Monday, June 16, 2025

BRITISH INDIA RAILWAYS




 'But what about the railways ...?' ​​The myth of Britain's gifts to India

This article is more than 8 years old

Apologists for empire like to claim that the British brought democracy, the rule of law and trains to India. Isn’t it a bit rich to oppress, torture and imprison a people for 200 years, then take credit for benefits that were entirely accidental?

Many modern apologists for British colonial rule in India no longer contest the basic facts of imperial exploitation and plunder, rapacity and loot, which are too deeply documented to be challengeable. Instead they offer a counter-argument: granted, the British took what they could for 200 years, but didn’t they also leave behind a great deal of lasting benefit? In particular, political unity and democracy, the rule of law, railways, English education, even tea and cricket?

Indeed, the British like to point out that the very idea of “India” as one entity (now three, but one during the British Raj), instead of multiple warring principalities and statelets, is the incontestable contribution of British imperial rule.

Unfortunately for this argument, throughout the history of the subcontinent, there has existed an impulsion for unity. The idea of India is as old as the Vedas, the earliest Hindu scriptures, which describe “Bharatvarsha” as the land between the Himalayas and the seas. If this “sacred geography” is essentially a Hindu idea, Maulana Azad has written of how Indian Muslims, whether Pathans from the north-west or Tamils from the south, were all seen by Arabs as “Hindis”, hailing from a recognisable civilisational space. Numerous Indian rulers had sought to unite the territory, with the Mauryas (three centuries before Christ) and the Mughals coming the closest by ruling almost 90% of the subcontinent. Had the British not completed the job, there is little doubt that some Indian ruler, emulating his forerunners, would have done so.

Divide and rule ... an English dignitary rides in an Indian procession, c1754. Photograph: Universal History Archive/Getty Images

Far from crediting Britain for India’s unity and enduring parliamentary democracy, the facts point clearly to policies that undermined it – the dismantling of existing political institutions, the fomenting of communal division and systematic political discrimination with a view to maintaining British domination.

In the years after 1757, the British astutely fomented cleavages among the Indian princes, and steadily consolidated their dominion through a policy of divide and rule. Later, in 1857, the sight of Hindu and Muslim soldiers rebelling together, willing to pledge joint allegiance to the enfeebled Mughal monarch, alarmed the British, who concluded that pitting the two groups against one another was the most effective way to ensure the unchallenged continuance of empire. As early as 1859, the then British governor of Bombay, Lord Elphinstone, advised London that “Divide et impera was the old Roman maxim, and it should be ours”.

Since the British came from a hierarchical society with an entrenched class system, they instinctively looked for a similar one in India. The effort to understand ethnic, religious, sectarian and caste differences among Britain’s subjects inevitably became an exercise in defining, dividing and perpetuating these differences. Thus colonial administrators regularly wrote reports and conducted censuses that classified Indians in ever-more bewilderingly narrow terms, based on their language, religion, sect, caste, sub-caste, ethnicity and skin colour. Not only were ideas of community reified, but also entire new communities were created by people who had not consciously thought of themselves as particularly different from others around them.

Large-scale conflicts between Hindus and Muslims (religiously defined), only began under colonial rule; many other kinds of social strife were labelled as religious due to the colonists’ orientalist assumption that religion was the fundamental division in Indian society.

Muslim refugees cram aboard a train during the partition conflict in 1947 ... the railways were first conceived by the East India Company for its own benefit. Photograph: AP

It is questionable whether a totalising Hindu or Muslim identity existed in any meaningful sense in India before the 19th century. Yet the creation and perpetuation of Hindu–Muslim antagonism was the most significant accomplishment of British imperial policy: the project of divide et impera would reach its culmination in the collapse of British authority in 1947. Partition left behind a million dead, 13 million displaced, billions of rupees of property destroyed, and the flames of communal hatred blazing hotly across the ravaged land. No greater indictment of the failures of British rule in India can be found than the tragic manner of its ending.

Nor did Britain work to promote democratic institutions under imperial rule, as it liked to pretend. Instead of building self-government from the village level up, the East India Company destroyed what existed. The British ran government, tax collection, and administered what passed for justice. Indians were excluded from all of these functions. When the crown eventually took charge of the country, it devolved smidgens of government authority, from the top, to unelected provincial and central “legislative” councils whose members represented a tiny educated elite, had no accountability to the masses, passed no meaningful legislation, exercised no real power and satisfied themselves they had been consulted by the government even if they took no actual decisions.

As late as 1920, under the Montagu-Chelmsford “reforms”, Indian representatives on the councils – elected by a franchise so restricted and selective that only one in 250 Indians had the right to vote – would exercise control over subjects the British did not care about, like education and health, while real power, including taxation, law and order and the authority to nullify any vote by the Indian legislators, would rest with the British governor of the provinces.

Democracy, in other words, had to be prised from the reluctant grasp of the British by Indian nationalists. It is a bit rich to oppress, torture, imprison, enslave, deport and proscribe a people for 200 years, and then take credit for the fact that they are democratic at the end of it.

A corollary of the argument that Britain gave India political unity and democracy is that it established the rule of law in the country. This was, in many ways, central to the British self-conception of imperial purpose; Kipling, that flatulent voice of Victorian imperialism, would wax eloquent on the noble duty to bring law to those without it. But British law had to be imposed upon an older and more complex civilisation with its own legal culture, and the British used coercion and cruelty to get their way. And in the colonial era, the rule of law was not exactly impartial.

Crimes committed by whites against Indians attracted minimal punishment; an Englishmen who shot dead his Indian servant got six months’ jail time and a modest fine (then about 100 rupees), while an Indian convicted of attempted rape against an Englishwoman was sentenced to 20 years of rigorous imprisonment. In the entire two centuries of British rule, only three cases can be found of Englishmen executed for murdering Indians, while the murders of thousands more at British hands went unpunished.

The death of an Indian at British hands was always an accident, and that of a Briton because of an Indian’s actions always a capital crime. When a British master kicked an Indian servant in the stomach – a not uncommon form of conduct in those days – the Indian’s resultant death from a ruptured spleen would be blamed on his having an enlarged spleen as a result of malaria. Punch wrote an entire ode to The Stout British Boot as the favoured instrument of keeping the natives in order.

Political dissidence was legally repressed through various acts, including a sedition law far more rigorous than its British equivalent. The penal code contained 49 articles on crimes relating to dissent against the state (and only 11 on crimes involving death).

Rudyard Kipling, ‘that flatulent voice of Victorian imperialism would wax eloquent on the noble duty to bring law to those without it’. Photograph: Culture Club/Getty Images

Of course the British did give India the English language, the benefits of which persist to this day. Or did they? The English language was not a deliberate gift to India, but again an instrument of colonialism, imparted to Indians only to facilitate the tasks of the English. In his notorious 1835 Minute on Education, Lord Macaulay articulated the classic reason for teaching English, but only to a small minority of Indians: “We must do our best to form a class who may be interpreters between us and the millions whom we govern; a class of persons, Indians in blood and colour, but English in taste, in opinions, in morals and in intellect.”

The language was taught to a few to serve as intermediaries between the rulers and the ruled. The British had no desire to educate the Indian masses, nor were they willing to budget for such an expense. That Indians seized the English language and turned it into an instrument for our own liberation – using it to express nationalist sentiments against the British – was to their credit, not by British design.

The construction of the Indian Railways is often pointed to by apologists for empire as one of the ways in which British colonialism benefited the subcontinent, ignoring the obvious fact that many countries also built railways without having to go to the trouble and expense of being colonised to do so. But the facts are even more damning.

The railways were first conceived of by the East India Company, like everything else in that firm’s calculations, for its own benefit. Governor General Lord Hardinge argued in 1843 that the railways would be beneficial “to the commerce, government and military control of the country”. In their very conception and construction, the Indian railways were a colonial scam. British shareholders made absurd amounts of money by investing in the railways, where the government guaranteed returns double those of government stocks, paid entirely from Indian, and not British, taxes. It was a splendid racket for Britons, at the expense of the Indian taxpayer.

The railways were intended principally to transport extracted resources – coal, iron ore, cotton and so on – to ports for the British to ship home to use in their factories. The movement of people was incidental, except when it served colonial interests; and the third-class compartments, with their wooden benches and total absence of amenities, into which Indians were herded, attracted horrified comment even at the time.

Asserting British rule during the war of independence, also known as the Indian mutiny, 1857. Photograph: Universal History Archive/Getty Images

And, of course, racism reigned; though whites-only compartments were soon done away with on grounds of economic viability, Indians found the available affordable space grossly inadequate for their numbers. (A marvellous post-independence cartoon captured the situation perfectly: it showed an overcrowded train, with people hanging off it, clinging to the windows, squatting perilously on the roof, and spilling out of their third-class compartments, while two Britons in sola topis sit in an empty first-class compartment saying to each other, “My dear chap, there’s nobody on this train!”)

Nor were Indians employed in the railways. The prevailing view was that the railways would have to be staffed almost exclusively by Europeans to “protect investments”. This was especially true of signalmen, and those who operated and repaired the steam trains, but the policy was extended to the absurd level that even in the early 20th century all the key employees, from directors of the Railway Board to ticket-collectors, were white men – whose salaries and benefits were also paid at European, not Indian, levels and largely repatriated back to England.

Racism combined with British economic interests to undermine efficiency. The railway workshops in Jamalpur in Bengal and Ajmer in Rajputana were established in 1862 to maintain the trains, but their Indian mechanics became so adept that in 1878 they started designing and building their own locomotives. Their success increasingly alarmed the British, since the Indian locomotives were just as good, and a great deal cheaper, than the British-made ones. In 1912, therefore, the British passed an act of parliament explicitly making it impossible for Indian workshops to design and manufacture locomotives. Between 1854 and 1947, India imported around 14,400 locomotives from England, and another 3,000 from Canada, the US and Germany, but made none in India after 1912. After independence, 35 years later, the old technical knowledge was so completely lost to India that the Indian Railways had to go cap-in-hand to the British to guide them on setting up a locomotive factory in India again. There was, however, a fitting postscript to this saga. The principal technology consultants for Britain’s railways, the London-based Rendel, today rely extensively on Indian technical expertise, provided to them by Rites, a subsidiary of the Indian Railways.

Mother and children ... the British left a society with 16% literacy, a life expectancy of 27 and over 90% living below the poverty line. Photograph: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive

The process of colonial rule in India meant economic exploitation and ruin to millions, the destruction of thriving industries, the systematic denial of opportunities to compete, the elimination of indigenous institutions of governance, the transformation of lifestyles and patterns of living that had flourished since time immemorial, and the obliteration of the most precious possessions of the colonised, their identities and their self-respect. In 1600, when the East India Company was established, Britain was producing just 1.8% of the world’s GDP, while India was generating some 23% (27% by 1700). By 1940, after nearly two centuries of the Raj, Britain accounted for nearly 10% of world GDP, while India had been reduced to a poor “third-world” country, destitute and starving, a global poster child of poverty and famine. The British left a society with 16% literacy, a life expectancy of 27, practically no domestic industry and over 90% living below what today we would call the poverty line.

The India the British entered was a wealthy, thriving and commercialising society: that was why the East India Company was interested in it in the first place. Far from being backward or underdeveloped, pre-colonial India exported high quality manufactured goods much sought after by Britain’s fashionable society. The British elite wore Indian linen and silks, decorated their homes with Indian chintz and decorative textiles, and craved Indian spices and seasonings. In the 17th and 18th centuries, British shopkeepers tried to pass off shoddy English-made textiles as Indian in order to charge higher prices for them.

The story of India, at different phases of its several-thousand-year-old civilisational history, is replete with great educational institutions, magnificent cities ahead of any conurbations of their time anywhere in the world, pioneering inventions, world-class manufacturing and industry, and abundant prosperity – in short, all the markers of successful modernity today – and there is no earthly reason why this could not again have been the case, if its resources had not been drained away by the British.

If there were positive byproducts for Indians from the institutions the British established and ran in India in their own interests, they were never intended to benefit Indians. Today Indians cannot live without the railways; the Indian authorities have reversed British policies and they are used principally to transport people, with freight bearing ever higher charges in order to subsidise the passengers (exactly the opposite of British practice).

This is why Britain’s historical amnesia about the rapacity of its rule in India is so deplorable. Recent years have seen the rise of what the scholar Paul Gilroy called “postcolonial melancholia”, the yearning for the glories of Empire, with a 2014 YouGov poll finding 59% of respondents thought the British empire was “something to be proud of”, and only 19% were “ashamed” of its misdeeds.

All this is not intended to have any bearing on today’s Indo-British relationship. That is now between two sovereign and equal nations, not between an imperial overlord and oppressed subjects; indeed, British prime minister Theresa May recently visited India to seek investment in her post-Brexit economy. As I’ve often argued, you don’t need to seek revenge upon history. History is its own revenge.

 Inglorious Empire by Shashi Tharoor is published by Hurst & Company at £20. Go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over £10, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of £1.99

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Apologists for empire like to claim that the British brought democracy, the rule of law and trains to India. Isn’t it a bit rich to oppress, torture and imprison a people for 200 years, then take credit for benefits that were entirely accidental?



And, of course, racism reigned; though whites-only compartments were soon done away with on grounds of economic viability, Indians found the available affordable space grossly inadequate for their numbers.
 
 Related imageImage result for gandhi pushed out of train in south africa
 Image result for gandhi pushed out of train in south africaA visit to Pietermaritzburg station, where Gandhi was pushed off the ...

The Hindu
A visit to Pietermaritzburg station, where Gandhi was pushed off the train in South Africa

 (A marvellous post-independence cartoon captured the situation perfectly: it showed an overcrowded train, with people hanging off it, clinging to the windows, squatting perilously on the roof, and spilling out of their third-class compartments, while two Britons in sola topis sit in an empty first-class compartment saying to each other, “My dear chap, there’s nobody on this train!”)


Nor were Indians employed in the railways. The prevailing view was that the railways would have to be staffed almost exclusively by Europeans to “protect investments”. This was especially true of signalmen, and those who operated and repaired the steam trains, but the policy was extended to the absurd level that even in the early 20th century all the key employees, from directors of the Railway Board to ticket-collectors, were white men – whose salaries and benefits were also paid at European, not Indian, levels and largely repatriated back to England.

Racism combined with British economic interests to undermine efficiency. The railway workshops in Jamalpur in Bengal and Ajmer in Rajputana were established in 1862 to maintain the trains, but their Indian mechanics became so adept that in 1878 they started designing and building their own locomotives. Their success increasingly alarmed the British, since the Indian locomotives were just as good, and a great deal cheaper, than the British-made ones. In 1912, therefore, the British passed an act of parliament explicitly making it impossible for Indian workshops to design and manufacture locomotivesBetween 1854 and 1947, India imported around 14,400 locomotives from England, and another 3,000 from Canada, the US and Germany, but made none in India after 1912.
 



New electric local trains are unloaded. They were introduced in Mumbai between 1925 and 1930.



After independence, 35 years later, the old technical knowledge was so completely lost to India that the Indian Railways had to go cap-in-hand to the British to guide them on setting up a locomotive factory in India again. There was, however, a fitting postscript to this saga. The principal technology consultants for Britain’s railways, the London-based Rendel, today rely extensively on Indian technical expertise, provided to them by Rites, a subsidiary of the Indian Railways.



Mother and children ... the British left a society with 16% literacy, a life expectancy of 27 and over 90% living below the poverty line.

Mother and children ... the British left a society with 16% literacy, a life expectancy of 27 and over 90% living below the poverty line. Photograph: Bettmann/Bettmann Archive 
 The process of colonial rule in India meant economic exploitation and ruin to millions, the destruction of thriving industries, the systematic denial of opportunities to compete, the elimination of indigenous institutions of governance, the transformation of lifestyles and patterns of living that had flourished since time immemorial, and the obliteration of the most precious possessions of the colonised, their identities and their self-respect.

 In 1600, when the East India Company was established, Britain was producing just 1.8% of the world’s GDP, while India was generating some 23% (27% by 1700). By 1940, after nearly two centuries of the Raj, Britain accounted for nearly 10% of world GDP, while India had been reduced to a poor “third-world” country, destitute and starving, a global poster child of poverty and famine. The British left a society with 16% literacy, a life expectancy of 27, practically no domestic industry and over 90% living below what today we would call the poverty line.



The story of India, at different phases of its several-thousand-year-old civilisational history, is replete with great educational institutions, magnificent cities ahead of any conurbations of their time anywhere in the world, pioneering inventions, world-class manufacturing and industry, and abundant prosperity – in short, all the markers of successful modernity today – and there is no earthly reason why this could not again have been the case, if its resources had not been drained away by the British.
If there were positive byproducts for Indians from the institutions the British established and ran in India in their own interests, they were never intended to benefit Indians. Today Indians cannot live without the railways; the Indian authorities have reversed British policies and they are used principally to transport people, with freight bearing ever higher charges in order to subsidise the passengers (exactly the opposite of British practice).


This is why Britain’s historical amnesia about the rapacity of its rule in India is so deplorable. Recent years have seen the rise of what the scholar Paul Gilroy called “postcolonial melancholia”, the yearning for the glories of Empire, with a 2014 YouGov poll finding 59% of respondents thought the British empire was “something to be proud of”, and only 19% were “ashamed” of its misdeeds.
All this is not intended to have any bearing on today’s Indo-British relationship. That is now between two sovereign and equal nations, not between an imperial overlord and oppressed subjects; indeed, British prime minister Theresa May recently visited India to seek investment in her post-Brexit economy. As I’ve often argued, you don’t need to seek revenge upon history. History is its own revenge.
 Inglorious Empire by Shashi Tharoor is published by Hurst & Company at £20. Go to bookshop.theguardian.com or call 0330 333 6846. Free UK p&p over £10, online orders only. Phone orders min p&p of £1.99

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IRCTC is operating first Railway Saloon Coach tour departed yesterday from Old Delhi Railway Station. It is like a moving house having two exclusive bedrooms with attached bath, a large living cum dining room, kitchenette and rear window for watching the spectacular views. 
 comment:- i saw one with a special servant quarter attached to the bed room in the Madras mail when it arrived in Trivandrum station in 1950 ,bath rooms with shower ,hot and cold water and all.
 Related image
top-notch quality and service in the railways of British India was the food and catering offered in the Refreshment rooms at nearly all main stations and the Restaurant Cars that were a part of many long-distance passenger trains. The modern luxury trains of India offer a similar experience. “Part of the joy of a long train journey in the days of the Raj was walking along the platform to the restaurant car at stations designated in the time table for lunch or dinner. Here the hygiene, cuisine and service was of the highest standard, and managed by a Dining Car Manager…  Like in an expensive restaurant, he made a point of enquiring of every diner if all was to their liking … ,” recalled late Kenneth Hugh Staynor, an India-born Briton
 
Imperial Indian Mail of the EIR, Restaurant in the 30's (contemporary press)
 and Indian Railways enthusiast, in his reminiscing 2015 piece ‘Railway Travel in the Raj’. These services catered to the British, first and foremost, and occasionally included Hindu (vegetarian) and Muslim (halal) options.

below :- the indians used to travel by 3 rd class and even some had 4 th class compartment equal to cattle sheds

 Related image


Classy and the Class system

“Privacy and comfort were of paramount importance to the railways for First and Second class passengers, who travelled almost like a privileged class,” Staynor wrote. The difference between the first three classes and the last, however, was vast. On the one hand, the First and Second Classes, he recalls, were well upholstered and pleasant with superior fittings, en suite western-style toilet and shower facilities. The Intermediate Class got fans and Indian style toilets.

India: Views : News Photo
 The Indian Railway - 1930 - Photographer: Emil Otto Hoppe Vintage property of ullstein bild (Photo by Emil Otto Hoppe

Photo , india photo , vintage , photography, calcutta, kolkata



 Lacking any cooling fans, upholstery, space and even toilets, the travellers of Third Class were forced perform ablutions on the sides when the trains stopped at stations.

  Foreigners, who were disgusted by this practice that eschewed both privacy and dignity, were often not fully aware of appalling conditions in these coaches. The inhumane situation of the Third Class were so horrid in comparison that Mahatma Gandhi castigated it as a gigantic evil undermining health and morality in his piece, ‘Third Class in Indian Railways,’ wherein he observed, “In the Madras case the first class fare is over five times as much as the third class fare. Does the third class passenger get one-fifth, even one-tenth, of the comforts of his first class fellow?”


Post-1947, when the railways were nationalised and royalty abolished, the royal and the tourist saloons with their valuable interior furnishings and high upkeep costs, could no longer be maintained or run. Initially discarded, they eventually became the inspiration for luxury trains. The Palace-on-Wheels was thus designed to reproduce the regal splendour and nostalgia of pre-independence day Indian maharajas and many of the old royal saloons were refurbished to become a part of the first version of it that ran on meter-gauge (many also served for a long time as inspection saloons for railway officials).


 

KALUPUR RAILWAY STATION 1923--CATTLE COMPARTMENTS USED BY ORDINARY iNDIANS

The Punjab Mail, earlier known as the Punjab Ltd
IMAGE: The Punjab Mail, earlier known as the Punjab Ltd. Photograph: Kind courtesy rail.co.in
Great Indian Peninsular Railway 1918 Timetable Cover - Click to show full-size image in new browser
GIP 1918 Timetable Cover scanned by IRFCA member Senthil Kumar
In the era that the film depicts, railways were the quickest and most reliable way to cover the great distances that are India. Mrs Moore and Adela take a horse-drawn tonga from Ballard Pier to what is perhaps the most famous railway station in Asia: Victoria Terminus, now renamed Chhatrapati Sivaji Terminus.
Click here to see more vintage Indian postcards from harappa.com
Victoria Terminus, Bombay
David Lean did not use any images of the station itself in the film, limiting himself to the shot of the departure-boards, below. Many of these famous trains with such evocative names have now gone for ever, though the Flying Rani (Mumbai - Surat) and the Deccan Queen (Mumbai - Pune) are still available. The Frontier Mail, which took passengers for the north, was renamed The Golden Temple Mail. The 'Imperial Mail' that Mrs Moore and Adela travel on to get to Chandrapore is perhaps the 'Imperial Indian Mail', a prestigious train of the time that ran between Bombay and Calcutta. Introduced by the East Indian Railway and the Great Indian Peninsular Railway in 1926, the train's schedule was such that the departures from Bombay made for convenient connections for passengers arriving by ship from England. The train was known for a high level of luxurious accommodation. It carried only 32 passengers, and their staff. This train was the forerunner of the Calcutta Mail trains of later years. Listen to Mark Tully's fascinating documentaries about this train in 2003: Programme One (30 mins) and Programme Two (30 mins). You can see more photos of the Great Indian Peninsular Railway at David Flitcroft's photo-page here, or at the Science & Society Picture Library here.
Departure-boards at Victoria Terminus, Bombay - Click to show full-size image in new browser
Departure-boards at Victoria Terminus, Bombay
What is the exact date that the film was set in? Most people would say the late 1920's. I had hoped to get some idea from the sign-boards, but after researching the topic at the IRFCA FAQ site, it became obvious that such a notice board never existed at Victoria Terminus. The Frontier Mail first ran on Sept 1st 1928. The Flying Rani didn't run after April 24th 1914 - it ran again as The Flying Queen on May 1st 1937, though at the inauguration ceremony the train was also referred to as the 'Flying Ranee, Queen of the West Coast'. The Deccan Queen first ran on June 1st 1930. The dates just don't add up, unless the film is set after May 1st 1937. Another problem arises, too. The Flying Rani ran from Bombay's Central station, not Victoria Terminus. As mentioned on the London page, the 'Rawalpindi' steamship had a short life of just 14 years, between 1925 and 1939. If we accept that the reference to the Flying Rani on the Victoria Terminus noticeboard was a mistake, the date for the film can only have been between 1930 and 1939.
The Imperial Mail - carriage interior - Click to show full-size image in new browser
The Imperial Mail - carriage interior
Hmmm, that's strange - why does the word 'Delhi' appear outside the carriage window ? (Spotted by Mohan Bhuyan)
The Imperial Mail - carriage interior - Click to show full-size image in new browser
The Imperial Mail - carriage interior
Were these carriage-interiors real, or were they made specially for the film? I suspect the latter. There are a number of rail museums in India: the National Rail Museum at New Delhi, and others at Mysore, Nagpur, and Chennai, but I have not been able to find where the carriages were then, or are now. Carriages are also located at other sites, such as the State Railway Carriage at the Lalgarh Palace Hotel, Bikaner, Rajasthan; or the Royal Rail Saloon at the Riverside Palace Hotel, Gondal, Gujarat. There is even a privately owned one, once belonging to the Maharajah of Jodhpur, now in the collection of Mr Thakral, general manager of the Le Meridien Hotel in Delhi.
Dining car of Imperial Indian Mail in 1929 - Click here to see original image at the IRFCA gallery
Dining car of Imperial Indian Mail, 1929
This image shows a scan of the Dining Saloon on the 'Imperial Indian Mail', East Indian Railway, dated 1929. Scan provided by John Lacey.


Train crossing bridge over a river - Click to show full-size image in new browser
Train crossing bridge over a river
Which bridge and river is this? Perhaps it was meant to be the Narmada near Jabalpur, the Ganges at Allahabad, or the Ghaghara at Chapra.
Click to see other historical maps of India
Route map of the Indian Imperial Mail

The 'Imperial Mail' arrives at Chandrapore - Click to show full-size image in new browser
The 'Imperial Mail' arrives at Chandrapore
The locomotive used in this shot is an 'XC' class 4-6-2, heavy-passenger, broad gauge, with an axle-load of 19.5 tons. When not in use for filming, it was stabled at Bangalore Cant station. The location for 'Chandrapore station' is Dodballapur, a small town about 23 miles north of Bangalore, on the main line via Dharmavaram Junction to Bombay. Thanks to Anu and Saifullah for identifying it. See photos of how the station looks today on the IRFCA picture gallery here and here. See a map of Bangalore and Dodballapur on my Marabar Caves 1 page.
The 'Imperial Mail' arrives at Chandrapore - Click to show full-size image in new browser
The 'Imperial Mail' arrives at Chandrapore
More photos of historical steam locomotives can be seen at the IRFCA Gallery.
Imperial Mail - view of carriages - Click to show full-size image in new browser
Imperial Mail - view of carriages
This is an interesting shot, showing the steps that were brought to the doorways of the carriages to let the passengers disembark, in the same way that steps are brought to aircraft today.
Steps to carriages - Click to show full-size image in new browser
Steps to carriages
Later on in the film, the railway re-appears in the film. Ronny Heaslop has collected Mrs Moore and Adela Quested from their visit to Mr Fielding's house, and is driving them back to his house. Their carriage is stopped at a level-crossing whilst a train passes. This is the same 'XC' engine that was used earlier at Chandrapore.
Waiting at a level crossing - Click to show full-size image in new browser
Waiting at a level crossing
This time, the carriages have been replaced with modern Indian Railways carriages, painted a darker color, some of which has come off. The brackets above the windows are normally used to hold destination-boards. Travelling on the roof still happens today on parts of the Indian Railways network, but it is much rarer these days, especially on sections with overhead electric cables!
The train passes by - Click to show full-size image in new browser
The train passes by
The coaches used in these scenes were old stock AC First coaches
An empty level crossing, probably near Bangalore - Click to show full-size image in new browser
An empty level crossing, probably near Bangalore
Image result for 1930 TRAIN INDIA

 





3 3 c m
40cm
actual image size: 32cm x 25cm

 

 

religious festival in Pandharpur, 1930 ...

 

Description

These passengers are going to a religious festival. British colonial administrators in shorts and pith helmets can be seen marshalling the crowd. Indian trains were and still are often very crowded, with some passengers sitting on the roof or hanging onto the outside. Some people preferred to sit on the roof as it was much cooler than being inside the hot carriage.

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The railways were first conceived of by the East India Company, like everything else in that firm’s calculations, for its own benefit. Governor-General Lord Hardinge argued in 1843 that the railways would be beneficial “to the commerce, government and military control of the country”. Ten years later, his successor Lord Dalhousie underscored “the important role that India could play as a market for British manufacturers and as a supplier of agricultural raw materials”. The vast interior of India could be opened up as a market only by the railways; lab­ourers could be transported where they were needed and its fields and mines could be tapped to send material to feed the ‘satanic mills’ of England.
In its very conception and construction, the Indian Rai­lways was a big colonial scam. British shareholders made absurd amounts of money by investing in the railways, where the government guaranteed returns on cap­ital of 5 per cent net per year, unavailable in any other safe investment. That was an extravagantly high rate of return those days, possible only because the government made up the shortfall from its revenues, payments that of course came from Indian, and not British, taxes.
These excessive guarantees removed any incentive for the private companies constructing the railways to economise—the higher their capital expenditure, the higher would be their guaranteed return at a high and secure rate of interest. As a result, each mile of Indian railway construction in the 1850s and 1860s cost an average of £18,000, as against the dollar equivalent of £2,000 at the same time in the US. In the event, it was 20 years or more before the first lines ear­ned more than 5 per cent of their capital out­lay, but even after the government had taken over railway construction in the 1880s, thanks to the rapacity of private British firms contracted for the task, a mile of Indian railway cost more than double the same distance in the equally difficult and less populated terrains of Canada and Australia.
It was a splendid racket for everyone, apart from the Indian taxpayer. In terms of a secure return, Indian rai­lway shares offered twice as much as the British government’s own stock. Guaranteed Indian railway shares abs­orbed up to a fifth of British portfolio investment in the 20 years to 1870—the first line opened in 1853—but only 1 per cent of it originated in India. Britons made the money, controlled the technology and supplied all the equipment, which meant once again that profits were repatriated. It was a scheme described at the time as “private enterprise at public risk”. All the losses were borne by the Indian people, all the gains pocketed by the British trader—even as he penetrated by rail deep into the Indian economy. The steel industry in England found a much-needed outlet for its overpriced products for railways in India: steel rails, engines, rail wagons, machinery and plants. Far from supporting the proposition that the British did good to India, the railways are actually evidence for the idea that Britain took much more out of its most magnificent colony than it put in.
Nor was there any significant residual benefit to Indians. The railways were intended principally to transport extracted resources—coal, iron ore, cotton and so on—to ports for the British to ship home to use in their factories. The movement of people was incidental, except when it served colonial interests; and the third-class compartments, with their woo­den benches and absence of amenities, into which Indians were herded, attracted horrified comment even at the time. And also questions in the toothless legislatures: there were 14 questions on this issue in the legislative assembly every year between 1921 and 1941, and 18 more annually in the Council of State. The yearly averages for 1937-1941 were 16 and 25 respectively. Mah­atma Gandhi’s first crusade on his return to India was on behalf of the third-class traveller. Yet, third-class passengers became a source of profit for the railways, since British merchants in India ensured that freight tariffs were kept low (the lowest in the world) while third-class passengers’ fares made up the railway companies’ principal source of profit. No effort was made, in laying railway lines, to ensure that supply matched the demand for popular transport.
Nor were Indians employed in the railways. Disc­rimi­natory hiring practices meant that key industrial skills were not effectively transferred to Indian personnel. The prevailing view was that the railways would have to be staffed almost exclusively by Europeans to “protect inv­estments”. This was especially true of signalmen, and those who operated and repaired the steam trains, but the policy was extended to such an absurd level that even in the early 20th century all the key employees, from dir­ectors of the Railway Board to ticket-collectors, were white men—whose salaries and benefits were also paid at European, not Indian, levels and largely repatriated back to England. Moreover, when the policy was relaxed and expensive European labour reduced, there was a continuing search for the most ‘British-like’ workers. Thus came the long-lasting identification of the Anglo-Indian community with railway employment, since at first it was these Eurasians who were trained to do the jobs that only Europeans had been ass­umed to be capable of doing previously. In keeping with British notions of eugenics, and since the Anglo-Indians were not a very large community, ‘martial’ Sikhs and pale-skinned Parsis were then employed as well, although they were only put in charge of driving engines within station yards and emp­loyed in stations with infrequent traffic.
Double standards prevailed in other ways: whereas in Britain it was common practice to ensure the merit-based promotion of firemen to drivers, or of station-masters of small rural stations to large stations, this did not happen in India because these junior positions were occupied by Indians, whose promotion would have be to posts otherwise occupied by Europeans. By 1900, in the regulations for pay, promotion and suitability for jobs, or what we would today describe as the human resource management rules, employees were subdivided into “European, Eurasian, West Indian of Negro descent pure or mixed, Non-Indian Asiatic, or Indian”. On employment, the local medical officer would certify the race and caste identity of a candidate and write it on his history sheet—thus determining his future pay, leave, allowances, and possible promotions, as well as place in the railway hierarchy for the rest of his career.
Racism combined with British economic interests to undermine efficiency. The railway workshops in Jamalpur in Bengal and Ajmer in Rajputana were established in 1862 to maintain the trains, but their Indian mechanics became so adept that in 1878 they started designing and building their own locomotives. Their success increasingly alarmed the British, since the Indian locomotives were just as good, and a great deal cheaper, than the British-made ones. In 1912, therefore, the British passed an Act of Parliament, explicitly making it impossible for Indian workshops to design and manufacture locomotives. The Act prohibited Indian factories from doing the work they had successfully done for three decades; instead, they were only allowed to maintain loc­omotives imported from Britain and the industrialised world. Between 1854 and 1947, India imported aro­und 14,400 locomotives from England (some 10 per cent of all British locomotives produced), and another 3,000 from Canada, the US and Germany, but made none in India after 1912. After Independence, the old technical knowledge was so completely lost to India that the railways had to go cap-in-hand to the British to guide them on setting up a locomotive factory in India again.
This is far from being a retrospective critique from the comfortable perspective of a 21st century commentator. On the contrary, 19th-century Indians were quite conscious at the time of the abominable role of the railways in the crass exploitation of their country. The Bengali newspaper Samachar wrote on 30 April 1884 that “iron roads mean iron chains” for India—foreign goods could flow more easily, it argued, killing native Indian industry and increasing Indian poverty. Nationalist voices like those of G.V. Joshi, G.S. Iyer, Gopal Krishna Gokhale and Dadabhai Naoroji were raised publicly in the 1890s, pointing out how limited the benefits of the railways were to India, how the profits all went to foreigners abroad, and how great was the burden on the Indian exc­hequer. And there are other examples to show how the interests of Indians were never a factor in railway operations: during World War I, several Indian rail lines were dismantled and shipped out of the country to aid the Allied war effort in Mesopotamia!
On the whole, therefore, the verdict of the eminent historian Bipan Chandra stands. British motives in building railways in India, he wrote, were “sordid and selfish—the promotion of the interests of British merchants, manufacturers and investors—at the risk and expense of Indian revenues”; their “essential purpose” being to “assist British enterprise in the exp­loitation of the natural resources of India”.

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25. Workers working in Indigo factory , Allahabad : 1877

Indigo planting in Bengal started around 1877. Indigo planting became more and more commercially profitable due to the demand for blue dye in Europe. It was introduced in large parts of eastern India. The indigo planters mercilessly pursued the peasants to plant indigo instead of food crops LEADING TO FAMINES.



 They provided loans, called dadon at a very high interest. Once a farmer took such loans he remained in debt for whole of his life before passing it to his successors. Read more.
Source

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Professor M.S. Narasimhan demonstrating the first Indian digital computer to Jawaharlal Nehru at Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR)
The Story of How India's First Indigenous Computers Were Built




First Indigenous Computers ...
thebetterindia.com-CLICK AND READ


1- How India’s First Indigenous Supercomputer Amazed the World in 1991CLICK AND READ

param_computer_20130413

dr-vijay-bhatkar


“Great nations are not built on borrowed technology.” 
– Vijay Bhatkar, the Father of Indian Supercomputers

 

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What was life like in British India?


Ashutosh Mehndiratta

Short Answer first -

The term ‘British India’ can broadly cover a long period of 350 years, starting from the early 1600s when East India Company ships landed on coastal India, until 1947. However, I have covered the 90 year period call the ‘British Raj’ from 1857–1947.
They were the best of times - This period witnessed the creation and explosive growth in Infrastructure that came to define modern India (and Pakistan, Bangladesh) - Major Urban Centers, Hill Stations, Cantonments, Railroads, Major Highways, Bridges, Communication system (Post, Telegraph, Telecom), Irrigation system (Canals), Legal system, Major Universities and Colleges, Institutions, Archaeological Department, Political system, Bureaucracy, Armed forces, Police forces, and even some of the largest Business and Industrial Groups. There prevailed an air of intellectual curiosity, and many bright people and ideas from Europe flowed into India. The great Middle Class of India which numbers around 300 million today has roots in this period. People could own land or transfer ownership while being protected by law. First time in thousands of years, the lowest castes got an opportunity to improve their lot and were covered by law rather than customs. Lastly, India managed to escape from the clutches of a foreign power after hundreds of years.
They were the worst of times - OTOH this period witnessed the most savage massacre of Indian rebels at the hands of the British after the 1857 Rebellion was suppressed. Over a 100,000 were butchered, many blown directly from the cannons. In 1919, General Reginald Dyer ordered his troops to fire on a peaceful demonstration that left over 1,000 dead. The British introduced Indenture system which was sort of Debt Bondage under which they sent 3.5 million Indian laborers to far away colonies like Mauritius, Guyana, Trinidad, Jamaica, Fiji, etc. Around 200,000 Indian soldiers died in the 2 World Wars fighting for the British Indian Army. The Partition in 1947 lead to the largest population migration in the human history with 15 million people getting uprooted and anywhere from 200,000 to 2 million killed in riots. There was widespread discrimination against Indians, including the elite Indians, and mingling with the natives was strongly discouraged. Though the caste divide has been ingrained in the subcontinent for thousands of years, the British rule formalized and accentuated the divide. However, the most shocking part of this period was the reckless management that was a major cause of several Famines and lead to anywhere from 30 million to 50 million people dying of starvation or subsequent epidemic.
So how was life in this 90 year period? It depended on who you were. If you were one of the top ranking British officials or one of the 1,000 odd British Civil servants, you literally lived like a king. The remainder of British officials, soldiers, businessmen lived a very comfortable life too as a superior. The rulers of the Princely states lived luxurious lives too, some of them living like Sheikhs of the Middle East. The minority elite Indians who got access to Western education and worked closely with the British lived a life full of opportunities too. Then there was the newly emerging Middle Class comprising of thousands of Zamindars and Jagirdars, Moneylenders, Government Clerks, Army men, Railway employees, Supervisors, Engineers, Lawyers, Academics, Printers, small businessmen catering to the British, who were living in urban centers lived reasonably comfortable lives. However, the bottom 90% Indians or more were tied to agriculture, toiled in the fields, often looking up towards the sky for rains, worrying about debt, the village moneylender, and worst case starvation and disease.
Yes, that was the short one :-)




  
Track inspection, 1895[these photos shows the life of ordinary Indians vs British ]

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INDIA -THE BRITISH LEGACY
Railways in India were privately owned by public limited companies incorporated in England, whose shares were quoted and traded on the London Stock Exchange.[another way to make money by the colonial ruler]
 Only after India became free in August 1947 railways came to be nationalised.




India's industrial output was 25% of worlds industrial output in 1770 AD. When British left after 200 years of various form of rule  India had 0.1% of worlds industrial output 2) Literacy was left at 13% and 3) Average life expectancy of Indians was brought to measly 37 years







  • India had 30crore (300mn) population, with an average longivity of 32 years (with between 17.5 to 19.0% infantile mortality)
  • There were just 360,000 income-tax payers in 1947
  • Only13% of Indians were literate (literacy rate among women was 9%)
  • 83% of Indians lived in villages, and 70% depended on agriculture... 28% were landless labours (this, as one would notice, has not changed much)
  • 70% of cultivated land was owned by a handful of zamindars and money-lenders.
  •  We were producing 52 million tonnes in 1950-51 and are today producing 257 million tonnesFrom a food importing country we are now exporting, though it is also a fact that a large number of population is not fed, whereas godowns are full.
  • Only 3% of India's workforce (less than 9mn) was employed in manufacturing sector.
  • Jute and cotton industry accounted for 30% of the total industrial employment (and about 55% of value-added to manufacturing)
  • Indian farmers owned 0.9mn iron plough, and 31.3mn wooden plough.
  • Across the total population, even in 1950-51, there were just about 168,000 telephones.
  • Only 27% of cultivated land was irrigated.
  • In 1951, there were just 37,000 towns and villages (out of around 5,000 cities and 500,000 villages) with electricity
  • There were 9 agricultural colleges with around 3,000 students.
  • There were just 10 medical colleges that turned out about 700 doctors every years. In 1951 census, India had about 18,000 doctors... We also had 1,900 hospitals and 6,500 dispensaries, accounting for around 1.2lac (.12mn beds) - for a population of 300mn.
  • There were a total of 7 engineering colleges, with around 2,200 students.
  • In 1950, India produced 7 locomotives, 1mn tons of steel, 99,000 bicycles, 33mn tons of coal, 2.7mn tons of cement, 33,000 sewing machines,
  • India had a total number of 27 universities/colleges in 1950.
  • The total number of enrollment of students from primary to pre-degree education, in 1950-51, was less than 25mn.
  • There were around 6,500 newspapers and periodicals (nationals and vernacular) and 26 radio centers.
  • Even as late as 1955, India had just about 790,000 engineering degree/diploma holders.
  • There were a total of 1125 companies listed on the stock exchange (there were only two of them - Bombay and Calcutta)


  •  India hardly had any large-scale industry in 1947, which could process the raw-material into finished usable goods. There were a few industries in the cotton, jute, sugar, matches, and steel sectors, etc. - but they were too few to really service the country's needs. About 65-70% of India's less-than-Rs.600cr export consisted of raw material (cotton, oilseeds, minerals and ores, tobacco, etc.); around the same proportion of its imports were finished goods (ranging from biscuits, sewing needles, cloth etc., to dress-material, medicines to machines-tools). In fact, even in 1950, India was importing 90% of its requirement of machine tools.


    Indian Railways – The British Legacy

      . Facing problems at home and abroad, the significant British interest in India was extraction of remaining wealth in Indian hands.
    Indian Railway system too suffered  from this approach.  Especially after WWI, the Great Depression  and the currency crisis, starved of investments and renewal, Indian railways suffered.


    During WW2, nearly 40% rolling stock from India was diverted to the Middle East. More than 50% of the track system was the outdated metre gauge and narrow gauge. Track systems were nearly a century old. 40% of the railway system went to Pakistan. 32 of the forty-two separate railway systems operating in India, were owned by the former Indian princely states. More than 8000 outdated steam engines were used as motive power – and less than 20 diesel locomotives were in use. Apart from elephants and people – called as ‘hand-shunting’ in Indian Railways lingo.


    www.youtube.com/watch?v=uFHnRn8yCek


    So much for the British gift of railways to India.
     NAPOLEON CALLED  ENGLAND AS THE "SHOP KEEPER OF THE WORLD"-[PROFIT FIRST PROFIT LAST WAS THEIRMOTTO; TILL THEY LEFT INDIA IN 1947]
    The railways run by the Indian princely states became party to the collusive price fixing systems. Like this extract (linked to the right) shows, all the business went to the British engineering yards. To this add the guaranteed returns systems, and what was achieved was something else.
    The guarantee system did not encourage cost control, and, at an average cost of BP18,000 per mile, the Indian railways were some of the costliest in the worldStarved of investments and maintenance, the railways infrastructure at the time of British departure was crumbling
     In 1952, it was decided that IIIrd class passengers deserved fans and light. It took another 7 years to implement this decision. Elephants used for shunting wagons, box-cars, finally got a respite after WDS-4B shunters were introduced by Chittaranjan Locomotive Works in 1969. In the 1977,3rd class railway travel was abolished. Wooden-slat seats were abolished. Cushioned 2nd class seating system was made minimum and standard. It took India 40 years, to modernize the colonial railway system, we should be thankful. Remember, they could have uprooted the rails, and taken away the wagons and engines. After all, Indian Railways was the biggest scrap iron collection in the world at that time.

    India began with an extremely low tax base as well as low income at Independence. This meant that the available revenues were small. Providing for public investment in industry, agriculture, infrastructure, defence and administration left meagre revenues for investment in education and health. Therefore, the option was to either settle for slow progress all around or pursue growth-friendly Track-I policies that would allow rapid expansion of incomes and revenues.

    Our tragedy was that, unlike South Korea and Taiwan, which foresaw the importance of Track-I reforms as early as the late 1950s and early 1960s, we went in the opposite direction and progressively slid into a command and control system. The result was slow growth as well as slow progress in education and health.

    But when we eventually accepted the lesson of history beginning in 1991, the results were spectacular: growth accelerated and social spending rose as well.

     -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    On Nov. 26th 1947, RK Shanmukham Chetty, India’s first Finance Minister presented the first budget.  It covered only 7 and half months from Aug 15th the day of Independence to March 31, 1948.  Though New Delhi could have authorized the expenditure for the part of the financial year, a budget was indeed presented in the Parliament and approved.   Understand that the Budget Estimate for total revenues was Rs 171.15 crore; of which notably, Rs 15.9 crore was to come from the Posts and Telegraphs Department. It was to be a deficit budget of 26.24 crores.  The first budget of the Republic of India was presented by John Mathai on Feb 28, 1950.   This budget laid down the roadmap for the creation of the Planning Commission. The Commission was entrusted with the responsibility of formulating phased plans for effective and balanced use of resources.  

    TO SAVE ON MONEY(SAME TIME LOOTING INDIA) ELEPHANTS USED BY BRITISH RULER
    Image result for india the british legacy in railways elephants used
    Image result for india the british legacy in railways elephants used

    Image result for india the british legacy in railways elephants used TO PUSH