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词条 Bhor Ghat
释义

  1. History

  2. Rail

  3. Road

  4. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2017}}{{Use Indian English|date=August 2017}}{{refimprove|date=March 2017}}{{Infobox Mountain Pass
|name = Bhor Ghat
|photo = Bhor Ghat (1870).jpg
|photo_width = 280px
|photo_caption = Bhor Ghat in 1870
| map= India Maharashtra
| map_size=
| lat_d =
| long_d =
| map_caption=Location of Bhor Ghat
| traversed =
| location = Maharashtra, India
| range = Sahyadri
|coordinates = {{coord|18.46|N|73.22|E|type:pass_region:IN}}
|elevation = {{convert|622|m|ft}}[1]
}}

Bhor Ghat or Bor Ghat, Bhore Ghaut,[2][3] is a mountain passage located between {{rws|Palasdari}} and {{rws|Khandala}} for railway and between Khopoli and Khandala on the road route in Maharashtra, India, situated on the crest of the Western Ghats.

History

The discovery of a route to make a motorable pass in Bor Ghat came after information was provided by a local Dhangar tribesman called Shigroba. Later, the Great Indian Peninsula Railway laid a railway line from Mumbai to Pune. The section through Bhor Ghat with 28 tunnels, and old bridges was opened in 1863.[4] The Ghat opened Mumbai to the Deccan plains of Peninsular India.[5]

Building a railway over the Bhor ghat was an exercise in imperial engineering, as noted in an article in Engineering Magazine in 1899, where it was described as "a more certain and enduring form of attack than military power, and that the railway, the canal and harbour are the real weapons in the conquest of a colony."[6] p. 347

The number of staff during construction increased from 10,000 in 1856, over 20,000 in 1857 to a peak of 42,000 in January 1861. The original incline included building 25 tunnels, eight arched masonry viaducts, blasting and removing of 54 mio cubic feet (1.5 mio m³) of hard rock and building embankments from 67.5 mio cubic feet (1.9 million m³) of material at a total cost of £ 1,100,000, i.e. £ 70,000 per mile.[6] p. 352

The project was marred by industrial unrest as well as disease. The first contractor awarded the section, William Frederick Faviell, mistreated his workers and underpaid his subcontractors, leading to riots by the workers that resulted in the death of one of the European managers attempting to subdue the unrest. Following a British Government investigation, Faviell's contract was taken away from him and granted to Solomon Tredwell, who arrived in 1859 to restart the works. Tredwell died within days, of dysentery or cholera. His wife, Alice then took over the contract, completing it with success by 1863.[6]

During the grand ceremony at the official opening, which was held at Khandala near the highest point of the incline on 21 April 1863, the governor of Bombay Presidency, Sir Bartle Frere, gave a speech, in which he felt "assured, that in the future ages the works of our English engineers on these Ghauts will take the place of those works of their demigods, the great cave temples of western India, which have so long, to the simple inhabitants of these lands, been the type of superhuman strength, and of more than mortal constructive skill."[6] p. 351

Rail

{{BS-header|Bhor Ghat|Bhor Ghat}}{{BS-table}}{{BS9||||||vCONTg|||WCONTg||to {{rws|Mumbai CST}} (Via {{rws|Panvel}} / {{rws|Kalyan}})}}{{BS9||||||vHST|||WASSER||{{rws|Palasdari}}}}{{BS9||||||vÜSTr|||WASSER||}}{{BS9|||||STR+l|vABZgr-STR|||WASSER||}}{{BS9|||||STR|vWBRÜCKE1|WASSERq|WABZq+l|WABZgr||}}{{BS9|||||STR|vWBRÜCKE1|WASSERq|WASSERr|WASSER||}}{{BS9|||||S+BHF|vSTR||WASSER+l|WASSERr||{{rws|Kelavli}}}}{{BS9|||||STR|vTUNNEL2||WASSER|||}}{{BS9|||||STR|vBRÜCKE1||WASSER|||}}{{BS9|||||STR|vTUNNEL2||WASSERl|WASSER+r||}}{{BS9|||||S+BHF|vSTR|||WASSER||{{rws|Dolavli}}}}{{BS9|||||STR|vTUNNEL2|WASSER+l|WASSERq|WASSERr||}}{{BS9|||||S+BHF|vSTR|WASSER||||{{rws|Lowjee}}}}{{BS9|||||STR|vTUNNEL2|WASSERl|WASSER+r|||}}{{BS9|||||STR|vHST||WASSER|||Thakurvadi}}{{BS9||CONTg grey||CONTg grey|STR|vTNL2-STR||WASSER|||to Mumbai (Via Panvel)}}{{BS9||RP4||RP2t|ENDEe|vSTR|WASSER+l|WASSERr|||Khopoli}}{{BS9|RP1+l|RP4xRP1|RP1q|RP2wRP1||vTNL2-STR|WASSER||||}}{{BS9|RP1l|RP4wRP1||RP1||vTUNNEL2|WASSER||||}}{{BS9||RP4||RP1||vTUNNEL2|WASSERl|WASSER+r|||}}{{BS9|RP2+l|RP2yRP4new|RP2+r|RP1||vTNL2-STR||WASSER|||}}{{BS9|tRP2ae||RP2|RP1||vSTR||WASSER|||One way tunnel on Express way from Khandala to Khopoli}}{{BS9|RP2l|RP2yRP4sew|RP2rf|RP1||vTUNNEL2||WASSER|||}}{{BS9||RP4||RP1|exvENDEaq|vABZgr||WASSER|||Catch Sliding}}{{BS9||RP4l|RP4swRP1|RP1xRP4|RP4K+r|vHST||WASSERl|WCONTfq||Monkey Hill (halt)}}{{BS9|||RP1|RP1yRP2|RP4|vSTR|||||}}{{BS9|||RP1l|RP2wRP1|RP4|tvSTRa|||||}}{{BS9||||RP2l|RP4uRP2|tvSKRZ-G2h|RP2q|RP2q|RP2+r||}}{{BS9|||||RP4Kl|vSKRZ-G4h|RP4q|RP4+r|RP2||}}{{BS9||||||tvSTRe||RP4|RP2||}}{{BS9||||||vSTR||tRP4a|RP2||}}{{BS9||||||vTUNNEL2|RP2+l|RP4uRP2|RP2rf||}}{{BS9||||||vTUNNEL2|tRP2ae|tRP4e|||Khandala Tunnel (2.304 Km)}}{{BS9||||||vHST|RP2t|RP4|||Khandala}}{{BS9||||||vCONTf|CONTf grey|CONTf grey|||to Pune}}{{end}}
Guide
RailwayOld NH4 now AH47E-wayRiver Ulhas
STR|2=0}}RP2|2=0}}RP4|2=0}}WASSER|2=0}}

The Bhor Ghat Railway cuts a distance of 21 km between {{rws|Khandala}} and {{rws|Palasdari}}. There are 28 tunnels across the railway ghat.{{cn|date=March 2017}} This ghat comes under the proposed Golden Quadrilateral Freight Corridors. During construction of this ghat almost 25,000 workers lost their lives due to steepness of this ghat.[7] p. 343 Initially steam traction was used to haul trains across this ghat. In 1929-30 the Great Indian Peninsula Railway electrified Bombay (Mumbai) - Poona (Pune) section with use of 1500 Volts DC current. This led to end of steam era on this ghat.

The first DC locomotives were EF/1 class locomotives (later classified as WCG1) for freight trains. Later Express trains were hauled by EA/1 class locomotives (later classified as WCP1).[8]

Reversing Station

There used to be a reversing station on this ghat which trains of Great Indian Peninsula Railway (GIPR) used earlier. This was shutdown due to new tunnels on the ghat.[9]{{not in source|date=March 2017}} The reversing station was located between {{rws|Monkey Hill}} and {{rws|Khandala}} after tunnel no. 26. During night time lights of Khopoli can be seen from here.[10]{{better source|date=March 2017}}

Railway stations on Bhor Ghat
#Station NameDescriptionkm
English Marathi Station Code
1Palasdari}}पळसदरी PDI Start 0
2Thakurvadi}}ठाकुरवाडी TKW Minor Halt 9
3Monkey Hill}}मंकी हिल MNLC Technical Halt, no tickets issued 16
4Khandala}}खंडाळाKAD End 21

Road

The road ghat lies between Khopoli and Khandala and is 18 km long. There are six lanes on the Mumbai - Pune express highway and four lanes on the old Mumbai - Pune road. There is proposal to dig two four-lane tunnels between Khalapur toll booth near Khopoli and Sinhagad institute, Lonavala to bypass this ghat on Mumbai – Pune express-way which will be expanded from six-lane to eight-lane road. Similarly, old Mumbai – Pune highway will use the existing express highway route and will be expanded from four to six lanes. This will also reduce the distance on express highway by 6 km i.e. from 18 km to 12 km.[11]

References

1. ^Google Earth
2. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=yUhvfR1S_UEC&pg=PA36&dq=Bhor+Ghat The Indian Empire By William Wilson Hunter, p. 36]
3. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.maharashtra.gov.in/english/gazetteer/KOLABA/gen_phy_features.html |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2009-01-23 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20080501013616/http://www.maharashtra.gov.in/english/gazetteer/KOLABA/gen_phy_features.html |archivedate=2008-05-01 |df= }}
4. ^{{cite book|first=Richard|last=Balkwill|author2=Marshall, John|title=The Guinness Book of Railway Facts and Feats|edition=6th|location=Enfield|publisher=Guinness Publishing|year=1993|isbn=978-0-85112-707-1|pages=66–7}}
5. ^{{cite book|last=Rao|first=M.A.|title=Indian Railways|location=New Delhi|publisher=National Book Trust|date=1988|page=15}}
6. ^{{cite book|author=Christian Wolmar|title=Railways and The Raj: How the Age of Steam Transformed India|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bwErDwAAQBAJ&pg=PT53|year=2017|publisher=Atlantic Books|isbn=978-1-78239-766-3|page=44-45}}
7. ^Ian Kerr: The Building of the Bhor Ghat Railway Incline in Western India in the mid-19th Century.
8. ^A Brief History of Railway Electrification in India
9. ^Bhor Ghat Reversing station
10. ^Khandala Reversing Station
11. ^ 14 lanes, 12-km bypass to speed up Mumbai-Pune expressway traffic
{{commons category|Bhor Ghat}}{{Mountain passes of India}}{{Railways in Western India}}

5 : Lonavala-Khandala|Mountain passes of Maharashtra|Geography of Raigad district|Mountain passes of the Western Ghats|Rail mountain passes of India

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