Northeast Frontier Railway zone explained

Railroad Name:Northeast Frontier Railway
Logo Filename:File:The logo of Northeast Frontier Railway (cropped).jpg
System Map:Indianrailwayzones-numbered.png
Locale:Assam, West Bengal, Nagaland, Tripura, Sikkim, Manipur, Mizoram, Arunachal Pradesh, Meghalaya, Bihar
Predecessor Line:North Eastern Railway
Gauge:Broad gauge
Narrow gauge
Old Gauge:Metre gauge
Hq City:Maligaon, Guwahati

The Northeast Frontier Railway (abbreviated NFR) is one of the 19 railway zones of the Indian Railways. It is headquartered in Maligaon, Guwahati in the state of Assam, and responsible for operation and expansion of rail network all across Northeastern states and some districts of eastern Bihar and northern West Bengal.

Divisions

Northeast Frontier Railway is divided into 5 divisions:

Each of these divisions is headed by a Divisional Railway Manager, a Senior Administrative Grade officer of the rank of Joint Secretary to Government of India.The departmental setup at headquarters level and divisional setup in the field assists the General Manager in running the railways. Various departments namely engineering, mechanical, electrical, signal & telecom, operations, commercial, safety, accounts, security, personal and medical are headed by a Senior Administrative Grade / Higher Administrative Grade officer, provide technical and operational support to the divisions in train operations.

History

In 1881, the Assam Railway and Trading Company opened a metre gauge line 65km (40miles) long from Dibrugarh to Makum. This company later started the first passenger train in Assam by the name of Dibru–Sadiya Railway.The North Eastern Railway was formed on 14 April 1952 by amalgamating two railway systems: the Assam Railway and Oudh and Tirhut Railway. Later, it was bifurcated into two railway zones on 15 January 1958, the North Eastern Railway and the Northeast Frontier Railway.[1] to better serve the needs of the northeastern states.

Operational area

The area of Northeast Frontier Railway operations is characterized by exceptional beauty and at the same time by some of the most arduous terrain. This difficult terrain limits the rail network expansion, and the only state with a decent rail network is Assam. The network is not broad gauge in many parts and the rail lines are antiquated with speeds at some sections being limited to a maximum of 30km/h. Before the Saraighat Bridge was constructed, passengers had to get down on the Amingaon side of the Brahmaputra and take a ferry across to Pandu Junction from where they could resume their journey.The majority of the tracks have been converted to BG and electrification is in process starting from Katihar till Guwahati.

Major sections

A few of the major sections under the Northeast Frontier Railway zone are:

Darjeeling Himalayan Railway

See main article: Darjeeling Himalayan Railway. The Darjeeling Himalayan Railway is maintained and governed under the responsibility of Katihar division. It ascends from New Jalpaiguri; the climb begins at Sukna, continues uninterruptedly to Ghum (7407feet) and descends the final to Darjeeling. After independence, India's partition resulted in the isolation of the Northeast region. Consequently, the DHR was merged into Assam Railways, it was closed for the construction of the Assam–Bengal link line and one of its extension lines to Kishanganj was converted to metre gauge. DHR's other extension line to Kalimpong was washed away due to floods. On reopening, the DHR was merged with North Eastern Railway in 1952 and later into Northeast Frontier Railway in 1958.

The DHR achieved worldwide fame for many reasons such as:

An interest in DHR all along has ensured that it continues to operate notwithstanding very heavy losses. The steam locomotive is an icon of this Railway. Tindharia workshop has kept 13 locomotives surviving, some of which are over 100 years old and the youngest is about 70 years old.

Timeline of DHR:

Major Trains

Number Train Name Starting Station Terminating Station
20503/20504 20505/20506Dibrugarh Rajdhani ExpressDibrugarhNew Delhi
22503/22504Dibrugarh–Kanyakumari Vivek ExpressDibrugarhKanyakumari
15909/15910Avadh Assam ExpressDibrugarhLalgarh
15657/15658Brahmaputra MailKamakhyaOld Delhi
20501/20502Agartala Tejas Rajdhani ExpressAgartalaAnand Vihar Terminal
12504/12503Agartala–SMVT Bengaluru Humsafar ExpressAgartalaSMVT Bengaluru Terminal
15959/15960 15961/15962Kamrup ExpressDibrugarhHowrah
12513/12514Silchar–Secunderabad ExpressSilcharSecunderabad
12519/12520Lokmanya Tilak Terminus–Agartala AC ExpressAgartalaLokmanya Tilak Terminus
12507/12508Aronai ExpressThiruvananthapuramSilchar
12509/12510Guwahati-SMVT Bengaluru Superfast ExpressGuwahatiSMVT Bengaluru
15903/15904Dibrugarh-Chandigarh ExpressDibrugarhChandigarh
15933/15934New Tinsukia–Amritsar ExpressNew TinsukiaAmritsar
15645/15646Lokmanya Tilak Terminus–Dibrugarh ExpressDibrugarhLokmanya Tilak Terminus
15635/15636Dwarka ExpressGuwahatiOkha
15653/15654Amarnath ExpressGuwahatiJammu Tawi
15655/15656Kamakhya–Shri Mata Vaishno Devi Katra ExpressGuwahatiShri Mata Vaishno Devi Katra
22511/22512Kamakhya–Lokmanya Tilak Terminus Karmabhoomi ExpressKamakhyaLokmanya Tilak Terminus
12505/12506North East ExpressKamakhyaAnand Vihar Terminal
15667/15668Kamakhya–Gandhidham Superfast ExpressKamakhyaGandhidham
15655/15656New Tinsukia–SMVT Bengaluru Superfast ExpressNew TinsukiaSMVT Bengaluru
15929/15930New Tinsukia–Tambaram ExpressNew TinsukiaTambaram

Loco sheds

Sicklines & Pitlines

Major stations

These are the major railway station which have large numbers of passenger frequencies and stoppages of trains in the zone.

Notes and References

  1. Rao, M.A. (1988). Indian Railways, New Delhi: National Book Trust, pp.42-4