Line openings The of line from Howrah to Benares were opened to: •
Hooghly () for passenger traffic on 15 August 1854. More than 3000 applications were received from people wanting to ride in the first train in eastern India. The first train ran to full capacity. The train left Howrah station at 8:30 a.m. and reached Hooghly in 91 minutes. It had three first-class and two second-class coaches. It also had three trucks for third-class passengers and a brakevan for the guard. All of these were built in India, because the ship ferrying the original coaches from England had unfortunately met with natural disaster on the high seas and consequently sank. The locomotive however was imported, though not without its own difficulties. The ship bringing the locomotive had initially, due to an error, sailed to Australia, and the engine had to be shipped back to India. During the first 16 weeks, the company was delighted to carry 109,634 passengers: 83,118 third class, 21,005 second class, and 5511 first class. The gross earnings, including the receipts of a few tons of merchandise were £6793. •
Pundooah on 1 September 1854. •
Burdwan in February 1855. •
Raniganj with its coalfields on 3 February 1855. In 1855, 617,281 passengers were carried and contracts made to carry 100,000 tons of coal from the Raniganj colliery to Howrah. •
Adjai in October 1858. •
Rajmahal (on the River
Ganges) in October 1859. The first train ran from Howrah to Rajmahal via
Khana (now known as the
Sahibganj Loop) on 4 July 1860. 1,388,714 passengers were carried in 1859. •
Bhagalpur in 1861. • The loop from Khana Junction to Kiul via Jamalpur, including the
Monghyr branch in February 1862. In the same year the line reached
Mughal Sarai via the present line beyond Kiul. The sections from
Luckee Sarai to
Danapore and Danapore to Mughal Sarai were completed in the meantime. •
Son River. George Turnbull inspected the
Son bridge and judged it complete on 4 November 1862. • Across the River Ganges from
Benares in December 1862. Including branch lines this totalled .
Bridges, tunnel and cholera The most significant bridge was the
girder bridge over the Son River (then known in English as the Soane River) which at the time was understood to be the second longest in the world. Other significant bridges were the girder bridges over the
Kiul and
Hullohur rivers and the masonry bridge over the
Adjai. The
Monghyr tunnel was a challenge. In late 1859, a horrific
cholera epidemic in the Rajmahal district killed some 4000 labourers and many of the British engineers.
Celebrations on completion On 5 February 1863, a special train from
Howrah took George Turnbull, the
Viceroy Lord Elgin, Lt Governor
Sir Cecil Beadon and others over two days to Benares inspecting the line on the way. They stopped the first night at
Jamalpur near
Monghyr. They alighted at the
Son bridge and inspected it. In Benares there was a
durbar on 7 February to celebrate the building of the railway and particularly the bridging of the
Son river, the largest tributary of the Ganges. The Chief Engineer responsible for all this construction from 1851 to 1862 was
George Turnbull who was acclaimed in the Indian
Official Gazette of 7 February 1863 paragraph 5 as the
"First railway engineer of India".
Criticisms Some historians like
Irfan Habib argue that because the contracts signed between East India Company and EIR in 1849 guaranteed 5% return on all capital invested, initially there was no inducement for economy or for employing Indians instead of high-paid Europeans (but initially, there were only experienced British railway civil engineers and no Indian ones). EIR was stated in 1867 to have spent as much as Rs 300,000 on each mile of railway, the construction described by a former Finance Member in India as
the most extravagant works ever undertaken. ==Later 19th-century developments==