Namyanggukkyong Line Explained

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Namyang Border Line
Native Name:남양국경선(南陽國境線)
Native Name Lang:ko
Type:Heavy rail, Passenger & freight rail
Regional rail
Status:Operational
Locale:North Hamgyŏng
Start:Namyang
End:Kukkyŏng
Stations:2
Open:1 August 1933
Owner:South Manchuria Railway (1933–1945)
Korean State Railway (since 1945)
Linelength Km:0.8
Tracks:Single track
Electrification:3000 V DC Catenary
Context:north
Hangul:남양국경선
Mr:Namyanggukkyŏng-sŏn

The Namyanggukkyŏng Line, or Namyang Border Line, is a 0.8km (00.5miles) long railway line of the Korean State Railway connecting Namyang on the Hambuk Line with Kukkyŏng at the DPRK–China border, continuing on to Tumen, China, 3.3km (02.1miles) from Namyang.[1] At Tumen it connects with China Railway's Changtu Railway (Changchun–Tumen; 长图铁路), Tujia Railway (Tumen–Jiamusi; 图佳铁路), and Tuhun Railway (Tumen–South Hunchun–Changlingzi and on to Russia; 图珲铁路). The line is electrified between Namyang and Kukkyong.

History

The Chosen Government Railway (Sentetsu) nationalised the privately owned Tomun Railway on 1 April 1929, acquiring the private railway's route from Hoeryŏng to Tonggwanjin (now Kangalli) and calling it the "West Tomun Line".[2] Intending to create as short a route as possible from Japan to Manchuria, Sentetsu had started building its own "East Tomun Line" from Unggi (now Sŏnbong) towards Tonggwanjin in 1929, eventually reaching Namyang on 1 December 1932, and finally closed the final gap between Namyang and Tonggwanjin on 1 August 1933, thus completing the Tomun Line from Hoeryŏng to Unggi; Tonggwanjin station was renamed Tonggwan at that time.[3]

At the same time as the Namyang–Tonggwan section of the mainline was opened, a bridge was built over the Tumen River at Namyang, along with a line to Tumen, Manchukuo.[3] This connected Sentetsu to the Manchukuo National Railway's new Jingtu Line from Xinjing (now Changchun), capital of Manchukuo, to Tumen, that was also opened in 1933. This established the desired shortest-possible connection from Japan to Harbin via the Korean ports of Ch'ŏngjin and Unggi through Xinjing.

On 1 October 1933, management of Sentetsu's entire route from Ch'ŏngjin to Unggi was transferred to the South Manchuria Railway (Mantetsu), and on 1 November 1934 the Unggi–Namyang section of the Domun Line and the Namyang–Tumen line were merged to form Mantetsu's North Chosen East Line (Unggi–Namyang–Tumen); the Namyang–Sambong section became the North Chosen West Line.[4] In 1936, the "Asahi" express train between Xinjing and Rajin was inaugurated, to connect to the ferry from Rajin to Japan.[4]

In 1940, management of the Ch'ŏngjin–Sambong route was transferred back to Sentetsu, which made it part of its Hamgyeong Line; Mantetsu continued to manage the North Chosen East Line, eventually acquiring outright ownership of the line.[5]

Services

The line is used for import-export traffic between the DPRK and China; the primary exports shipped through to China are magnetite, talc and steel, and the main import is coke.[6] These trains are often hauled by Chinese or Korean DF5-type locomotives.[7] [8]

Route

A yellow background in the "Distance" box indicates that section of the line is not electrified.

Distance (km) Station Name Former Name
Total S2S Transcribed Chosŏn'gŭl (Hanja) Transcribed Chosŏn'gŭl (Hanja) Connections
0.00.0Namyang남양 (南陽)Hambuk Line
0.80.8Kukkyŏng국경 (國境)
1.20.4Tumen Border Railway Bridge두만강 (豆滿江)DPRK−PRC border
3.33.3Tumen, China图们 (圖們)China Railway Changtu Railway,
Tujia Railway,
Tuhun Railway

Notes and References

  1. Kokubu, Hayato, 将軍様の鉄道 (Shōgun-sama no Tetsudō), p. 93
  2. 朝鮮総督府官報 (The Public Journal of the Governor-General of Korea), Shōwa No. 669, 28 March 1929 (in Japanese)
  3. 朝鮮総督府官報 (The Public Journal of the Governor-General of Korea), Shōwa No. 1963, 26 July 1933 (in Japanese)
  4. Web site: 南満州鉄道株式会社全路線 . 2017-02-21 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131021125429/http://homepage1.nifty.com/kitabatake/mansyu3.5.html . 2013-10-21 . dead .
  5. 朝鮮総督府官報 (The Public Journal of the Governor-General of Korea), Shōwa No. 5461, 21 April 1945 (in Japanese)
  6. The traffic and geography in North Korea: Hambuk Line (in Korean)
  7. https://www.flickr.com/photos/bg2axk/12437101694/sizes/l International train from Namyang to Tumen
  8. https://www.flickr.com/photos/bg2axk/12479863504/sizes/l/ International train from Tumen to Namyang