Asansol–Patna section


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The Asansol–Patna section is a railway line connecting Asansol in the Indian state of West Bengal and Patna in Bihar. The 331 km (206 mi) line passes through the fringe areas of West Bengal, a portion of Santhal Parganas in Jharkhand and the Gangetic Plain in Bihar.

Asansol–Patna section

Kiul Junction is an important railway station at Asansol–Patna section

Overview
StatusOperational
OwnerIndian Railways
LocaleWest Bengal, Jharkhand, Bihar
Termini
Service
Operator(s)Eastern Railway, East Central Railway
History
Opened1871
Technical
Line length331 km (206 mi)
Number of tracks2
Track gauge5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm) broad gauge
Electrification25 kV 50 Hz AC OHLE in 1960–61 and during 1994–95 and 2000–01
Operating speedup to 130 km/h

Route map

km

to
Patna–Mughalsarai section
of Howrah–Delhi main line

to Patna–Gaya line

331

Patna Junction

329

Rajendra Nagar Terminal

NH19-IN.svg NH 19

325

Gulzarbagh

322

Patna Sahib

Patna Ghat

319

Deedarganj

315

Banka Ghat

Punpun River

SH4-IN jct.svg SH 4

309

Fatuha Junction

to Fatuha–Tilaiya line

307

Buddhdevchak Yadav Nagar

306

Harasbigha

301

Khusropur

297

Manjhauligram (Halt)

295

Salimpur

293

Karauta

291

Teka Bigha (Halt)

286

Bakhtiyarpur Junction

to Bakhtiyarpur–Tilaiya line

280

Jai Prakash Mahuli

277

Athmal Gola

274

Achuara

268

Barh

266

Sabari (Halt)

Barh Super Thermal Power Station
(NTPC Limited)

262

Railey (Halt)

260

Lemuabad

258

Punarakh

255

Memrakhabad

253

Kanhaipur

249

Mor

247

Barhapur (Halt)

244

Shivnar (Halt)

Bharat Wagon and Engineering

242

Mokama Junction

238

Auta (Halt)

NH31-IN.svg NH 31

237

Tall

to Mokama–Barauni section

234

Hathidah Junction

230

Rampur Dumra

224

Barhiya

222

Ganga Sahay

220

Dumri (Halt)

217

Dhurani Jwas (Halt)

215

Mankatha

to Gaya–Kiul line

209

Lakhisarai Junction

Kiul River

208

Kiul Junction

to Sahibganj loop

206

Mahesh Leta (Halt)

205

Lakhochak (Halt)

204

Bansipur

203

Balaharpur (Halt)

201

Manakpur

198

Bhalui

191

Kunder (Halt)

SH72-IN jct.svg SH 72

181

Jamui

178

Chaura

166

Gidhaur

162

Dadpur

155

Jhajha

151

Rajla

147

Narganjo (Halt)

142

Ghorparan

136

Simultala

133

Telwa Bazar

Bihar
Jharkhand
border

126

Lahabon

118

Tulsitanr

Dahwa River

NH333-IN.svg NH 333

111

Jasidih Junction

to Jasidih–Dumka–Rampurhat line

104

Kumrabad Rohini

Ajay River

99

Sankarpur

93

Mathurapur

87

Nawapatra

Pathrol River

to Madhupur–Giridih–Koderma line

82

Madhupur Junction

72

Joramow

Jayanti River

66

Madankata

57

Vidyasagar

Mihijam–Madhupur Road

48

Kaseetar

Mihijam–Madhupur Road

39

Jamtara

Mihijam–Madhupur Road

Mihijam–Madhupur Road

30

Bodma

25

Chittaranjan

Jharkhand
West Bengal
border

Asansol–Chittaranjan Road

Chittaranjan Locomotive Works

21

Rupnarayanpur

Damgoria Colliery

13

Salanpur

Bonjemahari Colliery

NH2-IN.svg NH 2

to
Asansol–Gaya section
of Howrah–Gaya–Delhi line

9

Sitarampur

5

Barachak

to Asansol–Tatanagar–Kharagpur line

0

Asansol Junction

Bardhaman–Asansol section

The first rail track between Howrah and Delhi was via what was later named as Sahibganj loop and the first through train on the route was run in 1864. The Kiul–Patna sector was ready around 1862. A "shorter main line" connecting Raniganj and Kiul Junction was in position in 1871 and the opening of the Grand Chord in 1907 shortened the distance from Howrah to Delhi even further.[1][2][3]

The Asansol–Sitarampur sector was electrified in 1960–61 and the rest of the Asansol–Patna section was electrified during the period 1994–95 to 2000–2001. Sector-wise progress was as follows: Sitarampur–Chittaranjan 1994–95, Chittaranjan–Jamtara 1995–96, Jamtara–Jasidih 1996–97, Jasidih–Narganjo 1997–98, Narganjo–Jhajha 1998–99, Jhajha–Kiul in 1997–98, Kiul–Mankatha 1999–2000, Mankatha–Barhaiya 2000–01, Barhaiya–Mokama 1999–2000 Mokama–Fatuha 1998–99, Fatuha–Danapur 1999–2000.[4]

The entire Sitarampur–Patna–Mughalsarai line is classified as "B Class" line, where trains can run at speeds up to 130 km/h.[5]

Patna and Asansol, on this line, are amongst the top hundred booking stations of Indian Railway.[6]

Chittaranjan Locomotive Works, one of the largest electric locomotive manufacturers in the world, is located on this line. Initially started for manufacturing steam locomotives, it went into production on 26 January 1950, the day when India became a republic. It now produces AC and DC locomotives and accessories.[7]

Asansol is home to the oldest electric loco shed of Indian Railways. It houses WAG-5 and WAM-4 electric locomotives.[8]

Railway reorganisation

edit

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.[9] East Central Railway was created in 1996–97.[10]

  1. ^ Indian Railway History Time line by R. P. Saxena
  2. ^ "IR History: Early days I (1832–1869)". IRFCA. Retrieved 28 March 2014.
  3. ^ "IR History: Early days II (1870–1899)". Retrieved 28 March 2014.
  4. ^ "History of Electrification". IRFCA. Retrieved 28 March 2014.
  5. ^ "Permanent Way". Track Classifications. Retrieved 28 March 2014.
  6. ^ "Indian Railways Passenger Reservation Enquiry". Availability in trains for Top 100 Booking Stations of Indian Railways. IRFCA. Archived from the original on 10 May 2014. Retrieved 28 March 2014.
  7. ^ "Chittaranjan Locomotive Works". Indian Railwaya. Archived from the original on 19 March 2014. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  8. ^ "Sheds and Workshops". IRFCA. Retrieved 26 March 2014.
  9. ^ "Geography – Railway Zones". IRFCA. Retrieved 28 March 2014.
  10. ^ "East Central Railway". ECR. Retrieved 28 March 2014.

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