Shanghai Daily

All aboard for a trip through the history of railways

- Lu Feiran

The railways were and remain a significan­t factor in China’s economic developmen­t, and Shanghai has played a key role in that progress. The Shanghai Railway Museum is a tribute to the age of the locomotive.

The museum traces the colorful history of railroads since the first track went into operation in 1867.

Opened in 2004, the building of the museum — a British style of red bricks and gray walls is a smaller replica of old Shanghai North Railway Station built in 1909.

The most significan­t exhibits in the museum, however, are in the yard instead of in the building. Three locomotive­s are the biggest drawcards for visitors.

One of them is an SN-26 locomotive manufactur­ed in the US in 1928 and put into service in Yunnan Province. The relatively small, black locomotive was well adapted to narrow-gauge mountain tracks, making it the best choice for freight transport.

Another exhibit is the KD7-641 steam locomotive. Donated to China in 1947 by the United Nations Relief and Rehabilita­tion Administra­tion to help with postwar economic recovery, it served areas around Shanghai and Guangzhou. This model has become valuable because of its scarcity.

The last one was ordered by the Kuomintang government in the 1930s as a private coach for Soong Mei-ling (1898-2003), wife of Chiang Kai-shek (1887-1975). The interior of the train was completely refurbishe­d to include a bedroom, bathroom, meeting room and an office, all luxuriousl­y appointed. Lamp holders were made of pure silver and chairs were covered in leather. Unfortunat­ely, visitors nowadays can view the coach only from the outside.

“The coach was turned into a technical support car after the establishm­ent of the New China,” said Huang Weiyang, an official with the museum.

The exhibition­s indoors display the history of China’s railways with a clear timeline, from the first track laid in Shanghai during the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) to the latest high-speed train models released in the past 10 years.

In the 19th century, China was the third country in Asia to operate railways, after Japan and India. In 1865, a British merchant built a railway only half a kilometer long in Beijing to show the Qing government the future of transporta­tion. Historical records show that people in Beijing were “frightened” by the train running on the track, and it was soon demolished.

The first railway put in operation was the 14.5-kilometer-long Wusong Railway, which goes from what is now downtown Shanghai to the Wusong area. Built by a British bank, the railway was not approved by the Qing government, which bought it a year later and demolished it.

But no government would turn back the tide of industrial­ization, which created a need for railroads. In 1881, the Qing government succumbed to the inevitable and built its own railway, a 9.4-kilometer line linking Tangshan in Hebei Province and the neighborin­g town of Xugezhuang. The main purpose of the line was to transport coal from a nearby mine.

After that, the Qing government started to cooperate with foreigners to design and build railways around the country. In 1909, railroad engineer Zhan Tianyou (1861-1919) became the first Chinese to design a railway.

The line, from Beijing to Zhangjiako­u in Hebei Province, went through

 ??  ?? The museum building replicates the original look of the former Shanghai North Railway Station.
The museum building replicates the original look of the former Shanghai North Railway Station.
 ??  ?? A boundary stone at the museum — All photos by Wang Rongjiang
A boundary stone at the museum — All photos by Wang Rongjiang

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China