Katwa railway station

Katwa
Kolkata Suburban Railway Junction Station
Location Station Bazar-Kachhari Road, Katwa, West Bengal
India
Coordinates 23°38′25″N 88°07′25″E / 23.6402°N 88.1235°E / 23.6402; 88.1235Coordinates: 23°38′25″N 88°07′25″E / 23.6402°N 88.1235°E / 23.6402; 88.1235
Elevation 21 metres (69 ft)
Owned by Indian Railways
Operated by Eastern Railway
Line(s) Bandel-Katwa line
Barharwa-Azimganj-Katwa loop
Burdwan Katwa Railway
(Closed for gauge conversion)
Ahmedpur Katwa Railway
(Closed for gauge conversion)
Platforms 5
Construction
Structure type Standard (on ground station)
Parking No
Bicycle facilities No
Other information
Status Functioning
Station code KWAE
Division(s) Howrah
History
Opened 1913
Electrified 1994-96 with 25 kV overhead line
Previous names East Indian Railway Company
Location
Location of Katwa railway station in West Bengal

Katwa is a Kolkata Suburban Railway Junction Station on the Bandel-Katwa line and the Barharwa-Azimganj-Katwa loop. It is located in Bardhaman district in the Indian state of West Bengal. It serves Katwa and the surrounding areas.

History

In 1913, the Hooghly–Katwa Railway constructed a 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) wide broad gauge line from Bandel to Katwa, and the Barharwa–Azimganj–Katwa Railway constructed the 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) wide broad gauge Barharwa-Azimganj-Katwa Loop Line.[1][2]

The 53 km (33 mi) long 762 mm (2 ft 6 in) wide narrow gauge Burdwan Katwa Railway was opened in 1915 as part of Mc Leod’s Light Railways, taken over by Eastern Railway in 1966 and closed in 2010.

The 53 km (33 mi) long 762 mm (2 ft 6 in) wide narrow gauge Ahmedpur Katwa Railway was opened in 1917 as part of Mc Leod’s Light Railways and taken over by Eastern Railway in 1966. It was closed in 2013 for conversion to 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) wide broad gauge and electrification.[3][4]

Gauge conversion

The track from Burdwan to Katwa is being converted to 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) wide broad gauge and electrified.[5][6] The 26 km Burdwan-Balgona section has been converted to broad gauge in 2013 and EMU train started on the section in February 2014.[7] Conversion of the remaining 26 km Balgona-Katwa section to broad gauge started in 2015.

The track from Katwa to Ahmedpur was closed in 2013 for conversion to 1,676 mm (5 ft 6 in) wide broad gauge but the conversion work has not been completed.

Electrification

Electrification of the Bandel-Katwa line was completed with 25 kV AC overhead system in 1994-96.[8]

Narrow gauge travel

Here is a description of narrow gauge travel (now closed):

The land west of the Hooghly, though still alluvial and flat, is not as wet as riverine Bengal. Its fields, though usually covered with close-cropped green grass, bear but one crop a year and lie open, instead of being divided by watercourses and frequent villages. Altogether they do nothing to prevent the BK Railway from following a straight surveyed line, or to stop its trains from traveling at an even pace marked by the measured clunking of four-wheeled carriages on rail joints. My train from Burdwan stopped regularly, sometimes to shunt or to cross a southbound service. At each station the passenger load increased, so that after two stops the man opposite had to give up sleeping on the seat, and after several more there were fowls underfoot and small boys and women sitting on the floor and young men hanging on while standing on the footboards. So we rounded the curve into Katwa – doors open, dhotis flapping, all bound for Katwa market.

A secondary main line of the Eastern Railway also passes through Katwa, the headquarters of the two narrow gauge lines being alongside its station. Their loco shed had several more Bagnalls and, among others, a 0-6-0 Simplex or two. In company days each engine was owned by the BK or AK but used on either line – I dare say it all came out in the accounts. Another pleasing feature of McLeod’s accountancy was that the second class fare was only 20% above the third and the first that much again, instead of the 1:2 ratio preferred by the government. This meant that I could afford second class to Ahmadpur – the seedy red cushion on the seat was not worth it, but the lessened crowd was. This train left from No. 2 road of McLeod’s station (never mind that it had no platform) and wasted no time in making arrangements to run third-rail along the East Indian broad gauge for the first few miles out from Katwa, in order to share a bridge over one of the sluggish anabranches that meandered over the plain. Once AK was on its independent way, the regular jolting of the carriages combined with the monotonous scenery to induce sleepiness in all the passengers and perhaps the train itself. Matters were not helped by the Bengal midday, with the sunlight diffused by a high mist and yet stifling us with heat.[9]

References

  1. R.P.Saxena. "Indian Railway History timeline". Retrieved 20 November 2011.
  2. "The Chronology of Railway development in Eastern Indian". railindia. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  3. "Ahmedpur-Katwa_Railway". fibis. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  4. Chakraborty, Snehamoy. "Emotions pasted – One last run". The Telegraph, 14 January 2013. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  5. "Burdwan-Katwa Railway". fibis. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  6. Siddiqui, Kanchan. "Burdwan bids adieu to vintage narrow gauge trains". The Statesman, 14 April 2010. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  7. http://epaper.timesofindia.com/Repository/getimage.dll?path=TOIKM/2014/02/09/19/Img/Ad0191102.png
  8. "History of Electrification". IRFCA. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
  9. Manning, Ian. "From Bengal towards Nagpur". The Katwa Railways. IRFCA. Retrieved 2 May 2013.
Preceding station   Indian Railway   Following station
Dainhat
Eastern Railway zone
Nabagram Kakurhati
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