The Western Railway was created on 5 November 1951 by merging several state-owned railways, including the
Bombay, Baroda and Central India Railway (BB&CI), and the
Saurashtra Railway,
Rajputana Railway and
Jaipur State Railway. The
narrow-gauge lines of
Cutch State Railway was also merged into it in 1951. The BB&CI Railway was itself inaugurated in 1855, starting with the construction of a 29-mile (47-km)
broad-gauge track from
Ankleshwar to
Utran in
Gujarat state on the west coast. In 1864, the railway was extended to
Mumbai and the first train was flagged off from Grant Road Station in Mumbai to Ahmedabad on 28 November 1864. Subsequently, the project was further extended beyond
Vadodara in a north easterly direction towards Godhra,
Ratlam,
Nagda and thereafter northwards towards
Kota and
Mathura, to eventually link with the
Great Indian Peninsular Railway, now the
Central Railway, which had already started operating in Mumbai in 1853. In 1860 Surat railway station was built. In 1883, a
metre-gauge railway system, initially linking Delhi with
Agra,
Jaipur and
Ajmer, was established. The first suburban service in
Mumbai with steam traction was introduced in April 1867. It was extended to
Churchgate in 1870. By 1900 45 trains in each direction were carrying over one million passengers annually. The railways of several
princely states were also integrated into the Western Railway. The
Gaekwars of
Baroda built the
Gaekwar's Baroda State Railway (GBSR), which was merged into the BB&CI in 1949. Several railways of western Gujarat, including the
Bhavnagar,
Kathiawar,
Jamnagar &
Dwarka,
Gondal, and
Morvi railways were merged into the
Saurashtra Railway in 1948. The
Jodhpur–Bikaner Railway was taken over by
Rajasthan state in 1949, after the western portion was ceded to the government of Pakistan. In 2002, the Jaipur and Ajmer divisions of the Western Railway became part of the newly created
North Western Railway, and in April 2003 the
Kota division of the Western Railway became part of the newly created
West Central Railway. ==Present==