Tagawa Line


The Tagawa Line is a 26.3 km railway line owned by the Heisei Chikuhō Railway. The line runs west along the Ima River from Yukuhashi to Tagawa, all within Fukuoka Prefecture.

History

The line was first built in 1895 by the Hōshū Railway, which was merged in 1901 with Kyushu Railway. It was an important railway line to transport coal between the Chikuhō coal mine with Kanda Port in Kanda, north of Yukuhashi. Kyushu Railway was nationalized in 1907 and was merged into Japanese Government Railway, where it was named the Tagawa Line. In 1942, the line was extended south from Ita Station to Hikosan Station. The portion between Hikosan and Soeda Station was later reorganized into the Hita Line in 1956, and the section between Soeda and Ita was also merged into the same line in 1960 to form the current Tagawa Line.
Between 1899 and 1973, a short freight-only branch line ran north from Kawara Station to Natsuyoshi.
Ridership suffered with the decline and closure of the Chikuhō coal mine. Therefore, JR Kyushu, the successor of Japanese Government Railway, privatized and transferred the Ita Line, Itoda Line, and Tagawa Line to the newly founded Heisei Chikuhō Railway in 1997.

Operations

The line is not electrified and is single-tracked for the entire line. Some services continue past Tagawa-Ita Station on the Ita Line to Nōgata Station.
The Tagawa Line runs through many historical sites, including the Second Issaka Tunnel, the oldest railway tunnel in Japan, and the Uchida Triple-Arch Bridge, an old brick arch bridge. Both sites were registered as national cultural heritage sites in 1999.

Stations

All stations are within Fukuoka Prefecture.