The
Howrah–Allahabad–Mumbai line, a joint effort of
Great Indian Peninsula Railway and
East Indian Railway Company came up in 1870. The
Bengal Nagpur Railway was formed in 1887 for the purpose of upgrading the
Nagpur Chhattisgarh Railway and then extending it via
Bilaspur to
Asansol, in order to develop a shorter Howrah–Mumbai route than the one via Allahabad. The Bengal Nagpur Railway main line from Nagpur to , on the
Howrah–Delhi main line, was opened for goods traffic on 1 February 1891. However, it was only after
Kharagpur was linked from the west and the south that it was connected to Howrah in 1900. The closing years of the 19th century and the opening years of the 20th century were momentous for the area. 800 miles of East Coast Railway was built and opened for traffic between 1893 and 1896. The most vital sections of Bengal Nagpur Railway, Sini–Kharagpur–Kolaghat and Kharagpur–Cuttack, were opened to traffic in 1898–99. The Purulia–Ranchi branch was opened for traffic on 15 November 1907. BNR lines were extended to Gomoh, on EIR's main line, in 1907. The Mohuda–Chandrapura branch line was opened in 1913.
Railway reorganization The
Bengal Nagpur Railway was nationalized in 1944. In 1955,
South Eastern Railway was carved out of Eastern Railway. It comprised lines mostly operated by BNR earlier. ==Steel plants and freight traffic==