short of the Tay Bridge near Dundee.[3] Subsequently, longer road bridges were built but it remained the longest rail bridge in India for many years.[4] The opening of the 4.62 km Vembanad Rail Bridge, connecting the Container Transshipment Terminal on Vallarpadam Island to Edappally, in February 2011, pushed it to the second position.[5] [6]

Freight corridor

Son Nagar is expected to be connected with Ludhiana as part of the Eastern Corridor. The primary feeder routes for this will be from Sonnagar to Durgapur via Gomoh, Sonnagar to Tatanagar via Garhwa Road, and Barkakana to Bokaro via Chandrapura.[7]

Railway reorganisation

In 1952, Eastern Railway, Northern Railway and North Eastern Railway were formed. Eastern Railway was formed with a portion of East Indian Railway Company, east of Mughalsarai and Bengal Nagpur Railway. Northern Railway was formed with a portion of East Indian Railway Company west of Mughalsarai, Jodhpur Railway, Bikaner Railway and Eastern Punjab Railway. North Eastern Railway was formed with Oudh and Tirhut Railway, Assam Railway and a portion of Bombay, Baroda and Central India Railway.[8] East Central Railway was created in 1996–97.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Indian Railway History Time line. Saxena. R.P.. Irse.bravehost.com. https://web.archive.org/web/20120229092028/http://irse.bravehost.com/IRHTML.htm. 29 February 2012. 15 March 2017.
  2. Book: L. S. S. O'Malley. Bihar and Orissa Gazetteers Shahabad. Concept Publishing Company. 978-81-7268-122-7. 166.
  3. Web site: As the traffic continued to grow even beyond the capacity of the. Tripod. 2011-11-20.
  4. Web site: Longest Railway Bridge in India. Colours of India. 25 June 2011.
  5. Web site: A bridge over Vembanad Lake. The Hindu. 25 June 2011.
  6. Web site: Longest railway bridge in Kochi. ForumCo.com. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120323063453/http://irse.forumco.com/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=1888. 23 March 2012. 25 June 2011.
  7. Web site: Freight Trains. What is dedicated freight corridor?. IRFCA. 2011-11-20.
  8. Web site: Geography – Railway Zones. IRFCA. 28 March 2014.
  9. Web site: East Central Railway. ECR. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20140112090715/http://www.ecr.indianrailways.gov.in/. 12 January 2014. 28 March 2014.