Samcheok Railway

Samcheok Railway Co. Ltd.
Overview
Native name삼척철도주식회사 (Samcheok Cheoldo Jusikhoesa)
三陟鐵道株式會社 (Sanchoku Tetsudō Kabushiki Kaisha)
Route map

0.0
0.0
Mukho
0.8
Mukhohang
6.0
5.9
Bukpyeong
13.5
Dogyeongni
6.4
Chuam
17.1
Miro
7.8
Samcheok Haebyeon
21.8
Sangjeong
12.9
Samcheok
21.8
Sangjeong
27.0
Singi
32.4
Machari
35.9
Hagosari
37.6
Gosari
42.3
Dogye
45.6
Nahanjeong
47.1
Heungjeon
51.1
Simpori
58.8
Tongni
61.9
Dongbaeksan
63.7
Baeksan
68.0
Cheoram

The Samcheok Railway (Japanese: 三陟鐵道株式會社, Sanchoku Tetsudō Kabushiki Kaisha; Korean: 삼척철도주식회사, Samcheok Cheoldo Jusikhoesa), was a privately owned railway company in Japanese-occupied Korea.

The first 41.4 km (25.7 mi) section of the line (Mukho Port–Dogye) was opened on 31 July 1940.[1] The line was named Cheoram Line, which ran from Mukho, a port on Korea's east coast that became part of Donghae in 1980, to Cheoram in the Taebaek Mountains, to develop three coal fields.[2] Between Simpo-ri and Tong-ri stations, the great height difference was scaled by a steep double-track railway.[3] Freight railcars going up and down were connected to the same cable, passengers had to walk up the mountain.[3] On 1 August 1940, a branch from Bukpyeong (today Donghae Station) to Mukho bypassing Mukho Port was opened, and the original alignment became the Mukho Port Line (ko); this was followed by a 12.9 km (8.0 mi) branch from Bukpyeong to Samcheok, the Samcheok Line (ko), that was opened on 11 February 1944.[4]

After the partition of Korea the Samcheok Railway's network was entirely within the territory of South Korea, and the company was nationalised on 10 August 1948 and made part of the Korean National Railroad. The Cheoram Line became part of the KNR's Yeongdong Line in 1963,[2] whilst the Samcheok Line remained a separate line. The Samcheok Railway's network was isolated from the rest of Korea's railways, and remained so until 1955.[5]

  1. ^ 朝鮮總督府官報 (The Public Journal of the Governor-General of Korea), Shōwa No. 4066, 9 August 1940
  2. ^ a b 영동선 (in Korean). EnCyber. Retrieved 2011-01-06.
  3. ^ a b "철마 110년, 영고의 자취 [12] 경제개발과 철도" (in Korean). Silvernet News. 2010-03-20. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  4. ^ 朝鮮總督府官報 (The Public Journal of the Governor-General of Korea), Shōwa No. 5103, 9 February 1944
  5. ^ "철마 110년, 영고의 자취 [11] 3대 산업선" (in Korean). Silvernet News. 2010-03-14. Retrieved 2011-01-06.