India, May 18 -- Sahib, Sind and Sultan. It's not an old movie, but has star power. On April 16, 1853, these three locomotive engines hauled a 14-berth train, the first-ever of Bombay, from Bori Bunder, now Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj Terminus (CST), to Thane. The whistling, chugging train left behind a trail of black smoke from its coal engines, while an ecstatic crowd cheered its first send-off with a 21-gun salute. Memory of that excitement can be relived at CST's Heritage Gallery with the press of a button. Push the red and maroon dots, and the miniature model of the GIP 1 chugs out black smoke. GIP, or the British Great Indian Peninsula Railway, was the company that launched the first trains in Mumbai. The carriages were brought to India from UK. The gallery has a copy of a rare photograph that shows a train cart being lifted by a pulley; there is a box full of glass negatives, used to develop old photographs that documented the working of the railway system back in the day. The gallery also has a collection of old badges of railway personnel, leather belts, old tickets, hand-held signals and wooden salary boxes, and copper ladles with long handles used to serve water to train passengers....