Baro-Kano_Railway_Station
Baro-Kano Railway Station
Rail station in Nigeria
Baro-Kano railway built between 1908 and 1911 by government of the Northern Nigeria Protectorate was opened to traffic in 1912, to serve as the main rail transport facility from Baro in present Niger state to the emporium of Hausa land Kano (in present Kano state). The first railway built in Nigeria was the Lagos–Kano Railway built by the Lagos Colony (later Southern Nigeria Protectorate). The Baro-Kano Railway and the Lagos Government Railway was later amalgamated by the British colonial government represented by Frederick Lugard in 1914 to form a national system known as Nigerian Railway Department (which later became Nigerian Railway Corporation in the 1950s).[1]
In 1893, the construction of the Lagos railway began in Lagos, then passed through Ibadan, and later entered Ilorin (the Northern territory). The construction of the Northern Nigeria railway Baro-Kano railway started in 1907 and completed in 1911. It was linked to the Lagos line at Minna. The Jebba bridge was completed and the railway was able to travel across the bridge in 1921.[1][2][3][4]