The is a Japanese railway line connecting Toyohashi Station in Toyohashi, Aichi with Tatsuno Station in Tatsuno, Nagano, operated by Central Japan Railway Company (JR Central). The line links eastern Aichi Prefecture and southern Nagano Prefecture through northwestern Shizuoka Prefecture. It goes through steep mountains as well as cities such as Iida and Ina. The line was originally of four different private railway lines, the first of which opened in 1897.

The line has an unusually high number of so-called Hikyō stations, or hikyo-eki, which have since lost their nearby communities due to depopulation. The phrase was coined in 1999 by Takanobu Ushiyama and friends, for railroad stations that are isolated and little used.

Local service frequency changes multiple times along the line. From Toyohashi a 15-minute frequency operates as far as Toyokawa, approximately half-hourly as far as and hourly as far as . Between Hon-Nagashino and Tenryūkyō (a mountainous area with few passengers) services operate every 1-3 hours. North of Tenryūkyō services generally operate approximately hourly, with some sections having 30-minute frequencies in peak times. At Tatsuno, almost all trains continue to/from Okaya on the Chūō Main Line (Tatsuno Branch).

  • 213-5000 series 2-car EMUs
  • 313-3000 series EMUs
  • 373 series 3-car EMUs (on Inaji limited express and some all-stations "Local" services)

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File:Iida-Line JRE-Series211-3000.jpg|A Nagano-based JR East 211 series

File:Series213-5000 H13.jpg|A JR Central 2-car 213-5000 series EMU, April 2021

File:Series313-3000 R107.jpg|313-3000 series EMU, April 2021

File:Limited express inaji iida line.JPG|A JR Central 373 series EMU on an Inaji limited express, February 2012

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Past rolling stock

  • 115 series EMUs (until 14 March 2014, on JR East inter-running services)

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File:Model 115-1000 of JR East.JPG|A Nagano-based JR East 115 series, March 2006

File:JR-central-119-5300.JPG|A JR Central 2-car 119 series EMU, March 2008

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History

The Toyokawa Railway opened the section from Toyohashi to Toyokawa in 1897, extending the line to Omi in 1900. At the northern end, the Ina Electric Railway opened the Tatsuno to Ina-Matsushima section (electrified at 1,200 V DC) in 1909, extending the line to Tenryukyo in sections between 1911 and 1927. The Horaitera Railway opened the Omi to Mikawa-Kawai section in 1923, and electrified it at 1,500 V DC in 1925 in conjunction with the electrification of the Toyohashi to Omi section the same year. The Toyohashi to Toyokawa section was double-tracked the following year. The Sanshin Railway opened the Tenryukyo to Kadoshima section as an electrified (1,500 V DC) line in 1932, the Mikawa-Kawai to Toei section (and all subsequent stages) as an electrified line in 1933, and connected the two sections (completing the line) in 1936. All four companies were nationalised in 1943.

In 1955, the overhead line voltage of the Tatsuno to Tenryukyo section was increased to 1,500 V DC.

CTC signalling was commissioned on the line between 1983 and 1984, and freight services ceased in 1996.

Former connecting lines

  • Hon-Nagashino Station: A 23&nbsp;km line to Mikawa-Taguchi, electrified at 1,500 V DC, opened between 1930 and 1932. Two 762mm gauge forest railways connected to this line: the Damine forest railway, which connected at the station of the same name, consisted of a 19&nbsp;km 'main line' (including a tunnel) and a 7&nbsp;km branch, operated between 1932 and 1960; the Taguchi forest railway connected at the terminus station, consisted of a 10&nbsp;km 'main line' and a 6&nbsp;km branch, operated between 1934 and 1963. Both forest railways were notable for initially employing people and "large dogs" to haul the empty wagons upgrade, which then rolled downhill when loaded. The Mikawa-Taguchi line closed following flood damage in 1968.

Proposed connecting line

  • Chubu-Tenryu Station: Construction started on a 35&nbsp;km line to Tenryu-Futamata on the Hamanako Line in 1967. Proposed to involve 20 bridges and 14 tunnels, about 13&nbsp;km of roadbed, and about 50% of the overall work had been completed when construction was abandoned in 1980.

See also

  • List of railway lines in Japan

References

Bibliography

  • JR Central official website
  • JR Central official website