Formation The Eastern Bengal Railway Company was incorporated by the
Eastern Bengal Railway Act 1857 (
20 & 21 Vict. c. clix) of the
Parliament of the United Kingdom, with the objective of introduction of railway transport in eastern
Bengal and even to move into
Burma. The operational area of Eastern Bengal Railway was to be the east bank of the
Hooghly River, while
East Indian Railway Company operated on the west bank of the river.
Rolling stock By the end of 1877 the company owned 43 steam locomotives, 180 coaches and 691 goods wagons. By 1936, the rolling stock had increased to 327 locomotives, 3 steam railcars, 1560 coaches and 13.781 freight wagons.
Classification It was labeled as a Class I railway according to the
Indian Railway Classification System of 1926.
Subsequent developments The EBR was taken over by the Government of India by the '''''' (
47 & 48 Vict. c. cciv) and renamed the Eastern Bengal State Railway. The Calcutta and South-Eastern Railway (CSER) was formed in 1859 to connect
Calcutta with on the
Matla River. It constructed and completed the long line on 15 May 1863. The Calcutta and South-Eastern Railway was merged into the Eastern Bengal State Railway in 1887. In 1915, it reverted to its old name Eastern Bengal Railway. In 1941, the
Bengal Dooars Railway was merged into Eastern Bengal Railway. In 1942, the Government of India merged
Assam Bengal Railway with Eastern Bengal Railway to create
Bengal and Assam Railway.
Successors After the
partition of India in 1947 the broad-gauge portion of the Bengal and Assam Railway, lying in
India was added to the
East Indian Railway and the metre-gauge portion became the Assam Railway. On 14 April 1952, the Assam Railway and the
Oudh and Tirhut Railway were amalgamated to form the
North Eastern Railway. On the same day, the reorganized Sealdah division of the erstwhile Bengal Assam Railway (which was added to the East Indian Railway earlier) was amalgamated with the
Eastern Railway. With the formation of the
Northeast Frontier Railway on 15 January 1958, the portions of the erstwhile Eastern Bengal Railway that were in Assam and the Indian portion of North Bengal, came under its jurisdiction. The portion of the system which fell within the boundary of erstwhile East Pakistan was named as Eastern Bengal Railway. On 1 February 1961, the Eastern Bengal Railway was renamed as the Pakistan Railway and in 1962 it became the
Pakistan Eastern Railway. With the emergence of Bangladesh, it became the
Bangladesh Railway. == Lines ==