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Kalighat Falta Railway

The Kalighat Falta Railway was a narrow gauge light railway that operated in the southern part of Bengal in British India. It connected the Kalighat area on the southern fringe of Calcutta (now Kolkata) with Falta, a settlement on the eastern bank of the Hooghly river in the present-day South 24 Parganas district of West Bengal. The line was one of several feeder railways developed during the colonial period to serve riverine and rural traffic in the Bengal hinterland.

Name Kalighat Falta Railway
Type Light railway company
Country British India
Region served Southern Bengal (24 Parganas)
Northern terminus Kalighat, Calcutta
Southern terminus Falta, on the Hooghly river
Gauge Narrow gauge

Background

By the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Calcutta had emerged as the principal port and commercial centre of eastern India. To extend the reach of the metropolitan economy into the surrounding deltaic countryside, a number of light and feeder railways were promoted, often by private companies under concessions from the colonial government. The Kalighat Falta Railway was conceived as part of this broader expansion, intended to link the southern suburbs of Calcutta with the river port of Falta.

Route and operations

The line ran roughly southward from Kalighat, passing through villages and small market towns of the 24 Parganas district before terminating at Falta on the Hooghly. Falta had historic importance as a riverside anchorage and was used at various times for shipping and transhipment of goods between river craft and the interior. The railway facilitated the movement of passengers and agricultural produce, including rice and jute, between the rural south and the Calcutta market.

Significance

The Kalighat Falta Railway is remembered as part of the network of small gauge feeder lines that supplemented the trunk railways serving Calcutta. Such lines played an important role in integrating peri-urban and rural areas with the colonial port economy, although many were eventually closed or absorbed into larger systems as road transport developed in the twentieth century.

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