This line is a part of South Eastern Railway zone, on which the Kolkata Suburban local train runs from Howrah to Amta. Its total distance is about 35 km, which takes about one hour from Santragachi to Amta.
History
The Howrah Amta Light Railway was owned and worked by the Howrah–Amta Light Railway Company. The Howrah-Amta Light Railway was closed on 1 January 1971. The track bed was used for South Eastern Railway’s Amta branch.
Bargachia to Mahendra Lalnagar opened 22 July 2002
Mahendra Lalnagar to Amta opened December 2004
Construction
The union railway minister, Ms. Mamata Banerjee, formally inaugurated the 6 km long Bargachia–Munshirhat broad gauge line section in the South Eastern Railway system. This section, mainly to benefit the daily commuters, is a part of the much-awaited 73.5 km-long Howrah–Amta new BG line, including the Bargachia-Champadanga branch line. The entire stretch is expected to be completed by the end of 2001 or early 2002. The new line project is estimated to cost Rs. 124 crores. The minister announced a trial run for seven days, mainly on account of safety and security, and declared that two pairs of trains would be pressed into service between Howrah and Munshirhat from 29 July. Currently, six pairs of EMU locals run between Howrah and Bargachia every day. Unveiling the plaque signalling the formal commissioning of the Bargachia-Munshirhat BG section at the Mahendra Lal Nagar terminal station, the Minister complimented SER and its workforce for having completed the project four months ahead of schedule. The Howrah-Amta new BG line project including the branch line was sanctioned way back in 74-75 at an initial cost of Rs. 32 crores. The first 24-km stretch of the section from Howrah to Bargachia was completed in 1984 by SER along with electrification, and commissioned soon after. Work on further construction beyond Bargachia was frozen by the Railway Board for more than a decade, and was revived in 1995–96, when the next block section was sanctioned. The original narrow gauge line, connecting Howrah and Calcutta to Amta, was part of the Martin Light Railway in British India. The NG line connecting Howrah to Amta, Champadanga and Seikhala, was terminated on the bank of the Damodar river on the north west side. After running for a number of years, the line was abandoned in 1971, as operations became unprofitable owing to various reasons.
Route
Stations between Santragachi and Amta are Bankra Nayabaz–Baltikuri–Kona–Dansi–Jhalurberi–Makardaha–Domjur Road–Domjur–Dakshinbari–Bargachia–Pantihal–Munsirhat–Mahendralalnagar–Maju–Jalasi–Harshidadpur.