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Exported to Iraq in Second World War. [30] HG Class 4-6-0: 1907 Robert Stephenson & Company: One seen as 132 in 1967. Originally built for Burma Railways. Exported to Iraq later. [30] HG Class 4-6-0: 1920 Nasmyth Wilson: One seen as 179 in 1967. Originally built for South Indian Railway Company. Exported to Iraq later. [30] HG Class 4-6-0: 192 ...
Andrew's Locomotive and Rolling Stock in Iraq Page—excellent website with comprehensive roster of IRR locomotives; occasionally updated with news from Iraq. Iraq Railway Network Detailed map of railway routes in Iraq by the United Nations Joint Logistics Centre; Rainer's Pages are dedicated to the old Railway Postal System of Iraq.
One man is holding a bar, while others are using rail tongs to position a rail. Photo published in 1917. This is a list of railway industry occupations, but it also includes transient functional job titles according to activity. [1]
The IRR Southern Line, also known as the Baghdad–Basra Railway Line (Route Number 2), is a railway line between the Iraqi capital of Baghdad and the port city of Basra in Iraq. The line is roughly 550 kilometres (340 mi) long, with intermediate stops including Karbala, Musayyib, Diwaniya, Samawah, Nasiriya and Um Qasr.
Iraq-Iran Basra-Shalamcheh line – almost complete (2006) Kermanshah, Iran, and the Iraqi province of Diyala – construction commenced. [citation needed] Kuwait – no railways; Saudi Arabia-Jordan – partially constructed – break of gauge 4 ft 8 + 1 ⁄ 2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge / 1,050 mm (3 ft 5 + 11 ⁄ 32 in) gauge
The Basra–Shalamcheh rail line is a railway line that operates since 2023 between the cities of Basra in Iraq and Shalamcheh in Iran. The line is roughly 32 kilometres (20 mi) long. [1] [2] Construction is scheduled to be finished by October 2024. [3]
Passenger rail transport in Iraq (1 C) R. Rail infrastructure in Iraq (5 C) Rolling stock of Iraq (1 C) Pages in category "Rail transport in Iraq"
Baghdad Central Station is the main train station in Baghdad. [1] It links the rail network to the south and the north of Iraq.The station was built by the British and designed by J. M. Wilson, a Scot who had been an assistant to Lutyens in New Delhi and who subsequently set up a practice of his own in Baghdad. [2]