Nikkō Line Explained

Nikkō Line
Type:Regional rail
Locale:Tochigi Prefecture
Stations:7
Open:1890
Owner:JR East
Stock:E131-600/-680 series EMUs
Linelength:40.51NaN1
Electrification:1,500 V DC overhead catenary
Map State:collapsed

The is a railway line operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East) which connects to .

Both the Tobu and JR East railway stations in Nikkō are located within walking distance of each other.

Station list

StationJapaneseDistance (km)TransfersLocation
Between
stations
Total
宇都宮style="text-align:right;"-0.0Tohoku Shinkansen, Akita Shinkansen, Tohoku Main Line (Utsunomiya Line), Shōnan-Shinjuku LineUtsunomiyaTochigi
鶴田4.84.8 
鹿沼9.514.3 Kanuma
文挟8.122.4 Nikkō
下野大沢5.828.2 
今市5.733.9 
日光6.640.5Tōbu Nikkō Line

Rolling stock

Former rolling stock

History

The Nippon Railway Co. opened the line in 1890 and was nationalised in 1906. The line was electrified in 1959, and CTC signalling was commissioned in 1970. Freight services ceased in 1984.

Former connecting lines

The Tochigi Prefectural Government opened a 3 km gauge line to Nishihara-cho in 1897, extending it 10 km to Yoshihara in 1899 and opening a 4 km branch to Tokujiro the following year. Handcar passenger services commenced on both lines from opening, operating until 1928. A 7.5 km branch from Nishihara-cho to Tateiwa was opened in 1898 to haul gravel.

In 1931, the lines were purchased by the Tobu Railway Co. which closed all but the Tateiwa branch, which it converted to gauge and built a connection to Nishi-Kawada station on the Tobu Utsunomiya Line. The Tateiwa branch ceased operation in 1961 following a landslide and was formally closed in 1964.

The Nikko Electric Railway Co. opened an 8 km line electrified at 600 V DC to Iwanohana between 1907 and 1913, and extended it 2 km to Umakae (approximately 300 m higher than Nikko) in 1931 to connect to a 1.2 km funicular railway that climbed 428 m which opened in 1932. In 1944, electric locomotives began hauling copper ore on the line. Freight tonnage decreased 25% between 1964 and 1966, and passenger numbers decreased by 17% over the same period, resulting in the line closing in 1968. The funicular railway closed in 1970.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 宇都宮線・日光線に新型車両を投入します. New train sets for the Utsunomiya and Nikko Lines. 17 June 2021. 17 June 2021.
  2. Web site: http://railf.jp/news/2013/03/16/142400.html. ja:日光線用107系が営業運転を終了. Nikko Line 107 series withdrawn from service. 16 March 2013 . Japan Railfan Magazine Online. Koyusha Co., Ltd.. Japan. ja. 1 April 2013.