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Sir Leslie Wilson On the Tracks

by Rajendra Aklekar October 27, 2002 12:43

One of the first electric locomotives that ran on the Indian mainline railway still beckons enthusiasts.

How the ’British Governor’ still commands respectHis Highness Sir Leslie Wilson today rests at the National Railway Museum grounds in New and meets visitors without prior appointment! This is what Indian railway historian G.D Patwardhan has to say about His Highness.

But what has a railway historian got to do with Sir Wilson?

Well, Sir Leslie Wilson is the name of one of the first direct current (DC) electric locomotives that came on to the Indian soil in 1928. This was among a batch of 41 electric locos specially designed for goods operations and had a high tractive effort.

The engine was christened Sir Leslie Wilson in the honour of the then Governor of , Sir Leslie Orme Wilson, who officially inaugurated railway electrification in .

Build by Swiss Locomotive Works with electrical equipment by Metropolitan Vickers, England, this 5’ 6” broad gauge engine was initially classified as EF/1 and later WCG1.

The first batch of these electric locomotives of were in the service of the Great Indian Peninsula Railway, the pioneering railway in . The railway was electrified in 1925 and these locomotives started arriving at the Port since August 1927.

These locomotives were typically Swiss in their design and appearance and had coupled wheels like the Swiss electric locomotives of those days and were called “Crocodile” electric locomotives. “Incidentally, these engines were based on the Swiss “Krokodil” articulated electric locomotives of the 1920s,” says Anirban Dasgupta, a railway enthusiast. The engines are styled around the renowned Swiss 'crocodile' class of engines, so called due to their low slung profile and very long wheelbase, and an alleged resemblance to that animal while rounding bends.

Of the 41 electric locomotives, the first 10 had their bodies built by the Swiss Locomotive & Machine Works ( SLM ) of Switzerland with electricals by Metropolitan-Vickers of England.

These engines had regenerative braking and they were used extensively on the to Poona and Igatpuri routes via the Western Ghats.

Having C-C wheel arrangement, these locomotives had an articulated frame, suitable for rounding the sharp bends on the ardous hill route.

The next 31 were built totally built in England. These locomotives worked for 66 years and today, two such units are preserved, one at the National Railway Museum, New , and the other at Kalyan near Mumbai. Salute the His Highness.



(Technical info and pic courtesy: NRM)

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#14 harimau October 29, 2002 07:38
Ref Banjaara #11

[I don`t want to be rude,just one question,where is the article?Where is the creativity? I find DIY manuals more invigorating.]

You mean you got in your hands a DIY book on autoeroticism?

(Now, there is a pun hidden there, if you know where to look.)

 
 
#13 veeresh October 28, 2002 21:14

T - actually I pass this Rail Museum atleast once a week . . . and I do wonder . . . how was it when these iron horses could cross what are today borders . . . I remember some of the Anglo and Pathan railway drivers from the youth that I spent in Jamalpur (E.Rly, oldest steam loco shed) tall stories of elephants and tigers and tribals . . . did you know one thing - many of the Frontier Pathan Railway employees shifted en masse to India after 1947 because they could? A large number were settled into the NE Frontier and Eastern Railway cadres . . .

 
 
#12 jay October 28, 2002 18:49
NOT FROM A PAK NEWS PAPER,

Follwing is fron indian express, the type of report one can never see in a pak paper. May be one day when urstruly quits taliban he might write about one Lala Lajpat Rai from Lahore

A bit of Israel lives on at home

Satish Nandgaonkar

Mumbai, October 28: Shaul Joshuah, 70, rummages through a steel cupboard at the 162-year-old Maghen Aboth synagogue for a shofar, a Jewish musical instrument carved of ram horns. But its lost among the bundles of colourful embroidered clothes and religious paraphernalia.

Israel Street — residents call it Israel Aali — is as lost. In the centre of Alibaug, a coastal town 135 km from Mumbai, and almost forgotten, the few Jewish families who have stayed back are trying to keep its character alive.

This year, they collected donations to repaint the Maghen Aboth synagogue, one of the country’s oldest surviving Jewish monuments.

‘‘The synagogue was built in 1842 by the Jewish community. It is believed the Jews arrived on the Indian coast 2,000 years ago. Some of their ships sank off the Alibaug coast and that’s how they landed here,’’ says Levy Wakrulkar, 35.

 
 
#11 Banjaara October 28, 2002 12:31

When "Salute Her Highness" was published on Chowk, I was excited, that for the first time an article on `railways` was onChowk,unfortu natelty, it was any thing but...and the latest..........I don`t want to be rude,just one question,where is the article?Where is the creativity? I find DIY manuals more invigorating.

Regards.

a rail buff

 
 
#10 temporal October 28, 2002 10:03
#3 by veeresh:

veeruji hope your coffee was not bland and sanitized

 
 
#9 veeresh October 28, 2002 08:08

Well there is a Sir ganga Ram Hospital in Delhi, too . . . and quite a decent one too. (Mayo without gloves on? Isn`t that how they do it anyway?)

Urstruly: atleast we got a media that can report killing et al. The rest, we try to fix.

 
 
#8 Urstruly October 28, 2002 07:27

The grandpa of Pakistani Electric railway system is probably Japanese Government . The electric railway lines run between Lahore-Sahiwal, Lahore-Gujraanwala, and Lahore-Shiekhupura lines, I think, since mid-sixties. However, Sir Ganga Raams development of horse-driven railway system in Faisalabad pre-partition, basically for providing logistics for agri-products to reach markets, is also memorable. Sir Ganga Raam, I think, was the greatest Punjabi Engineer and philonthropist, that ever lived. A hospital in Lahore is named after him.

 
 
#7 Urstruly October 28, 2002 07:27
Jay

When there is peace in rest of the world and only Indian government is killing its own people through state organized genocides, then what is newspaperman to do. Can`t blame him.

 
 
#6 jay October 28, 2002 04:19
news in pakistan,

I have to agree with post 1. This is really informercial for pakistanis, death is the main news for them. Look at the chowk headlines for 28 oct. Killing in assam, west bengal, nepal. Three out of the five items culled by the chowk editors from global news is about killings.

I am sure post 1 is by a pakistani, so is the news selection for 28 oct.

 
 
#5 scout October 28, 2002 04:19
fascinating!

 

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Article Interatcs

#14 harimau
#13 veeresh
#12 jay
#11 Banjaara
#10 temporal
#9 veeresh
#8 Urstruly
#7 Urstruly
#6 i-am-the-cheese
#5 scout
#4 jay
#3 veeresh
#2 nooralain
#1 temporal

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