It was on this day in 1853, that the country's first passenger train operated between Bombay and Thane, marking the birth of the railways.
Built by the Great Indian Peninsula Railway (GIPR), the train was drawn by three engines named -- Sahib, Sindh and Sultan -- and covered the distance of 21 miles in 57 minutes
The Ministry of Railways marked the occasion on social media by sharing old, historic and nostalgic photographs, saying -- "162 years of Indian Railways!"
The photographs include one of the rare picture of a viaduct between Bomabay and Thane taken during the 1850s, a gate man standing at a level-crossing watching a steam engine puff out in front of him, a Bombay Baroda and Central India (BB & CI) railways train and a coloured image of a stationed freight express hauled by a diesel locomotive hauling at Nangloi.
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