INDIAN RAILWAYS IN OLD DAYS DURING THE BRITISH RAJ -
PART-II
Classes of Accommodation in Trains in
British India
When Railway
operations began in India, there were varieties of coaches providing various
classes of accommodation since there were quite a few companies who were
managing the Railways. However, there were four classes in general viz. First, Second,
Third and Fourth. First and Second class passengers used to travel as a
privileged class with highest level of comfort and privacy. In addition, there
were special-purpose luxury saloons for very High Level Government Servants and
Dignitaries.
It may be noted in this
respect that the Doors
of all these classes used to open outside.
It is from 1908 that Inward-opening
doors were introduced on passenger coaches.
First Class
The old First class
coaches were non-corridor type so that the compartment ran the full width of
the car, thereby making it super-luxurious in terms of Space. Entire coach was
divided into 6 individual cabins or suites (one 6-berth cabin, two 2-berth
cabin, and three 4-berth cabin). Each cabin was a separate room or suite with
its own doors opening on either side of the carriage right onto the
platform and each of these cabins had a plush toilet facilities in the Western
style and an attached shower room, as well as a narrow compartment at one end
with a bench and sometimes a single berth above, for the travelers' domestic
servants. The interior of these coaches was ultra-luxurious including royal-size
beds/berths, carpeting, wood-work, all paneling and good electric lighting with
each berth also having individual reading lights, and a minimum of two electric
ceiling fans.
It is to be noted at
this juncture that no light or fan was provided in lower classes. In fact it was after many years in 1952 that Fans and lights for all compartments
in all classes of passenger accommodation were made mandatory.
View of Old First class coaches
Some of the First classes even had rudimentary “Air-Conditioning”, where
a big block of ice bought from the platform could be lowered into a slot in the
floor or roof and fans would be directed at it for cooling effect! Here is a photograph of it:
Ice supply for the air
conditioning in First class coach of the Frontier Mail at Bayana Junction on
11.09.1942
These
compartments thus provided excellent comfort and privacy, which made the long journeys
enjoyable especially with a certain coziness and privacy with night travel,
when it was possible to lock the compartment doors and have a secure and good
night's sleep in one’s en suite compartment, which was solely for one’s use
between the hours of nine in the night and seven the next morning. This was
luxury at its best, a kind of opulence that is not seen probably anywhere in
the world on general trains today. Only the most distinguished Europeans could
travel by First Class. Today’s First Class AC is no match to this class. Such
coaches with these 'servant quarters' were built as late as 1940 and were in
service in India till 1955.
Second Class
Second class was also a non-corridor type coach
divided into individual a few Four - Berthed and two to three Two - Berthed
cabins with its own doors opening on either side of the carriage
right onto the platform and having Toilet attached to each Cabin having
facilities in the Western style, but it was much less luxurious than First
Class and did not have Servants’ Compartment or Shower units. These were having
heavily padded and cushioned seats, which could be converted to Beds for
Sleeping at night. These coaches were reclassified after 1955 as First Class
due to abolition of the original First class.
Third class
Third class consisted of plain carriages
with wooden benches having insufficient space or facilities for sleeping and
without lights, fans, toilets or even bars on the windows at first. These had
doors opening outside, instead of inside, as was the norm in those days.
Indians usually travelled in these and the coaches were filled with dirt and
filth. They were like the general second class compartments of today, but only
far worse. Two-tier seating was introduced in
Third Class (typically 50 passengers on the lower seats, and 70 on the upper
level, thus nearly doubling the capacity of the already overcrowded third-class
coaches) in 1862, but the lack of toilets
forced Third Class travelers, usually the Indians, to line side ablutions when
trains stopped at stations. In fact, traveling in this class was under the harshest
and humiliating of conditions, as may be seen from the photograph shown here:
It
is interesting to note at this juncture that Toilets were introduced in Third Class following
complain from a passenger Okhil Chandra Sen in 1909 to the Sahibganj divisional
railway office in West Bengal - a fact enumerated in the Indian Railway
Archive. The image displayed at India's Railway Museum is presented here. Note
that Name of the Passenger was Akhil Chandra Sen, who spelt his name as “Okhil”
and see his English writing !
Fourth class accommodation was introduced on several railways in 1874, which were basically just empty box cars with windows
and without even benches, crammed with people to the brim in unimaginable
conditions, worse than the third class. The Railways did not care about them.
Indians, wretched as they were seen as by the British could only afford and
were allowed to travel only by third or fourth class while their overlords
wallowed in luxury in First and Second class. Although most railways had them
at some time or the other in the 1860s, they were already going out of favour
by the 1870s so that by the early 1880s not many lines had Fourth class.
Intermediate or Inter
Class
Later
on in 1885, this Fourth class was abolished by
the expedient of providing benches in the carriages, thereby reclassifying
these carriages as Third class. Consequently, existing Third class was then started
to be provided with cushioned seats and renamed as “Intermediate Class” or
“Inter Class”. These were, more than often, of five berth variety, with
a central lower berth. This was possible owing to width of compartments, there
being no corridors. This gave more seating space during the day, which also
meant they were more crowded than the First or Second Class compartments, which
were very rarely overcrowded. Intermediate Class also had cooling fans but
toilet facilities were of the Oriental variety rather than the Western style!
Inter class was seen to be a class between the Second and Third, providing an
economical form of travel with better seating and bit of better comfort for
those Indians who were better off than the poorer majority who could only
afford the lowest class of accommodations, and where they would not be bothered
by the 'low-class' travellers (Indians or Europeans) travelling in Third class.
First class and Second class were generally the domain of Europeans, although
very wealthy Indians did occasionally travel in First class.
Classes in Trains in Post Indepence
India
The class
system of British Period as enumerated above, continued till 1955. I vaguely
remember a journey to Bombay, alongwith my mother and elder brother in Second
class in Bombay Mail of EIR via Allahabad from Bardhaman to Kalyan in 1951 (at
the age of four) for going to Pune where my uncle was working in the
Meteorological Department of Govt. of India.
During 1955,
First-class was abolished and the erstwhile 2nd and Inter classes
were renamed as 1st and 2nd respectively, Third remaining Third.
These First
Classes (old second class renamed) were non-corridor coaches divided into a few Four - Berthed and two to three Two -
Berthed individual cabins with its own doors opening on either side of the
carriage right onto the platform and having Toilet attached to each Cabin
having facilities in the Western style. Subsequently by 1961, these were
replaced by Corridor type coaches with four Toilets – two at each end, with two
Indian and two western type Lavatories. Since more space was available now due
to abolition of Toilets attached to the cabins individually, the typical
configuration became Five Four-Berthed and Three Two-berthed Cabins – Total 26
Berths.
Views of
interior of such Non-AC First class Corridor Coaches of 1960s are shown here.
Four Berthed cabins
Two Berthed cabins
The huge
advantage of First Class Non-AC is that it doesn't insulate from the environment
like the AC classes do – one’s interaction with the outside environment is not
disrupted by a heavily-tinted glass window. However, unlike other non-AC
classes, First Class Non-AC also gives one a significant amount of privacy, as
if one have a whole cabin or coupe to oneself, shutting and bolting the door
totally cuts off any contact with other passengers, vendors and beggars. The
disadvantages of First Class Non-AC are that
(a)
since it is not AC, it gets extremely hot in summer and very cold in winter
(b) all
First Class coaches are extremely old, and some extremely rundown,
(c)
bedding is not automatically provided as in the AC classes, and while it can be
obtained from the attendant on payment of a nominal fee of INR 25, finding the
attendant can be difficult at times, not to mention the fact that bedding is
very limited,
(d)
since coaches aren't insulated from the outside environment, they're usually
far dustier than their AC equivalents.
The railways
are phasing it out in favour of AC Sleeper class as it is rather un
-remunerative. Today, First Class Non-AC is found in a few a few Broad gauge trains in South
India (mostly Tamil Nadu), a handful of Metre gauge trains in the north and
also in the Narrow gauge
Jabalpur-Balaghat Line (this was upto Gondia Jn. Earlier). I traveled from
Jabalpur to Gondia several times in 1980-81 at night by Non-corridor First
class coach having Five berths – Three lower and Two Upper and one attached
Toilet. This line is now operative from Jabalpur to Balaghat.
Photo of Present First
class of Satpura Express in this route is presented here.
The Third
Class was having wooden benches as usual, but was provided now with lights,
fans, covered windows and toilets.
In 1956, the first fully
air-conditioned train was introduced between Howrah and Delhi (predecessor of
the Poorva Exp.) on a Bi-weekly service with the name “Bi-weekly Airconditioned
Vestibuled Express”. It had AC First Class and AC Chair Car connected through
the vestibule, but also Non-AC First Class and Third Class.
It was also in this year that
Third-class passengers were permitted to use the dining car earlier reserved
for higher classes of travel as well as a "buffet-cum-cinema" car was
introduced in the Janata Exp. between Kanpur and Jhajha.
However,
the original First Class remained in service in the Railways at East Pakistan
for some period even after 1955. It may
be noted here that rail links existed between West Bengal of India and East
Pakistan carrying goods and passengers. Three trains used to run in these
routes till 1965, when war broke out between India and
Pakistan. These were (1) East Bengal Express between Sealdah and Goalundo Ghat via Gede and Darshana,(2) East Bengal Mail between Sealdah and Parbatipur via Gede and Darshana, and
(3) Barisal Express between Sealdah and Khulna via Petrapole-Benapole. Therefore, in these
trains, “IND I / PAK II” on First Class and “IND II / PAK INT” used to be
written the on the First Class and Second class coaches of India respectively (meaning
these will be classed as 2nd Class and Inter Class respectively in Pakistan),
as was seen by me in Sealdah Station in 1957.
Airconditioned
2-tier sleeper coaches were introduced in the late seventies followed by Airconditioned 3-tier sleeper coaches in late
90s.
XXXXXXX
Sir when did The Luxurious First Class Coaches get withdrawn? I read somewhere it was in 1980s. And are there any old first class Coaches in museums?
ReplyDeleteBut nice article, I learnt a lot.
Sir, the answer to your question lies in the article itself : " During 1955, First-class was abolished and the erstwhile 2nd and Inter classes were renamed as 1st and 2nd respectively, Third remaining Third".
DeleteThanks for the reply.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteNo Sir. I have travelled in the luxury second class coach as late as in 1971 (Between Jhansi and Kanpur stations) which might be, of course, the last lot, as a few coaches did exist of the old times and were used by railways. I am sure the old luxurious first class also existed till then. It used to be like a living room where broad cushioned benches were placed in a large room all around with superior furniture, tables and fixtures.
DeleteI am come here many time. I am always find new thing. Thanks for sharing beautiful post.
ReplyDeletePNR status
Train running status
Dear Shri Raychaudhuri, Hats off to you for finding the origin of A/C in Indian Railways.
ReplyDeleteDo you have information on the use of ice for cooling in IR until the 1960s? I have heard that upper class passengers could purchase blocks of ice that were placed in tubs within compartments.
Keep up the good work!
I have already narrated about this in this article itself as follows : "Some of the First classes even had rudimentary “Air-Conditioning”, where a big block of ice bought from the platform could be lowered into a slot in the floor or roof and fans would be directed at it for cooling effect! Here is a photograph of it:"
Deletegreat information. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteSir, Is it a fact that main doors of compartments were opening towards platform during British days unlike present system of doors going inside?
ReplyDeleteyes i hv travelled in these https://images.app.goo.gl/fmjaSu6QzxncqoHy6
Deletein the early 1970s
DeleteI was searching for some article on Old First class till i hit this treasure.
ReplyDeleteThough it went in 1955, Old first class was seen in 70s movies, Pakeezah and Manoranjan.
Very interesting article. Thanks. I do remember traveling in the non corridor first class in Rockfort express or Pallavan express ( do not remember exactly) in 1970s. It used to huge compartment. If there are any photos pls share.
ReplyDeleteSir. When did the third class coaches are treated as second class coaches and old second class coaches are abolished.
ReplyDeleteI cannot tell you the exact date, but I remember coming from Delhi Jn to Howrah by Kalka -Howrah Mail in 1974 in 2nd Class Sleeper Class (introduced in selected trains in 1967),having only the upper Berth for Sleeping and Lower berth for sitting with the corner seat reserved for the passenger having sleeping accommodation on the upper berth. Therefore, I can confirm this much that at least up to 1974, the original Second Class coaches were there.
ReplyDeleteEffectively, Second class coaches were 'economic luxury. As a child in 1950s, many times I have travelled ClassII overnights with my parents. It used to be good for middle class travellers.
ReplyDeleteBest thing of those travel was the varieties of railway food - a tradition destroyed by the later management of the Indian Railways.
Till early 70s there used to be two ClassII coaches in Calcutta Bombay Express - miss the leisurely travel in privacy.
Very nice reading your article Mr. Roy Chowdhury.
This comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteThank you, Sir. Please also go through other posts of mine in this blog.
DeleteWhen was pantry car introduced?
ReplyDeleteVery nice information. Thanks❤❤❤❤
ReplyDeleteWas searching for just this information. Thank you for it.
ReplyDeletenice informations, as i remember in my childhood i have travelled in old first class bogie, containg dressing table, shoer bath, one sofa cum bed .
ReplyDeletehttps://www.gyaniguru.in
ReplyDeleteGood information. May serve as a reference to many in current generation,
ReplyDelete