Takachiho Railway
Takachiho Railway (高千穂鉄道, Takachiho Tetsudō) is a Japanese railway company. The company in Miyazaki Prefecture has suspended operation of the railway since a typhoon disaster in 2005 and is expected to liquidate.
Line
The company operated one line named the Takachiho Line connecting Nobeoka Station in Nobeoka, Miyazaki and Takachiho Station in Takachiho, Miyazaki. The government authorization of the railway business was abolished for a half of the line in 2007 and for the remaining half in 2008.
- Distance 50.0 km (31 mi.)
- Nobeoka - Makinine 29.1 km (18.1 mi.) Officially closed on 2007-09-06
- Makimine - Takachiho 20.9 kilometres (13.0 mi) Officially closed on 2008-12-28
- Gauge: 1,067 mm / 3 ft. 6 in.
- Stations: 19
- Double-track line: None
- Electrification: None
- Signalling: Simplified automatic
History
The Takachiho Line, originally named the Hinokage Line (日ノ影線, Hinokage sen) of Japanese Government Railways, opened on February 20, 1935 in the section between Nobeoka Station and Hyūga-Okamoto Station. Following some extensions, the line reached Takachiho Station on July 22, 1972 and was renamed the Takachiho Line same day.[1]
When the national railway was privatized in 1987, the line belonged to JR Kyushu, which withdrew from the operation of the Takachiho Line and transferred it to Takachiho Railway, a new company established by local funds, on April 28, 1989.[1]
The typhoon disaster on September 6, 2005 was destructive for the small company. Some attempts by local communities to rebuilt the railway went for nothing. A shareholders' resolution scheduled to be made on January 6, 2009 will start the company's liquidation procedures.[2]
Stations
Cars
cars at 2005
- TR100
- TR200
- TR400 (Takarakuji-gō 401)
-
TR100 for local trains
-
Amanouzume-gō used for Torokko-Kagura-gō
-
Tajikarao-gō used for Torokko-Kagura-gō
Cars before 2005
- TR300
Future
Takachiho-Amaterasu Railway Co. (高千穂あまてらす鉄道, Takachiho-Amaterasu-Tetsudō) has a plan to operate the line between Takachiho and Amanoiwato as a heritage railway.
References
- ^ a b Ishino, Tetsu; et al., eds. (1998). 停車場変遷大事典 国鉄・JR編 [Station Transition Directory – JNR/JR] (in Japanese). Vol. I. Tokyo: JTB Corporation. p. p. 232. ISBN 4-533-02980-9.
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has extra text (help) - ^ 高千穂鉄道 1月6日解散決議へ 12月28日全線廃線 (Nishinippon Shinbun, December 21, 2008). Retrieved on December 30, 2008.