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The first railway in Thailand was a private line connecting Bangkok with
Paknam at the mouth of the Chao Phraya River, a distance of 21 kms. Paknam at
the time was the anchorage for sea-going ships that could not reach Bangkok.
Work on the line was be gun in 1887 and it was opened to traffic by the
king on 11 April 1893. Besides the two terminals in Bangkok and Paknam it had
ten intermediate stations, several of which boasted sidings. The terminals had
40 metre long wooden roofs, covering two lines as well as the main buildings and
offices. The manager was a European who had his office at Paknam.
The metre-gauge line was intended for both goods and passenger traffic,
passenger trains consisting of four coaches plus a brake van and offering second
and third class accommodation. The distance was covered in one hour and the line
crossed the many klongs and other waterways on its route on wooden bridges, some
of which were of mixed wood/iron construction. The line clearly met an existing
need and within a few years it showed a handsome rate of return upon the capital
invested.
Though the Paknam line was a Belgian-Danish joint venture, all locomotives
were built by Kraus of Munich. The Paknam line possessed four locomotives. The
no. 2 engine pictured has the name Paknam. Total we ight in working order of
these engines was 15 tonnes.
When traffic volumes ultimately did develop to a higher level, after World
War I, the Paknam railway was converted to electric traction. Streetcar-type
railcars then became the predominant traffic vehicles, the light steam
locomotives being disposed of. (The picture shows one of the Japanese built
railcars at Paknam during the 1950's.)
During World War II, the Paknam tram was damaged when its cables were cut at
Bang Chak. But the tram still ran. A tram conductor would climb up on the roof
to guide the trolley across the cut section, and would reconnect it to make the
tram continue.
The line was nationalised after World War II and then finally closed in 1959.
This brought to an end the history of Thailand first railway and first
full-length electric railway.
Source of information: 'The Railways of Thailand' by R.
Ramer and published by White Lotus.
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