Hachikō Line

Railway line in Japan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Hachikō Line (八高線, Hachikō-sen) is a 92.0 km (57.2 mi) regional railway line owned and operated by East Japan Railway Company (JR East). It is located within Tokyo, Saitama, and Gunma Prefectures in Japan. It connects Hachiōji Station in Hachiōji, Tokyo with Kuragano Station in Takasaki, Gunma Prefecture.

Native name八高線
StatusIn operation
Owner JR East
Locale
Quick facts Overview, Native name ...
Hachikō Line
A KiHa 110 series near Takezawa Station, February 2017
Overview
Native name八高線
StatusIn operation
Owner JR East
Locale
Termini
Stations23
Service
TypeHeavy rail
Operator(s)JR East
Rolling stock
History
Opened1 July 1931; 94 years ago (1 July 1931)
Technical
Line length92.0 km (57.2 mi)
Number of tracks
  • Single-track (Hachiōji – Kita-Fujioka)
  • Double-track shared with Takasaki Line (Kita-Fujioka – Kuragano)
CharacterUrban in some areas and rural in others
Track gauge1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in)
Electrification1,500 V DC overhead catenary (Hachiōji – Komagawa)
None (Komagawa – Kuragano)
Operating speed85 km/h (53 mph) (Hachiōji – Kita-Fujioka)
100 km/h (62 mph) (Kita-Fujioka – Kuragano)
Route map
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Train on the Hachikō Line, 2020

Services

Komagawa Station in Hidaka, Saitama is the boundary point between two distinct sections. The southern section from Hachiōji to Komagawa is electrified at 1,500 V DC. Some trains terminate at Komagawa, while others continue over the Kawagoe Line to Kawagoe Station.

The non-electrified northern section connects Komagawa with Kuragano. All trains continue on the Takasaki Line to Takasaki, where transfer to the Jōetsu and Hokuriku Shinkansen is available. There are no through services connecting the southern and northern halves of the line.

The Hachikō Line takes the first kanji of its name from the first character of Hachiōji (王子) and the second kanji from the first character of Takasaki ().

Stations

  • All trains stop at every station.
  • Stations marked "o" or "^" allow passing; stations marked"|" do not. Stations marked "∥" are double-tracked.

Hachiōji - Komagawa

More information Station, Japanese ...
Station Japanese Distance (km) Transfers  Track Location
Between
stations
Total
Hachiōji 八王子 - 0.0 o Hachiōji Tokyo
Kita-Hachiōji 北八王子 3.1 3.1   o
Komiya 小宮 2.0 5.1   o
Haijima 拝島 4.8 9.9 o Akishima
Higashi-Fussa 東福生 2.8 12.7   o Fussa
Hakonegasaki 箱根ヶ崎 3.0 15.7   o Mizuho, Nishitama District
Kaneko 金子 4.8 20.5   o Iruma Saitama
Higashi-Hannō 東飯能 5.1 25.6 Seibu Ikebukuro Line o Hannō
Komagawa 高麗川 5.5 31.1 Kawagoe Line (through to Kawagoe)
Hachikō Line (for Takasaki)
o Hidaka
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Komagawa - Takasaki

More information Station, Japanese ...
Station Japanese Distance (km) Transfers  Track Location
Between
stations
Total
Komagawa 高麗川 5.5 31.1 Kawagoe Line
Hachikō Line (for Hachiōji)
o Hidaka Saitama
Moro 毛呂 5.8 36.9   o Moroyama, Iruma District
Ogose 越生 2.7 39.6 Tobu Ogose Line | Ogose, Iruma District
Myōkaku 明覚 5.2 44.8   o Tokigawa, Hiki District
Ogawamachi 小川町 8.0 52.8 Tobu Tojo Line o Ogawa, Hiki District
Takezawa 竹沢 3.5 56.3   |
Orihara 折原 4.0 60.3   | Yorii, Ōsato District
Yorii 寄居 3.6 63.9 Tobu Tojo Line
Chichibu Main Line
o
Yōdo 用土 4.5 68.4   |
Matsuhisa 松久 2.7 71.1   | Misato, Kodama District
Kodama 児玉 4.8 75.9   o Honjō
Tanshō 丹荘 4.1 80.0   | Kamikawa, Kodama District
Gunma-Fujioka 群馬藤岡 4.7 84.7   o Fujioka Gunma
Kita-Fujioka 北藤岡 3.7 88.4   ^
Kuragano 倉賀野 3.6 92.0 Takasaki Line (for Tokyo) Takasaki
Through to Takasaki on the Takasaki Line
Takasaki 高崎 4.4 96.4 Joetsu Shinkansen
Hokuriku Shinkansen
Shinetsu Main Line
Joetsu Line
Ryōmō Line
Agatsuma Line
Jōshin Dentetsu Jōshin Line
Takasaki Gunma
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Rolling stock

From 2017, former E231-0 series ten-car sets based at Mitaka Depot for use on Chūō–Sōbu Line services were reformed and converted to become four-car E231-3000 series sets based at Kawagoe for use on Kawagoe Line and Hachiko Line services.[4] The first set entered revenue service on the line on 19 February 2018.[5]

From 2018, former 209-500 series ten-car sets based at Mitaka Depot for use on Chūō–Sōbu Line services were reformed and converted to become four-car 209-3500 series sets based at Kawagoe for use on Kawagoe Line and Hachiko Line services.[6]

Former rolling stock

History

The first section of the line, named the Hachikō North Line (Japanese: 八高北線, Hepburn: Hachikō-kita-sen), opened from Kuragano to Kodama on 1 July 1931, followed by the section from Hachioji to Higashi-Hanno, named the Hachikō South Line (Japanese: 八高南線, Hepburn: Hachikō-minami-sen), on 10 December 1931.[1] The Hachiko North Line was extended southward from Kodama to Yorii on 25 January 1933, and the Hachiko South Line was extended northward from Higashi-Hanno to Ogose on 15 April 1933.[1] The Hachiko South Line was further extended northward from Ogose to Ogawamachi on 24 March 1934, and the last section between Ogawamachi and Yorii opened on 6 October 1934, connecting the north and south sections, and completing the entire line, which became known simply as the Hachiko Line.[1]

All passenger operations were switch from steam haulage to electric trains from 20 November 1958.[1]

CTC signalling was commissioned over the entire line from 27 February 1985.[1] On 1 April 1987, with the privatization and splitting of Japanese National Railways (JNR), the Hachiko Line was transferred to the ownership of JR East.[1]

From 16 March 1996, the Hachioji to Komagawa section was electrified at 1,500 V DC, and services on the non-electrified section north of Komagawa to and from Takasaki were operated separately as one-man driver only operation services using KiHa 110 series DMUs,[1][9] and the southern section began through service operations to the Kawagoe Line to Kawagoe Station. Also from the same date until 11 March 2022, some morning rush hour services left the Hachikō Line at Haijima Station and travel to Tokyo via the Ōme Line and Chūō Line; the reverse happened during the evening rush.

Starting 12 March 2022, the southern section from Hachiōji to Komagawa (and through services to the Kawagoe Line) began one-man driver only operation services using the existing 209-3500 and E231-3000 series EMUs.

From the start of the revised timetable on 15 March 2025, single-car services between Komagawa and Takasaki were discontinued.[2]

Former connecting lines

  • Komagawa station – A freight-only line serving the Nippon Cement works in Hidaka operated from 1963 until 1984, which also connected to Nishi-Oya on the Tobu Ogose Line.[10]

Accidents

At 07:40 on 24 August 1945, a head-on collision at the Tamagawa bridge [ja] resulted in 105 fatalities.[11]

The Hachikō Line derailment in 1947 is Japan's worst rail accident since World War II in terms of fatalities.

References

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