The first train in India travelled from in
Bombay to
Tannah (current Thane) on 16 April 1853. By May 1854,
Great Indian Peninsula Railway's Bombay–Tannah line was extended to
Callian (current Kalyan). station was set up in 1860 and in 1867 the GIPR branch line was extended to . While the entire Mumbai–Nagpur line was
broad gauge, the next part from Nagpur to Rajnandgaon was
metre gauge. The
Nagpur Chhattisgarh Railway started construction of the Nagpur–Rajnandgaon section in 1878, after surveys were started in 1871. The Nagpur–Tumsar Road section was opened in April 1880 and the Tumsar Road–Rajnandgaon section in December 1880. The GIPR and
EIR, working jointly, completed the
Howrah–Allahabad–Mumbai line thereby establishing a connection between
Kolkata and
Mumbai in 1870. The
great famine of 1878 was an impetus for the fast completion of the Nagpur–Chhattisgarh railway track, but by then the idea of a route from Mumbai to Kolkata, shorter than the one via Allahabad, had set in. The
Bengal Nagpur Railway was formed in 1871. Amongst its major objectives were taking over of the Nagpur Chhattisgarh Railway and its conversion to broad gauge and extension of its system by a line to Asansol on EIR's main line. The entire task was completed by 1891 and Nagpur was connected to Asansol. ==Electrification==