1832–1899 In 1832 the proposal to construct the first railway line in India at
Madras was made. In 1835, a
railway track was constructed between
Red Hills and
Chintadripet in
Madras and became operational in 1837. It was hauled by a
rotary steam engine imported from
England and was used for ferrying
granite. The
Madras Railway was established in 1845 and the
Great Indian Peninsular Railway was incorporated in 1849. In 1853, the first passenger train on
broad gauge ran for between
Bombay and
Thane which had 14-carriages carrying 400 people, hauled by three steam locomotives: the Sahib, Sindh and Sultan. This day is considered to be the formation date of the Indian Railways and is marked annually as Indian Railways Day. The Thane viaducts, the first
railway bridges, were built over the
Thane creek when the Mumbai-Thane line was extended to
Kalyan in May 1854.
Eastern India's first passenger train ran from
Howrah, near
Kolkata, to
Hoogly on 15 August 1854. On 24 February 1873, a
horse-drawn tram opened in
Calcutta between
Sealdah and Armenian Ghat street. In 1875, a railway line was opened between
Mokama and
Darbhanga by the local ruler
Lakshmeshwar Singh through
Tirhut Railway. On 9 May 1874, a horse-drawn tramway began operation in Bombay between
Colaba and
Parel. In 1879, the
Nizam's Guaranteed State Railway was established which built railway lines across the then
Hyderabad State from
Kachiguda. In 1877,
Ajmer built "F1" class metre-gauge steam locomotive no. 734 became the first indigenously built locomotive in India. In 1897, lighting in passenger coaches was introduced by Jodhpur Railway, the first to introduce electric lighting as a standard fixture. In 1925, the first
Electric Multiple Units (EMU) were introduced in Bombay with
1500 V DC units imported from
Cammell Laird and
Uerdingenwagonfabrik.
Chennai suburban railway started operating in 1931 with a single
metre-gauge line from
Chennai Beach to
Tambaram. In 1950, there were about 42 different railway companies operating about tracks across the country. In December 1950, the Central Advisory Committee for Railways approved the plan for re-organizing Indian Railways into six
regional zones with the
Southern (14 April 1951),
Central (5 November 1951), and
Western (5 November 1951) zones being the first to be created. used by the Indian Railways till the late 1990s The first locomotive manufacturing unit at
Chittaranjan was commissioned in 1950. The first rail coaches were manufactured in India from 1956 when the
Integral Coach Factory was established at Madras. In 1956, the first
air-conditioned train plied between
Howrah and
New Delhi. In 1957, Indian Railways adopted
25 kV AC traction with the first runs beginning in December 1959 with the
WAM-1 locomotives. In 1974, Indian Railways endured a 20-day
strike. The first
metro rail was introduced in Calcutta on 24 October 1984. In 1986, computerized ticketing and reservations were introduced. In 1988, the first
Shatabdi Express was introduced between New Delhi and
Jhansi. In 1993, air-conditioned three-tier and
sleeper were introduced. Centralized computer reservation system was deployed in Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai in September 1996, coupon validating machines (CVMs) were introduced at
Mumbai CSMT in 1998 and the nationwide
concierge system began operation on 18 April 1999. In 2015, the first
Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) powered trains were rolled out. Since 1925, the Railway budget was presented before the
Union budget till 2016. The
central government approved the
merger of the Rail and General budgets from 2017. On 31 March 2017, Indian Railways announced a target of electrifying the entire rail network would be electrified by 2023. In March 2020, Indian Railways announced a
nationwide shutdown of passenger service to combat the
COVID-19 pandemic in India with the freight operations continuing to transport essential goods. The railways resumed passenger services in a phased manner in May 2020. operating on a
train-set built by
ICF, is the fastest train in India Starting in the 2010s, various infrastructure modernization projects have been undertaken including
high-speed rail, redevelopment of 400 stations,
doubling tracks to reduce congestion, refurbishing of coaches,
Global Positioning System (GPS)-enabled tracking of trains and modernization of locomotives. In 2018, a semi-high speed self-propelled
train-set capable of reaching speeds of over was rolled out from ICF and the
Vande Bharat Express was launched in 2019. Indian Railways announced plans to become a net-zero carbon emission railway by 2030 and has implemented
rainwater harvesting at stations,
reforestation along the tracks, introduction of solar-powered trains, installation of
solar and
wind power generation facilities, and
sustainable LED lighting at all the stations. Indian railways removed all unstaffed level crossings by 2019 with staffed level crossings being replaced by bridges. Other safety projects include the extension of an automated
fire alarm system to all air-conditioned coaches and GPS-enabled
Fog Pilot Assistance System railway signalling devices. In 2020, Indian Railways allowed the operation of private passenger trains for the first time with the first train flagged off from
Coimbatore in June 2022. == Organisation ==