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Uganda Railway

The Uganda Railway was a metre-gauge railway system and former British state-owned railway company. The line linked the interiors of Uganda and Kenya with the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa in Kenya. After a series of mergers and splits, the line is now in the hands of the Kenya Railways Corporation and the Uganda Railways Corporation.

Uganda Railway
Kenya Uganda Railways
TypeGovernment-owned corporation
Founded1895 (1895)
Defunct1929 (1929)
SuccessorKenya and Uganda Railways and Harbours
East African Railways & Harbours
Key people
Sir George Whitehouse

Construction

 
Near Mombasa, about 1899
3

The official approach, British and local, to both slavery and free porter labour included a genuine belief that the man doing the work had real interests which deserved concern and protection. No such concern was evident among parliamentarians, missionaries or administrators for those at work on the construction of the Uganda Railway. It was decided to build the railway as quickly as possible; its construction was viewed almost as a military attack—casualties were inevitable and might be large if the objective were to be attained and momentum not lost.[1]

—Anthony Clayton & Donald C. Savage

Background

Before the railway's construction, the Imperial British East Africa Company had begun the Mackinnon-Sclater road, a 970-kilometre (600 mi) ox-cart track from Mombasa to Busia in Kenya, in 1890.[2]

In July 1890, Britain was party to a series of anti-slavery measures agreed at the Brussels Conference Act of 1890. In December 1890, a letter from the Foreign Office to the treasury proposed constructing a railway from Mombasa to Uganda to disrupt the traffic of slaves from its source in the interior to the coast.[3]

With steam-powered access to Uganda, the British could transport people and soldiers to ensure dominance of the African Great Lakes region.[4]

In December 1891 Captain James Macdonald began an extensive survey which lasted until November 1892. At the time there was only one caravan route across the length of the country, forcing Macdonald and his party to march 4,280 miles (6,890 km) across unknown routes with limited supplies of water or food. The survey led to the first general map of the region.[5]

The Uganda Railway was named after its ultimate destination, for its entire original 1,060-kilometre (660 mi) length actually lay in what would become Kenya.[6] Construction began at the port city of Mombasa in British East Africa in 1896 and finished at the line's terminus, Kisumu, on the eastern shore of Lake Victoria, in 1901.[2]

Engineering

The railway is 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) gauge[7] and virtually all single-track with passing loops at stations. 200,000 individual 9-metre (30 ft) rail-lengths and 1.2 million sleepers, 200,000 fish-plates, 400,000 fish-bolts and 4.8 million steel keys plus steel girders for viaducts and causeways had to be imported from India, necessitating the creation of a modern port at Kilindini Harbour in Mombasa. The railway was a huge logistical achievement and became strategically and economically vital for both Uganda and Kenya. It helped to suppress slavery, by removing the need for humans in the transport of goods.[8]

Management

In August 1895, a bill was introduced at Westminster, becoming the Uganda Railway Act 1896 which authorised the construction of a railway from Mombasa to the shores of Lake Victoria.[9] The man tasked with building the railway was George Whitehouse, an experienced civil engineer who had worked across the British Empire. Whitehouse acted as the Chief Engineer between 1895 and 1903, also serving as the railway's manager from its opening in 1901. The consulting engineers were Sir Alexander Rendel of Sir. A Rendel & Son and Frederick Ewart Robertson.[10]

Workers

Nearly all the workers involved on the construction of the line came from British India. An agent was appointed in Karachi responsible for recruiting coolies, artisans and subordinate officers and a branch office was located in Lahore, the principal recruiting centre. Workers were sourced from villages in the Punjab and sent to Karachi on specially chartered steamers belonging to the British India Steam Navigation Company.[11] Shortly after recruitment began, a plague broke out in India, seriously delaying the advancement of the railway. The Government of India only permitted recruitment and emigration to resume on the creation of a quarantine camp at Budapore, financed by the Uganda Railway, and where recruits were required to spend fourteen days in quarantine before departure.[11]

A total of 35,729 coolies and artisans were recruited along with 1,082 subordinate officers, totalling 36,811 persons.[12] Each coolie signed a contract for three years at twelve rupees per month with free rations and return passage to their place of enlistment. They received half-pay when in hospital and free medical attendance.[12] Recruitment continued between December 1895 and March 1901, and the first coolies began to return to India after their contracts ended in 1899. 2,493 workers died during the construction of the railway between 1895 and 1903 at a rate of 357 annually.[12] While most of the surviving Indians returned home, 6,724 decided to remain after the line's completion, creating a community of Indians in East Africa.[6]

 
Reproduction poster of an advertisement for the railway. Note chopper coupling.

Law and order

To maintain law and order, the railway instituted a police department. The force was uniformed and drilled and armed with Martini-Henry rifles.[13] The force was composed of Indians and two officers were lent by the Indian government to drill and superintend the force. A maximum of 400 constables were recruited, and the force was handed over to the Protectorate government on completion of the railway.[13]

Resistance

At the turn of the 20th century, the railway construction was disturbed by the resistance by Nandi people led by Koitalel Arap Samoei. He was killed in 1905 by Richard Meinertzhagen, ending the Nandi resistance.[14]

Tsavo man-eating lions

The incidents for which the building of the railway may be most noted are the killings of a number of construction workers in 1898, during the building of a bridge across the Tsavo River. Hunting mainly at night, a pair of maneless male lions stalked and killed at least 28 Indian and African workers – although some accounts put the number of victims as high as 135.[15]

Lunatic Express

The Uganda Railway faced a great deal of criticism in Parliament, with many parliamentarians decrying it as exorbitantly expensive. Whilst the concept of cost-benefit analysis did not exist in public spending in the Victorian Era, the huge capital sums of the project nevertheless made many sceptical of the value of the investment. This, coupled with the fatalities and wastage of the personnel constructing it through disease, tribal activity, and hostile wildlife led the Uganda Railway to be dubbed a Lunatic Line:

What it will cost no words can express,
What is its object no brain can suppose,
Where it will start from no one can guess,
Where it is going to nobody knows,
What is the use of it, none can conjecture,
What it will carry, there is none can define,
And in spite of George Curzon's superior lecture,
It is clearly naught but a lunatic line.

Political resistance to this "gigantic folly", as Henry Labouchère called it,[17] surfaced immediately. Such arguments along with the claim that it would be a waste of taxpayers' money were easily dismissed by the Conservatives. Years before, Joseph Chamberlain had proclaimed that, if Britain were to step away from its "manifest destiny", it would by default leave it to other nations to take up the work that it would have been seen as "too weak, too poor, and too cowardly" to have done itself.[18] Its cost has been estimated by one source at £3 million in 1894 money, which is more than £170 million in 2005 money,[19] and £5.5 million or £650 million in 2016 money by another source.[20]

Because of the wooden trestle bridges, enormous chasms, prohibitive cost, hostile tribes, men infected by the hundreds by diseases, and man-eating lions pulling railway workers out of carriages at night, the name "Lunatic Line" certainly seemed to fit. Winston Churchill, who regarded it "a brilliant conception", said of the project: "The British art of 'muddling through' is here seen in one of its finest expositions. Through everything—through the forests, through the ravines, through troops of marauding lions, through famine, through war, through five years of excoriating Parliamentary debate, muddled and marched the railway."[21]

The modern term Lunatic Express was coined by Charles Miller in his 1971 The Lunatic Express: An Entertainment in Imperialism. The term The Iron Snake[22] comes from an old Nandi prophecy by Orkoiyot Kimnyolei: "An iron snake will cross from the lake of salt to the lands of the Great Lake to quench its thirst.."[23]

Extensions and branches

 
Uganda Railway is 1,000 mm (3 ft 3+38 in) metre gauge.

Disassembled ferries were shipped from Scotland by sea to Mombasa and then by rail to Kisumu where they were reassembled and provided a service to Port Bell and, later, other ports on Lake Victoria (see section below). An 11-kilometre (7 mi) rail line between Port Bell and Kampala was the final link in the chain providing efficient transport between the Ugandan capital and the open sea at Mombasa, more than 1,400 km (900 mi) away.

Branch lines were built to Thika in 1913, Lake Magadi in 1915, Kitale in 1926, Naro Moro in 1927 and from Tororo to Soroti in 1929. In 1929 the Uganda Railway became Kenya and Uganda Railways and Harbours (KURH), which in 1931 completed a branch line to Mount Kenya and extended the main line from Nakuru to Kampala in Uganda. In 1948 KURH became part of the East African Railways Corporation, which added the line from Kampala to Kasese in western Uganda in 1956.[24] and extended to it to Arua near the border with Zaïre in 1964.

Inland shipping

Lake Victoria

Almost from its inception the Uganda Railway developed shipping services on Lake Victoria. In 1898 it launched the 110 ton SS William Mackinnon at Kisumu, having assembled the vessel from a "knock down" kit supplied by Bow, McLachlan and Company of Paisley in Scotland. A succession of further Bow, McLachlan & Co. "knock down" kits followed. The 662 ton sister ships SS Winifred and SS Sybil (1902 and 1903), the 1,134 ton SS Clement Hill (1907) and the 1,300 ton sister ships SS Rusinga and SS Usoga (1914 and 1915) were combined passenger and cargo ferries. The 812 ton SS Nyanza (launched after Clement Hill) was purely a cargo ship. The 228 ton SS Kavirondo launched in 1913 was a tugboat. Two more tugboats from Bow, McLachlan were added in 1925: SS Buganda and SS Buvuma.[25][26]

Lake Kyoga, Lake Albert and the Nile

The company extended its steamer service with a route across Lake Kyoga and down the Victoria Nile to Pakwach at the head of the Albert Nile. Its Lake Victoria ships were unsuitable for river work so it introduced the stern wheel paddle steamers PS Speke (1910)[27] and PS Stanley (1913)[27] for the new service. In the 1920s the company added PS Grant (1925)[27] and the side wheel paddle steamer PS Lugard (1927).[27]

Safari tourism

 
Former U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt (seated, at left) and friends mount the observation platform of a Uganda Railway locomotive

As the only modern means of transport from the East African coast to the higher plateaus of the interior, a ride on the Uganda Railway became an essential overture to the safari adventures which grew in popularity in the first two decades of the 20th century. As a result, it usually featured prominently in the accounts written by travelers in British East Africa. The rail journey stirred many a romantic passage, like this one from former U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt, who rode the line to start his world-famous safari in 1909:

The railroad, the embodiment of the eager, masterful, materialistic civilization of today, was pushed through a region in which nature, both as regards wild man and wild beast, does not differ materially from what it was in Europe in the late Pleistocene.[28]

Passengers were invited to ride a platform on the front of the locomotive from which they might see the passing game herds more closely. During Roosevelt's journey, he claimed that "on this, except at mealtime, I spent most of the hours of daylight."

Current status

 
Former train still in use (2017)
 
Most parts of the old metre gauge line have been neglected and overgrown with bushes.

After independence, the railways in Kenya and Uganda fell into disrepair. In summer 2016, a reporter for The Economist magazine took the Lunatic Express from Nairobi to Mombasa. He found the railway to be in poor condition, departing 7 hours late and taking 24 hours for the journey.[20] The last metre-gauge train between Mombasa and Nairobi made its run on 28 April 2017.[29] The line between Nairobi and Kisumu near the Kenya–Uganda border has been closed since 2012.[30]

From 2014 to 2016, the China Road and Bridge Corporation built the Mombasa–Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway (SGR) parallel to the original Uganda Railway. Passenger service on the SGR was inaugurated on 31 May 2017. The metre-gauge railway is still used to transport passengers between the new SGR Nairobi Terminus and the old metre-gauge train station in Nairobi city centre.

Research has shown that expectations and hopes for the transformations that the Uganda railway would bring about are similar to contemporary visions about the changes that would happen once East Africa became connected to high-speed fibre-optic broadband.[31]

In popular culture

 
Jinja railway station with a Uganda Railways diesel locomotive.

The man-eating lions at Tsavo feature in a factual account by Patterson's 1907 autobiographical book The Man-eaters of Tsavo. John Halkin's 1968 novel, Kenya, focuses on the construction of the railway and its defence during the First World War.

The construction of the railway serves as the backdrop to the novel Dance of the Jakaranda (Akashic Books, 2017) by Peter Kimani.

Several films have featured the Uganda Railway, including Bwana Devil, made in 1952, the Tsavo man-eaters are part of the plot of the 1956 film Beyond Mombasa, The Ghost and the Darkness, in 1996 and Chander Pahar, a 2013 Bengali movie based on the 1937 novel by Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay. In addition the 1985 film Out of Africa shows the railway in a number of its scenes. A documentary on the construction of the line, The Permanent Way was made in 1961.

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Clayton & Savage 1975, pp. 10–1.
  2. ^ a b Ogonda 1992, p. 131.
  3. ^ Whitehouse 1948, p. 5
  4. ^ Ogonda & Onyango 2002, p. 223–4.
  5. ^ Whitehouse 1948, p. 2
  6. ^ a b Wolmar 2009, p. 182.
  7. ^ Treves, Frederick (1910). Uganda for a holiday. London: Smith, Elder & Co. p. 57. Retrieved 30 November 2009.
  8. ^ Cana, Frank Richardson (1911). "British East Africa" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 601–606.
  9. ^ Whitehouse 1948, p. 3.
  10. ^ Whitehouse 1948, p. 15.
  11. ^ a b Whitehouse 1948, p. 7
  12. ^ a b c Whitehouse 1948, p. 8
  13. ^ a b Whitehouse 1948, p. 10
  14. ^ "End of Lunatic Express". The East African. 21 September 2009.
  15. ^ . Railway Gazette International. 27 November 2009. Archived from the original on 15 August 2010.
  16. ^ Muiruri, Peter (31 May 2017). "End of road for first railway that defined Kenya's history". The Standard.
  17. ^ Henry Labouchère. "UGANDA RAILWAY [CONSOLIDATED FUND]. HC Deb 30 April 1900 vol 82 cc288-335". Hansard 1803–2005. UK Parliament. Retrieved 10 March 2012. I am opposed entirely to this sort of railway in Africa, and I have been opposed to this railroad from the very commencement because it is a gigantic folly. . . . This railroad has been, from the very first commencement, a gigantic folly.
  18. ^ Joseph Chamberlain. "CIVIL SERVICES AND REVENUE DEPARTMENTS ESTIMATES, 1894–5: CLASS V. HC Deb 01 June 1894 vol 25 cc181-270". Hansard 1803–2005. UK Parliament. Retrieved 10 March 2012.
  19. ^ "Currency converter". The National Archives. Retrieved 10 March 2012.
  20. ^ a b Knowles, Daniel (23 June 2016). "The lunatic express". The Economist. Retrieved 15 July 2016.
  21. ^ Churchill 1909, pp. 4–5.
  22. ^ Hardy 1965.
  23. ^ Matson 2009.
  24. ^ "Investing in Uganda's Mineral Sector" (PDF). Retrieved 20 June 2010.
  25. ^ Cameron, Stuart; Asprey, David; Allan. . Clyde-built Database. Archived from the original on 16 June 2012. Retrieved 22 May 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  26. ^ Cameron, Stuart; Asprey, David; Allan, Bruce. . Clyde-built Database. Archived from the original on 16 June 2012. Retrieved 22 May 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  27. ^ a b c d "Cambridge University Library: Royal Commonwealth Society Library, Mombasa and East African Steamers, Y30468L". Janus. Cambridge University Library.
  28. ^ Roosevelt, Theodore, 1909, African Game Trails, Charles Scribner's Sons, page 2
  29. ^ Ruthi, William (8 May 2017). "Last ride on the Lunatic Express". Daily Nation.
  30. ^ . Rift Valley Railways. Archived from the original on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  31. ^ Graham, Mark; Andersen, Casper; Mann, Laura (15 December 2014). "Geographical imagination and technological connectivity in East Africa". Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers. 40 (3): 334–349. doi:10.1111/tran.12076. ISSN 0020-2754.

Bibliography

  • Amin, Mohamed; Willetts, Duncan; Matheson, Alastair (1986). Railway Across The Equator: The Story of the East African Line. London: The Bodley Head. ISBN 0370307747.
  • Boyles, Denis (1991). Man Eaters Motel and other stops on the railway to nowhere: an East African traveller's nightbook, including a summary history of Zanzibar and an account of the slaughter at Tsavo : together with a sketch of life in Nairobi and at Lake Victoria, a brief and worried visit to the Ugandan border, and a survey of angling in the Aberdares. New York: Ticknor & Fields. ISBN 039558082X.
  • Chao, Tayiana (28 October 2014). "The Lunatic Express – A photo essay on the Uganda railway". The Agora. Retrieved 25 November 2014.
  • Churchill, Winston Spencer (1909) [1908]. My African Journey. Toronto: William Briggs. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  • Clayton, Anthony; Savage, Donald C. (1975). Government and Labour in Kenya, 1895–1963. London: Routledge.
  • Hamshere, C. E. (March 1968). "The Uganda Railway". History Today. 18 (3): 188–195.
  • Hardy, Ronald (1965). The Iron Snake. New York, NY: G.P. Putnam's Sons.
  • Hill, M. F. (1961). Permanent Way. Vol. 1: The story of the Kenya and Uganda Railway (2nd ed.). Nairobi: East African Railways & Harbours. OCLC 776735246.
  • Kinuthia, Helen. "The Iron Snake, History of the Kenyan Railways". Haligonian Investment Limited. Retrieved 25 November 2014.
  • D., Mannix (1954). "R.O. Preston of the Lunatic Line". In Hunter, J. A.; Mannix, D. (eds.). African Bush Adventures. Hamish Hamilton.
  • Matson, Alfred T. (2009) [1993]. Nandi Resistance to British Rule: The Volcano Erupts. Nairobi: Transafrica Press. ISBN 978-9966-940-18-6.
  • Mills, Stephen; Yonge, Brian (2012). A Railway to Nowhere: The Building of the Lunatic Line 1896-1901. Nairobi: Mills Publishing. ISBN 9789966709431.
  • Odongo, Waga (12 December 2013). . Daily Nation. Archived from the original on 25 March 2016. Retrieved 25 November 2014.
  • Ogonda, Richard T. (1992). "Transport and Communications in the Colonial Economy". In Ochieng', W. R.; Maxon, R. M. (eds.). An Economic History of Kenya. Nairobi: East African Educational Publishers. pp. 129–146. ISBN 978-9966-46-963-2.
  • Ogonda, Richard T.; Onyango, George M. (2002). "Development of Transport and Communication". In Ochieng', William Robert (ed.). Historical Studies and Social Change in Western Kenya. Nairobi: East African Educational Publishers. pp. 219–231. ISBN 978-9966-25-152-7.
  • Otte, T. G.; Neilson, Keith, eds. (2012). Railways and International Politics: Paths of Empire, 1848-1945. Military History and Policy. London: Routledge. ISBN 9780415651318.
  • Patience, Kevin (1976), Steam in East Africa: a pictorial history of the railways in East Africa, 1893-1976, Nairobi: Heinemann Educational Books (E.A.) Ltd, OCLC 3781370, Wikidata Q111363477
  • Patterson, J. H. (2013) [First published 1908]. The Man-Eaters of Tsavo: And Other East African Adventures. New York: Skyhorse. ISBN 9781620874066.
  • Preston, R. O. (1947). The Genesis of Kenya Colony: Reminiscences of an early Uganda railway construction pioneer. Nairobi: Colonial Printing Works. OCLC 3652501.
  • Pringle, Patrick; Hill, Mervyn F. (1970) [First published 1954]. The Story of a Railway (New ed.). London: Evans Brothers Ltd. ISBN 0237288559.
  • Ramaer, Roel (1974). Steam Locomotives of the East African Railways. David & Charles Locomotive Studies. Newton Abbot, North Pomfret: David & Charles. ISBN 978-0-7153-6437-6. OCLC 832692810. OL 5110018M. Wikidata Q111363478.
  • Ramaer, Roel (2009). Gari la Moshi: Steam Locomotives of the East African Railways. Malmö: Stenvalls. ISBN 978-91-7266-172-1. OCLC 502034710. Wikidata Q111363479.
  • Robinson, Neil (2009). World Rail Atlas and Historical Summary. Volume 7: North, East and Central Africa. Barnsley, UK: World Rail Atlas Ltd. ISBN 978-954-92184-3-5.
  • Sood, Satya V. (2007). Victoria's Tin Dragon: a railway that built a nation. Cambridge, England: Vanguard Press. ISBN 9781843862741.
  • Wolmar, Christian (2009). Blood, Iron & Gold: How the Railways Transformed the World. London: Atlantic Books. ISBN 9781848871700.
  • Whitehouse, G. C. (March 1948). "The Building of the Kenya and Uganda Railway". The Uganda Journal. Kampala: The Uganda Society. 12 (1): 1–15.

External links

  • 14 scale replica of EAR 31 class steam locomotive "Uganda" at Stapleford Miniature railway in the UK
  • Winchester, Clarence, ed. (1936), "Through desert and jungle", Railway Wonders of the World, pp. 193–199 illustrated description of the Uganda railway

uganda, railway, this, article, about, british, colonial, undertaking, 1896, 1929, uganda, state, railway, since, 1977, corporation, metre, gauge, railway, system, former, british, state, owned, railway, company, line, linked, interiors, uganda, kenya, with, i. This article is about the British colonial undertaking of 1896 1929 For Uganda s state railway since 1977 see Uganda Railways Corporation The Uganda Railway was a metre gauge railway system and former British state owned railway company The line linked the interiors of Uganda and Kenya with the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa in Kenya After a series of mergers and splits the line is now in the hands of the Kenya Railways Corporation and the Uganda Railways Corporation Uganda RailwayKenya Uganda RailwaysTypeGovernment owned corporationFounded1895 1895 Defunct1929 1929 SuccessorKenya and Uganda Railways and HarboursEast African Railways amp HarboursKey peopleSir George Whitehouse Contents 1 Construction 1 1 Background 1 2 Engineering 1 3 Management 1 4 Workers 1 5 Law and order 1 6 Resistance 2 Tsavo man eating lions 3 Lunatic Express 4 Extensions and branches 5 Inland shipping 5 1 Lake Victoria 5 2 Lake Kyoga Lake Albert and the Nile 6 Safari tourism 7 Current status 8 In popular culture 9 See also 10 References 10 1 Footnotes 10 2 Bibliography 11 External linksConstruction Edit Near Mombasa about 18993 The official approach British and local to both slavery and free porter labour included a genuine belief that the man doing the work had real interests which deserved concern and protection No such concern was evident among parliamentarians missionaries or administrators for those at work on the construction of the Uganda Railway It was decided to build the railway as quickly as possible its construction was viewed almost as a military attack casualties were inevitable and might be large if the objective were to be attained and momentum not lost 1 Anthony Clayton amp Donald C Savage Background Edit Before the railway s construction the Imperial British East Africa Company had begun the Mackinnon Sclater road a 970 kilometre 600 mi ox cart track from Mombasa to Busia in Kenya in 1890 2 In July 1890 Britain was party to a series of anti slavery measures agreed at the Brussels Conference Act of 1890 In December 1890 a letter from the Foreign Office to the treasury proposed constructing a railway from Mombasa to Uganda to disrupt the traffic of slaves from its source in the interior to the coast 3 With steam powered access to Uganda the British could transport people and soldiers to ensure dominance of the African Great Lakes region 4 In December 1891 Captain James Macdonald began an extensive survey which lasted until November 1892 At the time there was only one caravan route across the length of the country forcing Macdonald and his party to march 4 280 miles 6 890 km across unknown routes with limited supplies of water or food The survey led to the first general map of the region 5 The Uganda Railway was named after its ultimate destination for its entire original 1 060 kilometre 660 mi length actually lay in what would become Kenya 6 Construction began at the port city of Mombasa in British East Africa in 1896 and finished at the line s terminus Kisumu on the eastern shore of Lake Victoria in 1901 2 Engineering Edit The railway is 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in gauge 7 and virtually all single track with passing loops at stations 200 000 individual 9 metre 30 ft rail lengths and 1 2 million sleepers 200 000 fish plates 400 000 fish bolts and 4 8 million steel keys plus steel girders for viaducts and causeways had to be imported from India necessitating the creation of a modern port at Kilindini Harbour in Mombasa The railway was a huge logistical achievement and became strategically and economically vital for both Uganda and Kenya It helped to suppress slavery by removing the need for humans in the transport of goods 8 Management Edit In August 1895 a bill was introduced at Westminster becoming the Uganda Railway Act 1896 which authorised the construction of a railway from Mombasa to the shores of Lake Victoria 9 The man tasked with building the railway was George Whitehouse an experienced civil engineer who had worked across the British Empire Whitehouse acted as the Chief Engineer between 1895 and 1903 also serving as the railway s manager from its opening in 1901 The consulting engineers were Sir Alexander Rendel of Sir A Rendel amp Son and Frederick Ewart Robertson 10 Workers Edit Nearly all the workers involved on the construction of the line came from British India An agent was appointed in Karachi responsible for recruiting coolies artisans and subordinate officers and a branch office was located in Lahore the principal recruiting centre Workers were sourced from villages in the Punjab and sent to Karachi on specially chartered steamers belonging to the British India Steam Navigation Company 11 Shortly after recruitment began a plague broke out in India seriously delaying the advancement of the railway The Government of India only permitted recruitment and emigration to resume on the creation of a quarantine camp at Budapore financed by the Uganda Railway and where recruits were required to spend fourteen days in quarantine before departure 11 A total of 35 729 coolies and artisans were recruited along with 1 082 subordinate officers totalling 36 811 persons 12 Each coolie signed a contract for three years at twelve rupees per month with free rations and return passage to their place of enlistment They received half pay when in hospital and free medical attendance 12 Recruitment continued between December 1895 and March 1901 and the first coolies began to return to India after their contracts ended in 1899 2 493 workers died during the construction of the railway between 1895 and 1903 at a rate of 357 annually 12 While most of the surviving Indians returned home 6 724 decided to remain after the line s completion creating a community of Indians in East Africa 6 Reproduction poster of an advertisement for the railway Note chopper coupling Law and order Edit To maintain law and order the railway instituted a police department The force was uniformed and drilled and armed with Martini Henry rifles 13 The force was composed of Indians and two officers were lent by the Indian government to drill and superintend the force A maximum of 400 constables were recruited and the force was handed over to the Protectorate government on completion of the railway 13 Resistance Edit At the turn of the 20th century the railway construction was disturbed by the resistance by Nandi people led by Koitalel Arap Samoei He was killed in 1905 by Richard Meinertzhagen ending the Nandi resistance 14 Tsavo man eating lions EditMain article Tsavo Man Eaters The incidents for which the building of the railway may be most noted are the killings of a number of construction workers in 1898 during the building of a bridge across the Tsavo River Hunting mainly at night a pair of maneless male lions stalked and killed at least 28 Indian and African workers although some accounts put the number of victims as high as 135 15 Lunatic Express EditThe Uganda Railway faced a great deal of criticism in Parliament with many parliamentarians decrying it as exorbitantly expensive Whilst the concept of cost benefit analysis did not exist in public spending in the Victorian Era the huge capital sums of the project nevertheless made many sceptical of the value of the investment This coupled with the fatalities and wastage of the personnel constructing it through disease tribal activity and hostile wildlife led the Uganda Railway to be dubbed a Lunatic Line What it will cost no words can express What is its object no brain can suppose Where it will start from no one can guess Where it is going to nobody knows What is the use of it none can conjecture What it will carry there is none can define And in spite of George Curzon s superior lecture It is clearly naught but a lunatic line Henry Labouchere MP 16 Political resistance to this gigantic folly as Henry Labouchere called it 17 surfaced immediately Such arguments along with the claim that it would be a waste of taxpayers money were easily dismissed by the Conservatives Years before Joseph Chamberlain had proclaimed that if Britain were to step away from its manifest destiny it would by default leave it to other nations to take up the work that it would have been seen as too weak too poor and too cowardly to have done itself 18 Its cost has been estimated by one source at 3 million in 1894 money which is more than 170 million in 2005 money 19 and 5 5 million or 650 million in 2016 money by another source 20 Because of the wooden trestle bridges enormous chasms prohibitive cost hostile tribes men infected by the hundreds by diseases and man eating lions pulling railway workers out of carriages at night the name Lunatic Line certainly seemed to fit Winston Churchill who regarded it a brilliant conception said of the project The British art of muddling through is here seen in one of its finest expositions Through everything through the forests through the ravines through troops of marauding lions through famine through war through five years of excoriating Parliamentary debate muddled and marched the railway 21 The modern term Lunatic Express was coined by Charles Miller in his 1971 The Lunatic Express An Entertainment in Imperialism The term The Iron Snake 22 comes from an old Nandi prophecy by Orkoiyot Kimnyolei An iron snake will cross from the lake of salt to the lands of the Great Lake to quench its thirst 23 Extensions and branches Edit Uganda Railway is 1 000 mm 3 ft 3 3 8 in metre gauge Disassembled ferries were shipped from Scotland by sea to Mombasa and then by rail to Kisumu where they were reassembled and provided a service to Port Bell and later other ports on Lake Victoria see section below An 11 kilometre 7 mi rail line between Port Bell and Kampala was the final link in the chain providing efficient transport between the Ugandan capital and the open sea at Mombasa more than 1 400 km 900 mi away Branch lines were built to Thika in 1913 Lake Magadi in 1915 Kitale in 1926 Naro Moro in 1927 and from Tororo to Soroti in 1929 In 1929 the Uganda Railway became Kenya and Uganda Railways and Harbours KURH which in 1931 completed a branch line to Mount Kenya and extended the main line from Nakuru to Kampala in Uganda In 1948 KURH became part of the East African Railways Corporation which added the line from Kampala to Kasese in western Uganda in 1956 24 and extended to it to Arua near the border with Zaire in 1964 Inland shipping EditLake Victoria Edit Main article Lake Victoria ferries Steamers Almost from its inception the Uganda Railway developed shipping services on Lake Victoria In 1898 it launched the 110 ton SS William Mackinnon at Kisumu having assembled the vessel from a knock down kit supplied by Bow McLachlan and Company of Paisley in Scotland A succession of further Bow McLachlan amp Co knock down kits followed The 662 ton sister ships SS Winifred and SS Sybil 1902 and 1903 the 1 134 ton SS Clement Hill 1907 and the 1 300 ton sister ships SS Rusinga and SS Usoga 1914 and 1915 were combined passenger and cargo ferries The 812 ton SS Nyanza launched after Clement Hill was purely a cargo ship The 228 ton SS Kavirondo launched in 1913 was a tugboat Two more tugboats from Bow McLachlan were added in 1925 SS Buganda and SS Buvuma 25 26 Lake Kyoga Lake Albert and the Nile Edit The company extended its steamer service with a route across Lake Kyoga and down the Victoria Nile to Pakwach at the head of the Albert Nile Its Lake Victoria ships were unsuitable for river work so it introduced the stern wheel paddle steamers PS Speke 1910 27 and PS Stanley 1913 27 for the new service In the 1920s the company added PS Grant 1925 27 and the side wheel paddle steamer PS Lugard 1927 27 Safari tourism Edit Former U S President Theodore Roosevelt seated at left and friends mount the observation platform of a Uganda Railway locomotiveAs the only modern means of transport from the East African coast to the higher plateaus of the interior a ride on the Uganda Railway became an essential overture to the safari adventures which grew in popularity in the first two decades of the 20th century As a result it usually featured prominently in the accounts written by travelers in British East Africa The rail journey stirred many a romantic passage like this one from former U S President Theodore Roosevelt who rode the line to start his world famous safari in 1909 The railroad the embodiment of the eager masterful materialistic civilization of today was pushed through a region in which nature both as regards wild man and wild beast does not differ materially from what it was in Europe in the late Pleistocene 28 Passengers were invited to ride a platform on the front of the locomotive from which they might see the passing game herds more closely During Roosevelt s journey he claimed that on this except at mealtime I spent most of the hours of daylight Current status Edit Former train still in use 2017 Most parts of the old metre gauge line have been neglected and overgrown with bushes After independence the railways in Kenya and Uganda fell into disrepair In summer 2016 a reporter for The Economist magazine took the Lunatic Express from Nairobi to Mombasa He found the railway to be in poor condition departing 7 hours late and taking 24 hours for the journey 20 The last metre gauge train between Mombasa and Nairobi made its run on 28 April 2017 29 The line between Nairobi and Kisumu near the Kenya Uganda border has been closed since 2012 30 From 2014 to 2016 the China Road and Bridge Corporation built the Mombasa Nairobi Standard Gauge Railway SGR parallel to the original Uganda Railway Passenger service on the SGR was inaugurated on 31 May 2017 The metre gauge railway is still used to transport passengers between the new SGR Nairobi Terminus and the old metre gauge train station in Nairobi city centre Research has shown that expectations and hopes for the transformations that the Uganda railway would bring about are similar to contemporary visions about the changes that would happen once East Africa became connected to high speed fibre optic broadband 31 In popular culture Edit Jinja railway station with a Uganda Railways diesel locomotive The man eating lions at Tsavo feature in a factual account by Patterson s 1907 autobiographical book The Man eaters of Tsavo John Halkin s 1968 novel Kenya focuses on the construction of the railway and its defence during the First World War The construction of the railway serves as the backdrop to the novel Dance of the Jakaranda Akashic Books 2017 by Peter Kimani Several films have featured the Uganda Railway including Bwana Devil made in 1952 the Tsavo man eaters are part of the plot of the 1956 film Beyond Mombasa The Ghost and the Darkness in 1996 and Chander Pahar a 2013 Bengali movie based on the 1937 novel by Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay In addition the 1985 film Out of Africa shows the railway in a number of its scenes A documentary on the construction of the line The Permanent Way was made in 1961 See also Edit Trains portal Kenya portal Uganda portalKenya Railways Corporation MacKinnon Sclater road Rail transport in Kenya Transport in Uganda Uganda Railways CorporationReferences EditFootnotes Edit Clayton amp Savage 1975 pp 10 1 a b Ogonda 1992 p 131 Whitehouse 1948 p 5 Ogonda amp Onyango 2002 p 223 4 Whitehouse 1948 p 2 a b Wolmar 2009 p 182 Treves Frederick 1910 Uganda for a holiday London Smith Elder amp Co p 57 Retrieved 30 November 2009 Cana Frank Richardson 1911 British East Africa In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 601 606 Whitehouse 1948 p 3 Whitehouse 1948 p 15 a b Whitehouse 1948 p 7 a b c Whitehouse 1948 p 8 a b Whitehouse 1948 p 10 End of Lunatic Express The East African 21 September 2009 Man eating lions not as many dead Railway Gazette International 27 November 2009 Archived from the original on 15 August 2010 Muiruri Peter 31 May 2017 End of road for first railway that defined Kenya s history The Standard Henry Labouchere UGANDA RAILWAY CONSOLIDATED FUND HC Deb 30 April 1900 vol 82 cc288 335 Hansard 1803 2005 UK Parliament Retrieved 10 March 2012 I am opposed entirely to this sort of railway in Africa and I have been opposed to this railroad from the very commencement because it is a gigantic folly This railroad has been from the very first commencement a gigantic folly Joseph Chamberlain CIVIL SERVICES AND REVENUE DEPARTMENTS ESTIMATES 1894 5 CLASS V HC Deb 01 June 1894 vol 25 cc181 270 Hansard 1803 2005 UK Parliament Retrieved 10 March 2012 Currency converter The National Archives Retrieved 10 March 2012 a b Knowles Daniel 23 June 2016 The lunatic express The Economist Retrieved 15 July 2016 Churchill 1909 pp 4 5 Hardy 1965 Matson 2009 Investing in Uganda s Mineral Sector PDF Retrieved 20 June 2010 Cameron Stuart Asprey David Allan SS Buganda Clyde built Database Archived from the original on 16 June 2012 Retrieved 22 May 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Cameron Stuart Asprey David Allan Bruce SS Buvuma Clyde built Database Archived from the original on 16 June 2012 Retrieved 22 May 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b c d Cambridge University Library Royal Commonwealth Society Library Mombasa and East African Steamers Y30468L Janus Cambridge University Library Roosevelt Theodore 1909 African Game Trails Charles Scribner s Sons page 2 Ruthi William 8 May 2017 Last ride on the Lunatic Express Daily Nation Inter City Rift Valley Railways Archived from the original on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 16 September 2018 Graham Mark Andersen Casper Mann Laura 15 December 2014 Geographical imagination and technological connectivity in East Africa Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 40 3 334 349 doi 10 1111 tran 12076 ISSN 0020 2754 Bibliography Edit Amin Mohamed Willetts Duncan Matheson Alastair 1986 Railway Across The Equator The Story of the East African Line London The Bodley Head ISBN 0370307747 Boyles Denis 1991 Man Eaters Motel and other stops on the railway to nowhere an East African traveller s nightbook including a summary history of Zanzibar and an account of the slaughter at Tsavo together with a sketch of life in Nairobi and at Lake Victoria a brief and worried visit to the Ugandan border and a survey of angling in the Aberdares New York Ticknor amp Fields ISBN 039558082X Chao Tayiana 28 October 2014 The Lunatic Express A photo essay on the Uganda railway The Agora Retrieved 25 November 2014 Churchill Winston Spencer 1909 1908 My African Journey Toronto William Briggs Retrieved 19 March 2012 Clayton Anthony Savage Donald C 1975 Government and Labour in Kenya 1895 1963 London Routledge Hamshere C E March 1968 The Uganda Railway History Today 18 3 188 195 Hardy Ronald 1965 The Iron Snake New York NY G P Putnam s Sons Hill M F 1961 Permanent Way Vol 1 The story of the Kenya and Uganda Railway 2nd ed Nairobi East African Railways amp Harbours OCLC 776735246 Kinuthia Helen The Iron Snake History of the Kenyan Railways Haligonian Investment Limited Retrieved 25 November 2014 D Mannix 1954 R O Preston of the Lunatic Line In Hunter J A Mannix D eds African Bush Adventures Hamish Hamilton Matson Alfred T 2009 1993 Nandi Resistance to British Rule The Volcano Erupts Nairobi Transafrica Press ISBN 978 9966 940 18 6 Mills Stephen Yonge Brian 2012 A Railway to Nowhere The Building of the Lunatic Line 1896 1901 Nairobi Mills Publishing ISBN 9789966709431 Odongo Waga 12 December 2013 How Lunatic Line shaped Kenya and transformed the region Daily Nation Archived from the original on 25 March 2016 Retrieved 25 November 2014 Ogonda Richard T 1992 Transport and Communications in the Colonial Economy In Ochieng W R Maxon R M eds An Economic History of Kenya Nairobi East African Educational Publishers pp 129 146 ISBN 978 9966 46 963 2 Ogonda Richard T Onyango George M 2002 Development of Transport and Communication In Ochieng William Robert ed Historical Studies and Social Change in Western Kenya Nairobi East African Educational Publishers pp 219 231 ISBN 978 9966 25 152 7 Otte T G Neilson Keith eds 2012 Railways and International Politics Paths of Empire 1848 1945 Military History and Policy London Routledge ISBN 9780415651318 Patience Kevin 1976 Steam in East Africa a pictorial history of the railways in East Africa 1893 1976 Nairobi Heinemann Educational Books E A Ltd OCLC 3781370 Wikidata Q111363477 Patterson J H 2013 First published 1908 The Man Eaters of Tsavo And Other East African Adventures New York Skyhorse ISBN 9781620874066 Preston R O 1947 The Genesis of Kenya Colony Reminiscences of an early Uganda railway construction pioneer Nairobi Colonial Printing Works OCLC 3652501 Pringle Patrick Hill Mervyn F 1970 First published 1954 The Story of a Railway New ed London Evans Brothers Ltd ISBN 0237288559 Ramaer Roel 1974 Steam Locomotives of the East African Railways David amp Charles Locomotive Studies Newton Abbot North Pomfret David amp Charles ISBN 978 0 7153 6437 6 OCLC 832692810 OL 5110018M Wikidata Q111363478 Ramaer Roel 2009 Gari la Moshi Steam Locomotives of the East African Railways Malmo Stenvalls ISBN 978 91 7266 172 1 OCLC 502034710 Wikidata Q111363479 Robinson Neil 2009 World Rail Atlas and Historical Summary Volume 7 North East and Central Africa Barnsley UK World Rail Atlas Ltd ISBN 978 954 92184 3 5 Sood Satya V 2007 Victoria s Tin Dragon a railway that built a nation Cambridge England Vanguard Press ISBN 9781843862741 Wolmar Christian 2009 Blood Iron amp Gold How the Railways Transformed the World London Atlantic Books ISBN 9781848871700 Whitehouse G C March 1948 The Building of the Kenya and Uganda Railway The Uganda Journal Kampala The Uganda Society 12 1 1 15 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Uganda Railway History of the Uganda Railway 1 4 scale replica of EAR 31 class steam locomotive Uganda at Stapleford Miniature railway in the UK Winchester Clarence ed 1936 Through desert and jungle Railway Wonders of the World pp 193 199 illustrated description of the Uganda railway Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Uganda Railway amp oldid 1167672565, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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