Ryōmō Line
Ryōmō Line | |||
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![]() JR East 115 series EMU at Oyama Station
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Overview | |||
Locale | Gunma, Tochigi prefectures | ||
Termini | Oyama Shin-Maebashi |
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Stations | 18 | ||
Operation | |||
Opened | 1889 | ||
Operator(s) | JR East | ||
Technical | |||
Line length | 84.4 km (52.4 mi) | ||
Track gauge | 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) | ||
Electrification | 1,500 V DC overhead catenary | ||
Operating speed | 95 km/h (60 mph) | ||
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The Ryōmō Line (両毛線 Ryōmō-sen?) is a Japanese railway line connecting Oyama in Tochigi Prefecture with Maebashi in Gunma Prefecture. 84.4 km (52.4 mi) long, the line is owned and operated by the East Japan Railway Company (JR East). The name refers to the fact that Gunma and Tochigi prefectures were once part of an ancient province called Keno (毛野?), which was later split into Kōzuke (Gunma) and Shimotsuke (Tochigi). This line connects both halves of the old province.
Contents
Services
Most Ryōmō Line services continue beyond Shin-Maebashi and terminate at Takasaki on the Jōetsu Line. Local trains run about once in an hour during the day between Oyama and Maebashi and twice or three times as frequently between Maebashi and Takasaki. Some rapid services from Ueno and the Shōnan-Shinjuku Line travel through onto the Ryōmō Line, but they stop at every station.
Akagi limited express services travel to Maebashi from Ueno (four times daily to Maebashi, two or three times daily to Ueno) or Shinjuku (one round trip daily). On the weekdays some Akagi services are branded Swallow Akagi.
Station list
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Rolling stock
The following train types are used on the Ryōmō Line.
- 107 series
- 115 series (now only 115-1000 series)
- 185 series (Akagi limited express services)
- 211 series
- 651 series (Akagi limited express services)
- E231 series
- E233-3000 series EMUs (since 1 September 2012)[1]
History
The Oyama to Kiryu section was opened in 1888 by the Ryomo Railway, and extended to Shin-Maebashi the following year. The company merged with the Nippon Railway in 1897, and that company was nationalised in 1906.
The line was electrified in 1968, the same year the Iwafune - Sano and Komagata - Maebashi sections were double-tracked.[citation needed]
Freight services ceased in 2004.[citation needed]
Former connecting lines
- Tochigi station - The Nabeyama Railway Co. opened a 16km 610mm line to its namesake town in 1900 principally to haul limestone. Diesel locomotives were introduced in 1941, the year that passenger services ceased. The line closed in 1960.
- Iwafune station - The Tochigi Prefectural Government operated a 7km 635mm gauge human powered line to Sotogawa between 1899 and 1916.
- Sano Station - The 5 km Tōbu Sano Line segment to Koena operated between 1890 and 1917.[citation needed]
- Tomito station - A 7km 762mm gauge line built primarily to haul limestone operated between 1915 and 1927.
References
This article incorporates material from the corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia.
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External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to [[commons:Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).|Lua error in Module:WikidataIB at line 506: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).]]. |
- Stations of the Ryōmō Line (JR East) (Japanese)
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- Pages with reference errors
- Use dmy dates from September 2012
- Articles that mention track gauge 1067 mm
- Articles containing Japanese-language text
- Articles with unsourced statements from August 2014
- Commons category link from Wikidata
- Articles with Japanese-language external links
- Lines of East Japan Railway Company
- Rail transport in Tochigi Prefecture
- Rail transport in Gunma Prefecture
- 1067 mm gauge railways in Japan
- Railway lines opened in 1889