Kyushu Railway

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History

The company was incorporated on August 15, 1888 in Fukuoka, Fukuoka. The first Script error: No such module "convert". of the railway, between Hakata Station in Fukuoka and Chitosegawa temporary station in Asahi, Saga (near Kurume, Fukuoka), opened on December 11, 1889 as the first railway in Kyushu.[1]

The company expanded the railway by means of both construction and acquisition of other companies. As of 1907, it operated Script error: No such module "convert". of railways in Fukuoka, Kumamoto, Nagasaki, Ōita and Saga prefectures in northern Kyushu.

On July 1, 1907, the entire operation of the company was purchased by the government of Japan under the Railway Nationalization Act. Consequently, the company was dissolved.

List of lines

Operation of Kyushu Railway as of June 30, 1907
Endpoints
(Present station names in parentheses)
Length
(miles)
Line names
(designated after nationalization)
Notes
Moji (Template:STN) – Template:STN 143.4 Kagoshima Main Line via Ōkura
Template:STN – Usa (Template:STN) 42.6 Nippō Main Line
Template:STNTemplate:STN 8.8 Kagoshima Main Line via Template:STN
Template:STN – Kami-Yamada 33.3 Chikuhō Main Line, Kami-Yamada Line
Template:STNTemplate:STN 7.4 Sasaguri Line
Template:STNTemplate:STN 98.6 Nagasaki Main Line, Sasebo Line, Ōmura Line
Template:STNTemplate:STN 26.8 Karatsu Line
Template:STNTemplate:STN 8.1 Matsuura Line
Template:STNTemplate:STN 5.5 Sasebo Line
Template:STNTemplate:STN 15.9 Misumi Line
Template:STN – Soeda (Template:STN) 23.1 Tagawa Line, Hitahikosan Line
Template:STN – Ita (Template:STN) 9.9 Ita Line
Template:STN – Kōbukuro 3.0 Kōbukuro Line
Template:STN – Nagao (Template:STN) 3.6 Chikuhō Main Line
Gotōji (Template:STN) – Miyatoko (Template:STN) 1.9 Itoda Line
Template:STN – Kirino (Chikuzen-Miyada) 3.2 Miyada Line
Katsuno – Sugamuta 2.7 Tagawa Line Freight
Soeda (Template:STN) – Shō 0.6 Tagawa Line Freight
Kawara (Template:STN) – Natsuyoshi 1.5 Tagawa Line Freight
Gotōji (Tagawa Gotōji) – Kigyō 0.6 Gotōji Line Freight
Kawasaki (Template:STN) – Daini-Ōtō 1.2 Hitahikosan Line Freight
Azamibaru (Template:STN) – Yunokibaru 0.8 Karatsu Line Freight
Ōchi junction – Template:STN 0.5 Karatsu Line Freight
Ōshima – Template:STN 0.8 Karatsu Line Freight
(Overlap of Hakata – Template:STN) (1.0)
Total 442.8

Rolling stock

File:Krauss Kyushu 11.jpg
Class 4 (No. 11) made by Krauss in Germany

A special coach made by German car manufacturer van der Zypen & Charlier was imported by Kyushu Railway for VIP use in 1891. The coach was improved and designated as the imperial coach in 1902 for use by Emperor Meiji when he visited an army drill in Kumamoto Prefecture. After the nationalization, the coach was called the imperial coach No. 2 but was not used again by the emperor. It was designated a Script error: No such module "Nihongo". in 1963 and is now exhibited at the Railway Museum in Saitama.[2]

Fleet of Kyushu Railway[3]
Year Steam
locomotives
Passenger
cars
Freight cars etc.
Wagons Trucks
1890 3 38 107
1900 159 302 649 3,173
1906 244 392 1,048 5,300

Kyushu Railway History Museum

File:Kyushu Railway History Museum 03.JPG
Kyushu Railway History Museum, the former headquarters of the company

The Kyushu Railway History Museum was established near Mojikō Station in Kitakyūshū in 2003. The red-brick main building of the museum is the former headquarters of Kyushu Railway.

References

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External links

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