Railroad Name: | Japanese Government Railways Ministry of Railways 鉄道省 Tetsudō-shō |
Logo Filename: | National Railway Symbol of Japan.svg |
Locale: | Japan, nationwide |
Start Year: | 1871 |
End Year: | 1949 |
Successor Line: | Japanese National Railways |
Length: | 18,400 km (1941) |
Hq City: | Tokyo |
The Japanese Government Railways (JGR) was the national railway system directly operated by the Japanese Ministry of Railways (Japanese: 鉄道省|Tetsudō-shō, pronounced as /ja/) until 1949. It was a predecessor of Japanese National Railways and the later Japan Railways Group.
The English name "Japanese Government Railways" was what the Ministry of Railways (established in 1920) used to call its own and sometimes the ministry itself as a railway operator. Other English names for the government railways include Imperial Japanese Government Railways and Imperial Government Railways, which were mainly used prior to the establishment of the ministry. This article covers the railways operated by the central government of Japan from 1872 to 1949 notwithstanding the official English name of the system of each era.
By the end of World War II in 1945, the Japanese Government Railways operated on the main Japanese islands of Honshū, Hokkaidō, Kyūshū, Shikoku and Karafuto. The railways in Taiwan and Korea were operated by the local Governor-General Offices - the Taiwan Government-General Railway and the Chosen Government Railway respectively - and were not part of JGR.
Year | mi | km | |
---|---|---|---|
1881 | 76.3131miles | ||
1891 | 551.22miles | ||
1901 | 822.49miles | ||
1906-07: railway nationalization | |||
1911 | 4870.6miles | ||
1921 | 6484.7miles | ||
1931 | 14,574.9 | ||
1941 | 18,400.0 |
While the JGR was the only major operator of intercity railways after the railways were nationalized in 1906–1907, privately owned regional railways were also active.
The gauge used for Japanese railways was (narrow gauge) other than some minor exceptions (total in the peak years of 1936-38[2]) of gauge lines being used.
The first railway in Japan was operated by the imperial government in 1872. The idea of centralization of the railway was promoted under the idea of "breaking down of the geographical barriers that existed in the feudal communities which hindered the centralization of authority". Placing the railways under government control was for military and political ends; the government had no intention for the central railway to be operated as a "model enterprise". Early shareholders of the railway were members of the nobility, holding "the major portion of (the) capital".[3] The governmental system was largely expanded by the promulgation of the Railway Nationalization Act in 1906. In 1920, the Ministry of Railways was established.
In 1949, JGR was reorganized to become a state-owned public corporation named the Japanese National Railways.
See also: History of rail transport in Japan and Japanese National Railways.
Before the establishment of the Japanese National Railways as a public corporation on June 1, 1949, the Japanese Government Railways were operated by the governmental agencies. The table below shows the historical operators of the JGR.[4] Translated names of ministries may not be official. Names of the operating department generally mean "department (or office, section, agency) of railways" or like.
Date of establishment | Ministry | Department | Note |
---|---|---|---|
1870-04-19 | Civil and Finance Ministry(Japanese: 民部大蔵省|links=no, pronounced as /ja/) | 鉄道係 (pronounced as /ja/) | in charge of construction only |
1870-08-06 | Civil Ministry(Japanese: 民部省|links=no, pronounced as /ja/) | ||
1870-12-12 | Ministry of Industry(Japanese: 工部省|links=no, pronounced as /ja/) | ||
1871-09-28 | 鉄道寮 (pronounced as /ja/) | First railway opened in 1872. | |
1877-01-11 | 鉄道局 (pronounced as /ja/) | ||
1885-12-22 | Cabinet(Japanese: 内閣|links=no, pronounced as /ja/) | ||
1890-09-06 | Home Ministry(Japanese: 内務省|links=no, pronounced as /ja/) | 鉄道庁 (pronounced as /ja/) | |
1892-07-21 | Ministry of Communications(Japanese: 逓信省|links=no, pronounced as /ja/) | ||
1893-11-10 | 鉄道局 | ||
1897-08-18 | 鉄道作業局 (pronounced as /ja/) | Tetsudō-kyoku survived as an administrative body for private railways till 1908. | |
1907-04-01 | 帝国鉄道庁 (pronounced as /ja/) | ||
1908-12-05 | Cabinet | 鉄道院 (pronounced as /ja/) | Government Railways were commonly called In-sen(Japanese: 院線|links=no). |
1920-05-15 | Ministry of Railways(Japanese: 鉄道省|links=no, pronounced as /ja/) | Government Railways were commonly called Shō-sen(Japanese: 省線|links=no). | |
1943-11-01 | Ministry of Transport and Communications(Japanese: 運輸通信省|links=no, pronounced as /ja/) | 鉄道総局 (pronounced as /ja/) | |
1945-05-19 | Ministry of Transport(Japanese: 運輸省|links=no, pronounced as /ja/) | ||
Since opening in 1872, the railway set fares for passengers in three classes. The transportation of freight was charged based on weight and class of goods. In 1872, passengers could choose from Upper, Middle and Lower classes, which were later renamed as First, Second and Third classes. Freight was shipped using one of five rates based on 100 kin of product.[5]
A 1923 review of the shipping tariffs further explained that goods are divided into three shipping classes (according to the ways in which they are to be handled by the railway): koguchi atsukai (goods in small lots), kashikini atsukai (goods for a reserved freight car) and tokushu atsukai (goods requiring special treatment). It was also possible to ship them via futsubin (regularly-scheduled trains) and kyukobin (express trains). "It may, therefore,be fairly said that the freight rates of the State-owned railways in Japan are of absolute uniformity." As Japan is an island nation, it was noted that ocean-going vessels are a major source of competition for the freight business of the railway.[6]
The railway invested heavily in methods to reduce coal consumption in steam locomotives; between 1920 and 1936, coal consumption per kilometer traveled was reduced by about a quarter.[7]
The government mandated the use of automatic couplers on all cars on the system in July 1925. The system was transitioning from vacuum brakes to air brakes at this time, with most freight cars equipped with air brakes by April 1927.[8]
One of the roles of the Japanese Government Railways was to attract foreign tourists to Japan. In 1930, the government created the as a section of the Japanese Government Railways (Ministry of Railways). The Board printed and distributed picture posters and English guidebooks overseas and encouraged development of resort hotels at home.[9] The Board was dissolved in 1942, following the outbreak of the Pacific War in 1941.