HomeNewsTrends‘Lota’ in one hand, ‘dhoti’ in the other: The funniest letter in railway history that led to toilets on trains

‘Lota’ in one hand, ‘dhoti’ in the other: The funniest letter in railway history that led to toilets on trains

In 1909, a hilarious complaint letter by Okhil Chandra Sen forced Railways to add toilets to trains. Here’s the unbelievable true story behind the change.

November 19, 2025 / 13:26 IST
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AI-generated visual for representational purposes
AI-generated visual for representational purposes

More than a century ago, long before India had bullet trains, Wi-Fi, or high-speed rail networks, a single passenger with an urgent “nature’s call” ended up changing railway history forever.

On 2 July 1909, a man named Okhil Chandra Sen wrote a letter to the Sahibganj Divisional Railway Office in West Bengal. What began as a personal complaint soon became one of the most consequential, and unintentionally hilarious, pieces of correspondence in Indian Railways’ history.

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A swollen belly, a missed train… and a national problem

Okhil, travelling by a passenger train, stepped off at Ahmedpur railway station to relieve himself. It was a time when Indian trains did not have toilets, even though the first passenger train had started running in 1853. For 55 long years, passengers were expected to manage on platforms or in open fields during halts.