A feast of old findings and artefacts for global railway heritage buffs of railway archaeology in Bombay - Mumbai India. Rajendra B. Aklekar, Mumbai (rajendraa (@) gmail.com)
28 June 2018
20 April 2018
Sir Leslie Wilson arrives at Mumbai CSMT
What a day
today! They say life comes a full circle and was a witness to the momentous
event today when the Sir Leslie Wilson or EF/1, India’s first electric freight locomotive
class that was introduced in 1928 returned home at Mumbai CSMT or formerly
Bombay Victoria Terminus station.
I say home because the engine was in active service till 1992 and had spent its lifetime here and after retirement shifted to Kalyan electric loco shed. The engine has now been brought here to be a part of the ‘Heritage Alley’ on World Heritage Day 2018 and will be on permanent display. Sir Leslie Orme Wilson was the Governor of Bombay in 1928 who inaugurated the loco and hence named after him.
It was transported by road, splitting it into three parts that were later assembled here. It features the original livery of India’s first railway company, the Great Indian Peninsula Railway, now Central Railway. EF/1 20067 is one of the two remaining of the class, the other one being at National Rail Museum in New Delhi.

18 April 2018
16 April 2018
12 April 2018
Oldest rail platforms at Mumbai CSMT demolished
Rajendra B. Aklekar

Railway authorities promised to shelve whatever they could from this old station and make it a part of the heritage gallery and proposed alley.

The entire station platform building with a steam crane at one end had been almost stuck in a time warp.
The railways have now repainted and reviving the steam crane to be a part of a heritage museum, but the old station is being lost. Sources said it was all in active use till the 1950s.

The site of the goods sheds has remained the same though bigger sheds and platforms were built in the 1890s after the construction of the Victoria Terminus.

It has two platforms, now completely abandoned.

The entire platform is of cobble-stone flooring and once had various scales, sunk in pits, now most of them removed.
A rotten wooden board in one corner of the west-facing platform says Ludhina fast or ordinary service and scale number one, platform number two...the rest details are not legible, a legacy of organized cargo transport by rail.

These were the places which once brought fortune to the city,” he added.
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