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This was the first
full-fledged railway workshop facilities in India, set up
on Feb. 8, 1862 by the East Indian Railway. (There was an
earlier attempt to set up workshop facilities at Howrah,
but it proved unsuccessful because of problems with
procuring supplies and getting skilled labour.) The
Jamalpur site was chosen for its proximity both to the
Sahibganj loop (which was the main trunk route at the
time), and to the communities of gunsmiths and other
mechanical craftsmen in Bihar who would prove to be adept
at picking up the skills required in a railway workshop.
Another, possibly apocryphal account, though, has it
that one of the Agents of the EIR Mr D W Campbell, was
annoyed that the fitters and workmen of the then Howrah
workshop were spending too much time away from their work
in places of recreation in Howrah, and resolved to move
the workshop facilities to a place far away where there
would be no such distractions.
At first the Jamalpur shops were merely repairing
locomotives and also assembling locomotives from parts
salvaged from other, damaged locomotives. By the turn of
the century, however, they had progressed to producing
their own locomotives. The first one, CA 764 'Lady Curzon',
was produced in 1899.
Jamalpur has always had extensive workshop facilities.
In 1893, the first railway foundry in India was set up
there. It also had a boiler workshop for repairing and
building boilers. Today it has foundry and metallurgical
lab facilities, extensive machine tool facilities, etc.,
in addition a captive power plant of 5MVA, making it
fairly self-contained. It used to have a rolling mill of
its own (set up in 1870, now closed).
In addition to various repairs of wagons, coaches,
cranes and tower cars, and locomotives, Jamalpur also
undertakes repair and (small-scale) production of
permanent-way fixtures. It also manufactures some tower
cars (Mark II, Mark III) and break-down cranes of 10, 20,
and 140 tonne capacities, besides various kinds of
heavy-duty lifting jacks.
Finally, it also manufactures wheelsets for coaches and
wagons. In the past it was a significant supplier of
cast-iron sleepers as well. Starting in 1961 it produced
several rail cranes. It has also produced electric arc
furnaces, ticket printers and other ticket machines
(slitting, counting, and chopping). The high-capacity
synchronized lifting jacks known as 'Jamalpur Jacks' were
also produced by this workshop.
The school attached to the Jamalpur workshops
eventually became the IR Institute of Mechanical and
Electrical Engineering.
Jamalpur Gymkhana
This is the hostel and club used by the Special Class
Railway Apprentices
Golf Course
Just down the Gymkhana avenue is the golf course that
is frequented by the Railway and Army officers. The annual
ITC Golf tournament is held here.
The golf course also has the grave of an Englishman who
was killed by a tiger. The grave of the tiger is not very
far away.
Territorial Army
North Tank
Waterfall |