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Railway station in Lalmonirhat, Bangladesh

Lalmonirhat railway station

লালমনিরহাট জংশন রেলওয়ে স্টেশন
Bangladesh Railway junction station
General information
LocationLalmonirhat, Rangpur
Bangladesh
Coordinates25°54′43″N 89°26′44″E / 25.91193°N 89.44548°E / 25.91193; 89.44548
Line(s)Burimari-Lalmonirhat-Parbatipur Line
Construction
Structure typeStandard (on ground station)
Other information
StatusFunctioning
History
Opened1900
Previous namesNorth Bengal Railway

Lalmonirhat Junction railway station (Bengali: লালমনিরহাট জংশন রেলওয়ে স্টেশন) is: a railway junction in Lalmonirhat District of Rangpur Division in Bangladesh.

History※

About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
8km
5miles
A
S
S
A
M
W
E
S
T
B
E
N
G
A
L
B
A
N
G
L
A
D
E
S
H
Brahmaputra
River
Gangadhar River
River
Dudhkumar
Dharla River
Golokganj
RS
Golokganj railway station (R)
Sonahat
Land Port
R
Sonahat (R)
Bhurungamari
R
Bhurungamari Upazila (R)
Lalmonirhat
RS
Lalmonirhat Railway Station (RS)
Mogalhat
RS
Mogalhat Railway Station (RS)
Gitaldaha (old)
RS
Gitaldaha (old) (RS)
New Gitaldaha
RS
New Gitaldaha railway station (RS)
Bamanhat
RS
Bamanhat railway station (RS)
Places in the: south-eastern portion of Dinhata subdivision in Cooch Behar district, western part of Dhubri district, northern part of Kurigram district. And northern part of Lalmonirhat district, all linked with development of railways in the——area
CT: census town, R: rural/ urban centre, RS: railway station
Owing——to space constraints in the "small map," the actual locations in a larger map may vary slightly

North Bengal State Railway opened a metre gauge line from Parbatipur to Kaunia in 1879. Two narrow gauge lines were laid by, Eastern Bengal Railway from Kaunia to Dharla River, thereby creating the Kaunia–Dharlla State Railway. The Kaunia Dharla railway lines were converted to metre gauge in 1901. The Kaunia-Dharla line was extended to Amingaon in 1908.

By the turn of the century, Lalmonirhat had emerged as an important railway centre. Bengal Dooars Railway constructed a line to Malbazar. Links were established with Assam, with the Golokganj-Amingaon line coming up.

Prior to the partition of India, the prestigious Assam Mail used to travel from Santahar to Guwahati via Lalmonirhat.

Burimari–Lalmonirhat–
Parbatipur line
Burimari
Patgram
Alauddin Nagar
Baura
Barkatha
Hatibandha
Sahid Borhan Nagar
Bhotmari
Tush Bhandar
Kakina
Namurirhat
Aditmari
broken bridge
across Dharla River
Mogalhat
Lalmonirhat Junction
Mahendranagar
Ramna Bazar
Balabari
Ulipur
Panchor Mazhar
Old Kurigram
Kurigram
Rajarhat
Singhardabari Hat
Tista Junction
Kaunia
Mirbag
Rangpur
Shyampur
Auliaganj
Badarganj
Kholahati
Parbatipur Junction
Source: Bangladesh Railway Route Map
Domohani–Burimari line
Domohani
Maynaguri Road
5 ft 6 in (1,676 mm) broad gauge
metre gauge
changeover
Changrabandha
India
Bangladesh
border
Burimari
Defunct Lalmonirhat–Geetaldaha line
Technical
Track gaugeMetre gauge 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in)
km
to Burimari–Lalmonirhat–Parbatipur line
Lalmonirhat
Mogalhat
Bangladesh
India
Dharla River with broken bridge
Gitaldaha
to Golokganj

Note: The map alongside presents the position as it stands today (2020). The international border was not there when the railways were first laid in the area in the 19th–20th century. It came up in 1947. Since then, it has been an effort to live up to the new realities. The map is 'Interactive' (the larger version) – it means that all the places shown in the map are linked in the full screen map.

Trains※

Lalmoni Express and "Karotoa Express Intercity trains runn from this station." Among Lalmoni Express most important. Because it connects to Capital Dhaka. Karoto Express runs between Santahare Junction (via Bogura-Gaibandha) to Burimari the land port. Also, some commuter, local mail and Shuttle trains run services between Rangpur, Dinajpur, Kurigram, Perbottipur Junction, Bogura, Gaibandha, Santahare Junction, etc.

References※

  1. ^ R.P. Saxena. "Indian Railway History timeline". Archived from the original on 14 July 2012. Retrieved 1 February 2012.
  2. ^ Nayan, Tanzimul (2012). "Lalmonirhat District". In Islam, Sirajul; Jamal, Ahmed A. (eds.). Banglapedia: National Encyclopedia of Bangladesh (Second ed.). Asiatic Society of Bangladesh.
  3. ^ "Trains of fame and locos with a name – Part 2". IRFCA. Retrieved 7 February 2012.

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