Esashi Line

Railway line in Japan, 1913 to 2016


title: "Esashi Line" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["lines-of-hokkaido-railway-company", "closed-railway-lines-in-hokkaido", "1067-mm-gauge-railways-in-japan", "railway-lines-opened-in-1913", "railway-lines-closed-in-2016", "1913-establishments-in-japan", "2016-disestablishments-in-japan"] description: "Railway line in Japan, 1913 to 2016" topic_path: "geography/japan" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Esashi_Line" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Railway line in Japan, 1913 to 2016 ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox rail line"]

FieldValue
nameEsashi Line
native_name江差線
native_name_langja
color7CFC00
imageEsasigou.JPG
image_width300px
typeRegional rail
localeHokkaido
start
end
stations12
open15 September 1913
close26 March 2016 (Transferred to South Hokkaido Railway)
ownerJR Hokkaido
linelength37.8 km
gauge
electrification20 kV AC
map[[File:JR_Esashi_Line_linemap.svg
::

| box_width = | name = Esashi Line | native_name = 江差線 | native_name_lang = ja | color = 7CFC00 | logo = | logo_width = | image = Esasigou.JPG | image_width = 300px | caption = | type = Regional rail | system = | status = | locale = Hokkaido | start = | end = | stations = 12 | routes = | daily_ridership = | open = 15 September 1913 | close = 26 March 2016 (Transferred to South Hokkaido Railway) | owner = JR Hokkaido | operator = | character = | depot = | stock = | linelength = 37.8 km | tracklength = | tracks = | gauge = | electrification = 20 kV AC | speed = | elevation = | minradius = | map = [[File:JR_Esashi_Line_linemap.svg|240px|Route map]] | map_state =

The Esashi Line was a Japanese railway line formerly operated by Hokkaido Railway Company (JR Hokkaido). It connected (near Hakodate) and .

The section between and closed in May 2014, and the remainder was transferred to third-sector railway operator South Hokkaido Railway Company in March 2016 following the opening of the Hokkaido Shinkansen.

Stations

All stations are in Hokkaido.

Track: ∥: Double track, ∨: Double track ends, ◇: Passing loop |: No passing loop

Hakodate – Kikonai section (until March 2016)

::data[format=table]

StationJapaneseBetween (km)Distance (km)TransfersTrackLocation
Hakodate Main Line, part of Tsugaru-Kaikyō Line
函館-3.4Hakodate City TramHakodate
Esashi Line, part of Tsugaru-Kaikyō Line
五稜郭3.40.0Hakodate Main LineHakodate
七重浜2.72.7Hokuto
東久根別2.65.3
久根別1.26.5
清川口1.17.6
上磯1.28.8
茂辺地8.817.6
渡島当別5.022.6
釜谷4.927.5Kikonai
泉沢3.130.6
札苅3.434.0
木古内3.837.8Kaikyō Line
::

Former Kikonai – Esashi section (closed May 2014)

::data[format=table]

StationJapaneseBetween (km)Distance (km)TransfersTrackLocation
渡島鶴岡2.340.1Kikonai
吉堀3.143.2
神明13.256.4Kaminokuni
湯ノ岱2.859.2
宮越7.166.3
桂岡2.268.5
中須田2.170.6
上ノ国3.273.8
江差6.179.9Esashi
::

History

The Goryokaku to Kamiiso section opened on 15 September 1913, and was extended to Kikonai on 25 October 1930. The Kikonai to Yunotai section opened on 10 December 1935, and was extended to Esashi on 10 November 1936.

The Goryokaku to Kikonai section was electrified on 13 March 1988 as part of the upgrading of the line associated with the opening of the Seikan Tunnel and associated Kaikyo Line linking Hokkaido to Honshu.

On 7 August 2012, JR Hokkaido announced its intention to close the 42 km non-electrified section of the line between Kikonai and Esashi in spring 2014 due to a lack of financial viability. In fiscal 2011, the Kikonai to Esashi section was served by six return services daily, with an average patronage of 41 passengers per km daily, the lowest for any of JR Hokkaido's lines. The Kikonai – Esashi section was closed in 2014, with the last services operating on 11 May.

Operations on the remaining section of the line between Goryōkaku and Kikonai was transferred from JR Hokkaido to the newly created South Hokkaido Railway Company when the Hokkaido Shinkansen opened on 26 March 2016.

Former connecting lines

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/52/NihonCement_Kamiiso_1.JPG" caption="Japan Cement Co. loco No. 2 was in service at Kamiiso from 1922 until 1975"] ::

  • Kamiiso station: A 500 m spur line served the Japan Cement Co factory from 1915 to 1989. A private 6.6 km line transported limestone to the factory from 1921 to 1956, being electrified at 600 V DC from 1922. A second 3.4 km line to a limestone quarry operated from 1949 until replaced by a conveyor belt in 1973.
  • Kikonai station: In 1937, the 8 km section to Shiriuchi opened, the beginning of a 75 km line to serve a proposed manganese mine at Oshima. The line reached Matsumae (51 km) in 1953, and closed in 1988. The last 24 km to the manganese deposit was not constructed.

References

References

  1. link. (8 August 2012). Doshin Web. The Hokkaido Shimbun Press
  2. link. (7 September 2012). Tetsudo.com. Asahi Interactive Inc.
  3. link. (12 May 2014). Japan Railfan Magazine Online. Koyusha Co., Ltd.

::callout[type=info title="Wikipedia Source"] This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page. ::

lines-of-hokkaido-railway-companyclosed-railway-lines-in-hokkaido1067-mm-gauge-railways-in-japanrailway-lines-opened-in-1913railway-lines-closed-in-20161913-establishments-in-japan2016-disestablishments-in-japan