Jodhpur State Railway Explained

Railroad Name:Jodhpur State Railway
Start Year:1924
Hq City:Jodhpur
Locale:Jodhpur State, British India
End Year:1952
Length:approx 1050miles

The Jodhpur State Railway (JSR) was formed in 1924 and took over responsibility for working the Jodhpur section of the Jodhpur–Bikaner Railway, and the British section of the Jodhpur-Hyderabad Railway.

History

Predecessors

Earlier named the Jodhpur Railway the first section opened as a metre gauge line in 1882, later becoming the Jodhpur–Bikaner Railway (JBR) in 1889. In 1908 the JBR operated 828miles in the territories of Sind (under British control) and the States of Jodhpur and Bikaner. By 1918 the ‘JBR System’ had expanded to 1355miles, 1106miles of its own track and 249miles which the JBR operated under agreements with other railways.[1] A further 210miles were sanctioned or under construction by JBR in 1918.[1]

Creation of the Jodhpur State Railway

In 1924, the JBR was divided into two new systems, the Jodhpur State Railway (JSR) and Bikaner State Railway (BSR) formed to take over responsibility for working the railway. The JSR taking the Jodhpur Section of the Jodhpur–Bikaner Railway, together with the Jodhpur-Hyderabad Railway (British Section). The exact mileage comprising the Jodhpur section is not known but in 1918 it was 687miles plus 124miles of the Jodhpur-Hyderabad Railway (British Section).

Writing critically in 1929 about third class travelling, Mahatma Gandhi condemned the latrines in JSR carriages as being "absolutely intolerable, insanitary and unfit for human use. The State railways should really be a model to the British system; whereas the actual state of things is the other way."[2]

In 1936-37, the route mileage for the JSR had expanded to 767miles. They were also operating the British section of the Jodhpur–Hyderabad Railway (British Section), expanded to 239miles and also the 49miles long Mirpur Khas–Khadro Railway. All these were metre gauge lines.[3]

In 1947, the British section of the Jodhpur-Hyderabad Railway and the western portions of Jodhpur State Railway and Bikaner State Railway was ceded to the government of Pakistan becoming part of Pakistan Railways.[4] The remaining portions of the Jodhpur State Railway and the Bikaner State Railway became part of the Northern Division of Indian Railways in 1952.

Rolling stock

In 1936, the company owned 107 locomotives, 243 coaches and 2611 goods wagons.[5]

Classification

It was labeled as a Class I railway according to Indian Railway Classification System of 1926.[6] [7]

Conversion to broad gauge

The network was converted to broad gauge progressively in 2000s and 2010s.[8]

References

  1. https://archive.org/stream/BombayBarodaAndCentralIndiaRailwaySystem/Bombay_Baroda_And_Central_India_Railway_System#page/n194/mode/1up "Administration Report on Railways 1918" page185, pdf page 194
  2. http://www.gandhiserve.org/cwmg/VOL045.PDF Mahatma Gandhi, "Third-Class Travelling", Letters of Mahatma Gandhi, Vol 45, 14 February 1929 page 41
  3. http://oudl.osmania.ac.in/bitstream/handle/OUDL/11097/212975_Indian_Railways_1936_1937_Vol_I.pdf?sequence=2 “Report by the Railway Board on Indian Railways for 1836-37” page 118 pdf 150
  4. http://rajasthanhistory.com/gpage5.html “History of Rail in Rajasthan” by Dr Mohanlal Gupta, Department of Information and Public Relations, Government of Rajasthan, Jodhpur
  5. Book: World Survey of Foreign Railways . 1936 . Transportation Division, Bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, Washington D.C.. English . 215.
  6. Web site: Indian Railway Classification . 10 November 2022. en.
  7. Book: World Survey of Foreign Railways . 1936 . Transportation Division, Bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, Washington D.C.. English . 210–219.
  8. Web site: OVERVIEW OF JODHPUR DIVISION . 2018-04-30 .