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Article 1 

India's biggest ever steam locomotive revived

The Beyer-Garratt restoration project 2006  

By Rajendra Aklekar ©

THIS engine can alone pull the weight of a thousand elephants and now it’s back in action. India’s biggest
locomotive ever – the Beyer Garrat – is coming back to life. The locomotive is being restored by the South
Eastern Railway and they expect to have an inaugural run in October between Shalimar and Mecheda sections of Kharagpur division of the railway line.

Sources said the N-class Beyer Garrat were the locomotive of its kind to run anywhere in the world
and have the largest water capacity of any Garratt ever manufactured about 10,000 gallons.

“The engine was imported from Beyer, Peacock and Company locomotive builders based in Gorton, East
Manchester in 1929 by the Bengal Nagpur Railway and remained in service till 1969. The N-Class also holds the distinction of being the largest railway locomotive to run in India,” Subhasis Ganguly, SE
Railway’s Chief Heritage Officer told Rajendra Aklekar in an interview.

The Bengal Nagpur Railway had several BG Garratts, of classes P (4-8-2+2-8-4), N (4-8-0+0-8-4), and MN etc. These were quite powerful, and could haul 2400-ton loads on 1:100 gradients without any problem.

“The actual restoration has been carried out under the guidance of AK Behara, chief works manager
atKharagpur along with a retired railway official S Rangaswamy and skilled artisans from the workshop.
Though the actual restoration has taken one year, the entire project, including research and gathering
the right kind of people, has taken two years. There are more than 50 persons involved in the project, but
it is difficult to estimate the exact cost as it was done as a side activity. This is one of the only three
such surviving locos in India,” he added.

Ganguly, who has researched and conceptualised the concept and revived the locomotive, said originally
used on coal traffic between Chakradharpur and Jharsuguda, Anara to Tatanagar and also to Asansol,
they were last used in 1970-71 hauling 2,400 ton iron ore trains from Dallirajhra to Bhilai.

With their heavy axle load, the ‘N’ class were restricted to the main lines and branches laid with
90lb rail, but their ability to haul up to 2400 tons up a 1 in 100 gradient, and to reach maximum speeds of
45mph, set a standard of performance which could be well appreciated on certain more lightly laid
branches.

Since the section is now electrified, and the engine, once out of use, was sent to Kharagpur. “The Garratt
is a type of articulated steam locomotive. This means that unlike a conventional locomotive, where the whole machine is carried on a single set of frames, a Garratt has three separate frames,” he added.

The name "Garratt" derives from the engineer Herbert William Garratt, a British locomotive engineer, who
devised the type, and developed it in association with the Manchester firm of Beyer Peacock, which built most of the Garratts used around the world.

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Article 2

World War I loco goes to UK
Rajendra Aklekar, Hindustan Times, New Delhi and Mumbai

THE TIGER is set to roar again. The narrow gauge steam locomotive — used in World War I and extensively used in India for more than 50 years — is now ready to run again in UK, this time giving heritage rides to enthusiasts. It has been restored at a cost of more than £50,000.

“This is one of the last living links of the momentous First World War and we are trying to get it restored to its working order and save it for a long, long time. We took trial runs on August 1 and it is doing fine,” Mervyn Leah, trustee of the Baldwin Restoration Project Charity, a part of the Greensands Railway Museum Trust, Bedfordshire, told the Hindustan Times.

This world war veteran engine, classified as War Department Light Railway No 778, was built in 1917 by the Baldwin Locomotive Works, Philadelphia, USA (original number 44656). It was one of the 495 tank-engines built by Baldwin, for use on the vast network of 2ft (610mm) gauge lines laid to supply the World War 1 battlefields, in northern France, with food, ordnance and manpower.

After the war, it was one of the 50 engines exported to India. In India, it was used by the North Western Railways — becoming No 16 in their fleet. It was sold to a dealer in 1933, and later worked on the Daraula Light Railway. Fifty years later, it was withdrawn from service at its final home in India — the Upper India Sugar Mills, Khatauli, Uttar Pradesh — where it was christened as Tiger and sent to England for preservation.

Initially at the Chalk Pits Museum, Amberley, Sussex, it is now based at the Leighton Buzzard Railway, Bedfordshire, where the restoration project is taking place.

“The loco is almost back in working order, and could be hauling trains in 2007,” Leah said. In fact, the loco was brought to Leah's Leighton Buzzard Railway (LBR) in 1994 and is an active affiliate in the restoration project. The LBR already runs two restored Indian locos, including one from the Matheran line.

Asked what was the kind of money involved in restoration, sources said the funds include the Heritage Lottery Fund award of £50,000, generous financial support from enthusiasts that got the project off the ground, and the assistance provided, in both money and kind. “We require more funds and those willing to help will be offered an invitation to the official launch, a free ticket for the first train it hauls, and a subsequent footplate ride,” he added.

LBR can be reached at www.buzzrail.co.uk

Two more models in the vintage fleet

Loco number:
740
Date: 1907
Builder: Orenstein & Koppel, Berlin, Germany (Works No 2343)
Run on: Matheran Light Railway, Maharashtra
Profile:  No 740 is the biggest locomotive ever to have run on the Leighton Buzzard Railway, weighing 18 tonnes. It was built for the Matheran Light Railway, which serves the hill station of Matheran, in Maharashtra, India. To combine the power needed to climb the steep gradients, with the ability to get round sharp curves, No 740 was built with radial axles, which allow the driving wheels to “steer” round corners.

Loco name: Rishra
Date: 1921
Builder: Baguley Cars, Burton-onTrent, England (Works No. 2007)
Run on: Calcutta Corporation line, West Bengal
Profile: This tiny machine is the only known survivor of the small number of steam engines built by Baguley, who were much better known for their diesel locomotives and railcars. Supplied to Calcutta Corporation, India, it shunted coal wagons at a water pumping station.  -- Rajendra Aklekar (c) 2006, Mumbai.

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Article 3

Old electrics will soon be history
By Rajendra Aklekar

AFTER steam, it's time for the old electric engines to become redundant. Exactly eighty years after they were introduced, increasingly, electric locomotives running on DC traction are becoming rare by the day.

AFTER steam, it's time for the old electric engines to become redundant. Exactly eighty years after they were introduced, increasingly, electric locomotives running on DC traction are becoming rare by the day.

From December 26, 2005 as many as 43 of this type of engine, stopped running on the Kasara-Igatpuri route as the line switches on to AC traction.

"The WCG class of engines which were used all these years to pull trains, would not be able to run on the line. The engines, also called bankers among rail staff, were used to push trains from behind while climbing the steep Kasara-Igatpuri ghats," says a senior driver who has driven the locos for more than five years says.

"At times there were two of these engines pushing a train on difficult climbs. Soon, all this will just remain as memories as half the engines would be shifted to the Karjat-Lonavala section and remaining either scrapped or transferred," a senior official said.

A section of railway fans is contemplating trying to get the WCG class of engines preserved. "WCG engines have pulled all the trains -- from superfast Indyrani Express to goods trains and also performed banking duties on all trains to and from Mumbai. With this class becoming rare, virtually an old technology will vanish. They should be preserved in a running condition at least at the National Railway Museum," IS Anand, a resident of Chembur and a member of World Electric Locos Forum told HT.

Electric railways were introduced in India on Feb 3, 1925 between Kurla and VT with DC traction. In the 1950s, the railways shifted to AC traction, however, sections in Mumbai continue to run on obsolete DC power and the railways is now in the process of changing them. CR and WR has also bought several AC-DC local train rakes compatible for both the tractions. -- Rajendra Aklekar (c) 2006, Mumbai.

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Article 4 

Indian Railways and the local script

A research paper by Rajendra Aklekar

Indian Railways. It truly reflects India! It is complex, sometimes unwieldy and unmanageable, and yet full of life. It prospers against all odds! It is not just a transport organization. It is a great social institution. So many things may go wrong in the country, but the Indian Railways somehow manages to keep its head up above the waters, and it always runs the trains, serving millions of people everyday! Indian Railways is patient with and sad about those who try to bring damage to its network of passenger and goods trains, hoping that these people one day will repent for their sins and recognize the merit of the institution that has served the nation with great distinction.

Language communication on Indian Railways

This institution of merit has evolved very interesting language policies since its inception. Since the railways are a public transport, serving people from different regional, ethnic, and linguistic groups, the policy of the organization has been geared towards communicating with its passengers using their language and script. Advertisements, announcements, information signs, cautioning remarks within the compartments, and helpful suggestions about the use of the toilet facilities, and so many other areas of contact within and outside the train and in the railway station have been presented in the dominant language and script of the region. The ultimate goal is to help its passengers to have a pleasant journey! In a country where literacy has been low for generations, the Indian Railways chose to give the essential information using visuals as well.

Indian script in Indian Railways
The answer to the question "When was Indian script used first on the Indian Railways?" is difficult but not impossible to find. A quick study done on the subject by me has revealed some interesting facts. This study is a part of the comprehensive research I have undertaken on the Great Indian Peninsula Railway. The facts mentioned here are some quick references on the use of India script in the Indian Railways, culled together for the Indian Railways 150th Anniversary Year celebrations.

The first Indian train
The first train started running on the Indian soil on 16 April, 1853. It had 14 carriages and three engines - Sindh, Sahib, and Sultan. The opening of the railway in the East was a major occasion and the day was declared as a public holiday in the city of Bombay. 1853, just four years ahead of the First War of Independence, otherwise called the Sepoy Mutiny!

Preparations for this great event might have been done on a grand scale, and special attention might have been devoted to the decoration and embellishment of the locomotives and its carriages. And if we go by the conventions and the traditional practices of the day, I have no doubt that some pujas to the engines, to the railroad, and other equipment might have been performed by the Indian people associated with the project.


The people’s language

It can be safely stated that the public notices and general instructions put up in the carriages had to be in the language the people understood.

Hence, the strongest possibility is that the carriages of the first train in India must have had the scripts of Marathi and Urdu, besides English, for the signboards. There is a reason for that.


Marathi, being the local language of Bombay, was given preference. Since Hindi, as it is today, was not yet evolved then (1853), the spoken language used then was Hindoostani. The scripts of Persian and Urdu had had been widely written in upper India. But the British government in India had already laid down a policy to give preference to the local vernacular language.


"Yes," says M. S. Thirumalai, the editor of the online monthly journal Language in India, http://www.languageinindia.com//. "I can only guess that the system of writing in the Indian vernacular must have been introduced right from the beginning when the first train started moving from Bombay to Thane."


Thirumalai says, in his personal communication, that the then British India language policy was to use the Indian vernacular, (they used Persian only for a brief period). The replacement of the Perso-Arabic script for writing Hindi was done even before the first Indian War of Independence in 1857. Since Marathi was being written in the local script, the first train in India, I assume, must have had the Indian vernacular script.”

“Marathi was written in Modi script at that time. Devnagari script for Marathi was adopted after several decades of that date. This means that even assuming that the first train's coaches had words or sentences written in Marathi, the script was not Devnagari as we call it today,” adds another expert Ravindra Rao.


With the introduction of the competitive examinations for the civil services in 1853, and even earlier, the British Raj had introduced an incentive scheme for the officers of the civil services to learn and use Indian languages in the British Raj administration. The use of the Indian vernaculars in government documents and properties had been encouraged by the British rulers.


Proof in government records
What Mr. Thirumalai says seems correct. Further research on the subject by me has more or less proven the fact that the local language was, indeed, used in one of the references to the earliest inscriptions found in the railway infrastructure in Bombay.

According to the Gazetteer of Bombay City and Island, published in 1909 by the executive editor and secretary of the gazetteer department of the state government of Maharashtra, the Frere bridge - named after the Governor of Bombay, Sir Bartle Frere, and built by the Bombay Baroda and Central India Railway (BB&CI) in 1866 at Grant Road, has an inscription on the bridge in English, Marathi, and Gujarati.


Similar is the case with the Kennedy Bridge (English, Marathi, and Gujarati), the Wodehouse bridge (English and Marathi), and the French bridge (English, Marathi, and Gujarati). Gujarati was prominently used on the BB&CI Railway as the third language because the line had come down from Surat to Bombay. The common sense approach of the Indian Railways to the linguistic complexity of the country is evidenced in this early record.


The Great Indian Peninsula (GIP) Railway, however, used Urdu as the third language on its system as its script was readily available.

More proof
The practice of using English, Marathi, and Urdu did continue for some period. About seventy years later, the official picture released by the Central Railway's Chief Public Relations Department showing the crowd awaiting at Kurla station for the country's first electric train has the name of the station painted in three languages - English, Marathi, and Urdu.


So, we can safely conclude that the GIP Railway used English, Marathi, and Urdu as its first, second, and third language respectively. After the Constitution of India was formed in 1950, the railways decided to use English, Hindi, and the local language. Since the same train may pass through several states, the carriages always had more than the minimum two languages. The notices always carried the main languages of the states through which the trains ran.

Prominent Hindi terms used on Indian Railways

I give below a list of some Hindi terms that are commonly used on the Indian Railways. Satish Pai, the moderator of the Indian Railways Fans Club Association mailing list has taken some effort to gather this list. Although these are classified here as Hindi terms, some (not all) of these are widely used or understood in many areas of India.

·        'Dibba,' a passenger car (coach).

·        'Maal Gaadi,' a freight (goods) train

·        'Patri,' the tracks

·        'Karshan,' electric traction

·        'Kaka,' (Bombay division) a driver

·        'Aagwalah,' (also anglicized as "Augwala"), literally fireman, but generally used for the assistant driver even today.

·        'Chhavni,' Cantonment

·        'Chhoti rel,' (colloquial) MG or NG (literally, "small rail")

·        'Baramasi,' permanent-way worker or gangman. (Literally this means '12-month-er', referring to the nature of gangman's job, which requires going out at all times, and in all kinds of conditions.)

·        'Bada-fast,' is a mixed-language term; 'bada, 'big in Hindi.

·        The following are some of the "official terms" used in Hindi translations by the Indian Railways.

·        'Shayan yaan,' sleeper coach

·        'Paryatan yaan,' tourist coach

·        'Vatanukool,' air-conditioned

·        'Vatanukool kursi yaan,' AC Chair Car

·        'Vatanukool shayan yaan,' AC Sleeper Car

·        'Rasoi yaan,' pantry car

·        'Upari upaskar,' pantograph

·        'Chalak,' driver

·        'Sahachalak,' assistant driver

·        'Parichalak,' guard (?)

·        'Aaybhaar,' tare weight

·        'Mandal,' division

·        'Samay saarani' timetable

·        'Khekda' = crab, affectionate name for the WCG-1 locos; see the entry above on 'crocodiles'. There are quite a few terms from other Indian languages also used in the terminology used by the Indian Railways.


To conclude

Since 16 April, 1853, the Indian Railways have come a long way. The Indian Railways today rank as the largest rail network in Asia and the world's second largest under one management. Indian scripts have now firmly established itself on the railways front --- so firm that there's also a Rajbhasa department in the Indian Railways.


Unfortunately, the Indian linguists have not done any serious research on the use of Indian languages in the Indian Railways. More than any other wing of the government, the Indian Railways have been receptive to the communication needs of its patrons. It is important to study the language policies adopted by the Indian Railways because these policies could provide some useful models for language use in India. The syntax used in the linguistic styles used by the Indian Railways needs to be studied in depth. Likewise the study of the technical terms used in the loco sheds would throw light on the dynamic nature of the coinage of technical terms by the railway personnel.

 

(Rajendra Aklekar is a Mumbai-based journalist and an amateur railway historian privately involved in researching the Great Indian Peninsula Railway (GIPR), the pioneering railway in Asia, and has been documenting and archiving GIPR remains in Bombay.)