This article examines the history of railway development in British Burma between 1870 until 1900. In particular, it focuses on how railways and public works projects became a key site of contestation about Burma’s prospects, value, and future during the late nineteenth century, as well as how a litany of agents–both official and non-official – influenced the path of railway development in the colony. This article not only reveals the difficulties and disputes that impacted railway construction in Burma, but also how these debates led to the eventual privatisation of Burma’s railway system in the 1890s. In doing so, this article demonstrates how myriad agents with often competing aims affected the colony’s social and economic development, as well as how the results of these debates and the subsequent construction of railways produced a new geography of occupation in British Burma.
CITATION STYLE
Baillargeon, D. (2020). ‘On the Road to Mandalay’: The Development of Railways in British Burma, 1870–1900. Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History, 48(4), 654–678. https://doi.org/10.1080/03086534.2020.1741838
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