The Dalhousie is a slope station in Himachal Pradesh, built up in 1854 by the British Empire’s legislature in India as a mid year withdraw for its troops and authorities. It is based close by five slopes, Kathalagh, Potreyn, Terah, Bakrota and Bhangora. Situated on the western edge of the Dhauladhar mountain scope of the Himalayas, it is encompassed by snow-topped pinnacles. 
Dalhousie is arranged in the vicinity of 6,000 and 9,000 feet (2,700 m) above ocean level. Scottish and Victorian design are common in the cabins and chapels in the town. Dalhousie is a portal to the old Chamba Hill State, now Chamba District of the condition of Himachal Pradesh of India. This slope locale is a store of antiquated Hindu culture, workmanship, sanctuaries, and painstaking work safeguarded under the longest-running single tradition since the mid-sixth century. Chamba is the center point of this culture.

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