Khagraghat Road railway station explained



Native Name Lang:bn
Style:Indian Railways
Type:Express train and Passenger train station
Address:Berhampore, Murshidabad district, West Bengal
Country:India
Owned:Indian Railways
Operator:Eastern Railway zone
Line:Barharwa–Azimganj–Katwa loop
Platform:4
Tracks:4
Accessible:yes
Parking:yes
Structure:Standard (on-ground station)
Former:East Indian Railway Company
Electrified:Yes
Map State:collapsed
Mapframe:yes
Mapframe-Caption:Interactive map

Khagraghat Road is a railway station on the Barharwa–Azimganj–Katwa loop in Baharampur city and is located in Murshidabad district in the Indian state of West Bengal. Khagraghat Road serves westside of Baharampur.

History

In 1913, the Hooghly–Katwa Railway constructed a broad gauge line from Bandel to Katwa, and the Barharwa–Azimganj–Katwa Railway constructed the broad gauge Barharwa–Azimganj–Katwa loop.[1] [2] With the construction of the Farakka Barrage and opening of the railway bridge in 1971, the railway communication picture of the area completely changed.

The rail distance between Berhampore and Sealdah is approximately 205 km.

Location

KhagraGhat Road railway station lies on the Western Bank of River Bhagirathi (Ganga) in the Radharghat locality of Berhampore city. The line passes through Howrah–Chandannagar-Chuchura-Bandel-Nabadwip-Katwa-Salar-Khagraghat-Azimganj. It is located in Murshidabad district, from Howrah railway station.It is one of the important railway stations in Murshidabad and is second important station in Berhampore(the other being Berhampore Court railway station) town which lies on the Eastern side of Bhagirathi river. People from maximum part of Southern Murshidabad district board from this station to reach North Bengal.

Major trains

Some of the important trains that runs from Khagraghat Road are:

Infrastructure

The railway station has currently 4 platforms.

Time table

External links

24.0894°N 88.2638°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Indian Railway History timeline. R. P.. Saxena. 20 November 2011. dead. https://archive.today/20120714085533/http://irse.bravehost.com/IRHTML.htm. 14 July 2012. dmy-all.
  2. Web site: The Chronology of Railway development in Eastern Indian . Rail India . 2 May 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080316015721/http://www.irfca.org/~mrinal/chronology.html . 16 March 2008 . dead .