Vanchi Maniyachchi Junction railway station

Vanchi Maniyachchi Junction
வாஞ்சி மணியாச்சி சந்திப்பு
Express train and Passenger train station
Name board at train station
Location Ottantham-Maniyachchi Road, Maniyachchi, Thoothukudi district, Tamil Nadu
India
Coordinates 8°52′52″N 77°53′29″E / 8.8811°N 77.8913°E / 8.8811; 77.8913Coordinates: 8°52′52″N 77°53′29″E / 8.8811°N 77.8913°E / 8.8811; 77.8913
Elevation 70 metres (230 ft)
Owned by Indian Railways
Operated by Southern Railway zone
Platforms 4
Tracks 6
Construction
Structure type Standard (on ground station)
Parking Yes
Disabled access
Other information
Status Functioning
Station code MEJ
Zone(s) Southern Railway Zone
Division(s) Madurai
Fare zone Indian Railways
Electrified YES

Vanchi Maniyachchi Junction railway station is a junction railway station in Maniyachchi of Thoothukudi district in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu.[1] Services from north of the station pass through the station to proceed southwards to Tirunelveli and eastwards to Thoothukudi, as these branchings make the station, a junction.

History

The station is named after the Tamil freedom fighter Vanchinathan and was the site[2] of assassination of the British Collector, Robert Ashe. Today the station is a significant station in the Madurai railway division of the Southern Railway Zone, one of the six divisions established within the Southern Railway Zone others being Chennai, Tiruchchirappalli, Salem, Palakkad and Thiruvananthapuram.

Location and Layout

Sunset at Vanchi Maniyachi Junction

The station is located on the Ottantham-Maniyachchi Road at a distance of 30 kilometres (19 mi) from Thoothukudi its district headquarters.

Lines

The station has 3 intersecting lines:

Traffic

Being the junction at which the line bifurcates to the port city of Thoothukudi, the station has a fair share of train stoppage. All the passenger trains, most express trains and a few longer distance superfast trains stop here.

References

  1. "Madurai Division System Map" (PDF). Southern Railway. Retrieved 14 May 2017.
  2. "Centenary of a historical assassination today". Retrieved 14 July 2013.


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