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A Historic Journey in 1864
The Sunday Times Plus Section 3rd January
1999
By Aryadasa Ratnasinghe |
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The first train to
Ambepussa from Co lombo (a distance of 54 km) began its historic journey on
December 27, 1864. People who had come to see the 'iron horse' rushed to have a
look at the belching locomotive of the train, which they had never seen before.
Obviously, the railway would have
caused a stir in the placid rural society at the time. As they became
accustomed to the noise, children, seeing an approaching train would yell
"anguru-kaka watura-bebee, colomba duvana yakada-yaka" (coal-eating,
water-drinking, Colombo running iron devil).
A special significance of this train journey was
that the Duke of Brabant, the heir to the Belgian throne, who was later crowned
King Leopold II of Belgium, travelled in the train from Veyangoda to Ambepussa
and back to Colombo. He was accompanied by Major General O'Brien, the officer
administering the country at the time, in the absence of the Governor, Charles
MacCarthy (1860-1863), who had returned to England having relinquished his
duties on the grounds of ill-health. The driver of the engine was Sir G.L. Molesworth, the chief engineer,
who was appointed Director-General of Railways in 1865. He was also the
resident engineer who had the distinction of completing the first railway in
India. A railway for Sri Lanka was
first mooted in 1842, when the European coffee planters agitated for a railway
from Kandy to Colombo, to transport their estate produce for shipment, quickly
and regularly, as they had by then opened up virgin lands in the upland country
to grow coffee, a viable commercial crop. After protracted negotiations between
the planters and government, the Ceylon Railway Company (CRC) was formed in
1845, under the chairmanship of Philip Anstruther, to construct a railway in
Sri Lanka. The company's
engineer, Thomas Drane worked the preliminary survey in 1846. On August 3,
1858, that first sod of earth was cut (from a place where the present Maradana
Railway Station stands), by Governor Sir Henry Ward (1855-1860) amidst great
jubilation, and his attitude was summed up in his own words "As Educators,
Railways supersede roads in Oriental Lands."
In 1857, Capt. Morose was sent from England to
examine the project and submit his report, within two months, to the Secretary
of State for the Colonies. He recommended six alternative routes to Kandy and
the average estimate to complete the construction of the line was in the region
of £856,557. It was pointed out that there was no other way to reduce the
estimate when heavy work such as tunnelling, cutting through solid rock
formations and masses of boulders at the base of the hills, building steep
embankments over valleys and ravines, filling of water-logged areas,
constructing bridges and culverts etc., was found to be inevitable.
The contractor for the CRC W.T. Doyne, who
undertook the laying of the line, was faced with practical difficulties, and he
realised that it was impossible to complete the work on the estimate submitted.
The bridge over the Kelani river, laying of the track from Rambukkana to
Kadugannawa on steeper gradients, the filling of water-logged ground between
Kelaniya and Ragama, tunnelling etc., were major engineering feats that
consumed a bigger slab of the estimate.
The CRC needed more money. In 1861, the contract
with the CRC was terminated, the subscribed capital paid off, and the
government took over the construction work, under the name Ceylon Government
Railway (now Sri Lanka Railway). The
government called for fresh tenders. Of the tenders received, the lowest was
from the contractor W.F.G. Faviell. Both Sir Molesworth and Faviell combined
their talents and contributed in no small measure to the successful laying of
the railway in Sri Lanka. They were able to push the permanent way up to
Ambepussa within three years. In
1866, the line was extended to Polgahawela for both passenger and goods
traffic. In January 1864 the first locomotive was landed in Sri Lanka, and it
was used by the contractor for the transport of bulk material and ballast to
lay the line. It was this locomotive that hauled the Royal train to Ambepussa
with the Duke. It was a 4-4-0 type two-wheel coupled engine with a tender. It
had a fuel capacity of 5 tons and took 1,500 gallons of water for conversion to
steam. The total weight of the engine plus tender was 59 tons. It is said that
this engine was in service until 1926. The first tunnel on the Main Line, which
is 274 ft. long, is near Mirigama before reaching Ambepussa. The tunnels and
overhanging rocks on the incline stand as lasting monuments to the genius of
Sir Molesworth and to the great courage of Faviell, the contractor.
From Colombo to Kandy there are 10 tunnels, and
from Kandy to Badulla, 36 tunnels, the longest being the poolbank tunnel,
between Hatton and Kotagala, which is 1,842 ft. long, and keeps passengers
spellbound in the dark for about two minutes. The railway engineers faced
innumerable difficulties in constructing bridges of varying lengths. "The
bridge over the Kelani river is a substantial structure of 800 ft. in length
and was composed of 8 spans built on screw piles, and 12 spans of 25 ft. on
brick piers. Following a heavy monsoon rain, one of the centre spans collapsed
with an engine and its crew on September 20, 1872. The bridge was later
replaced by one of fine aspects and construction consisting of 6 spans of 80
ft. in the centre, and 12 spans of 25 ft. plate girder deck spans, with 6 spans
on either end. The main spans are supported on cast iron cylinders 6 ft. in
diameter in the top section, and 7 ft. underground. These were sunk to a depth
of 45 ft. to 50 ft. below the bed of the river to a bearing surface on a
structure of sand and large pebbles." Although it was originally designed to
carry double tracks, the line was not duplicated until about 30 years later.
However, after the duplication was done, the then consulting engineers, M/s.
Gregory, Eyles and Waring, reported that "the bridge was not of sufficient
strength to allow trains to run on both lines simultaneously". After tests
carried out in 1950, which consisted of "hammer blow, lurching and rail joint
strength at various speeds, it was decided that the bridge was safe for
existing loading and even for future loadings". Investigations were carried out
by the Bridge Investigating Committee headed by Conrad Gribbles,bridge
consultant. They used modern apparatus like Farraday Palmers, and Cambridge
Stress Recorders, Cambridge Deflectographs and Deflectometers.
The present Ambepussa Railway Station is a newly
constructed one. The old station still stands, but is not in use, and
passengers who travel by train can see it.
The first General Manager of Railways in Sri
Lanka was W.T. Pearce (1882-1901) and the last European to hold the post was
J.E.S. Bodger (1945-1948). He was succeeded by M. Kanagasabai as the first
Lankan to hold the chief executive post. |
Page first published on the
27th of November 2001 |