Nara Railway (奈良鉄道)

Nara Railway was a Japanese private railway company that constructed and managed the entire current Nara Line and over half of the current Sakurai Line. In 1905, all their lines were assigned to Kansei Railway Company, which was nationalized in 1907.

History

The railway was planned to connect Kyoto and Nara. Construction began from the Kyoto side, and the whole line between Kyoto and Nara was completed in 1895. Another railway section between Nara and Sakurai was completed in 1898, after the 1896 merger of Nara Railway with Hatsuse Railway, which was constructing the relevant section at the time.

In 1904, a consolidation of Kinki region railway companies was negotiated, and both Nara Railway and Nanwa Railway decided to merge with Kansei Railway Company. In the following year, 1905, all of Nara Railway's railway assets were taken over by Kansei Railway Company.

Timeline

September 5, 1895: A line 3 miles and 23 chains (unit) long began operations between Kyoto Station and Fushimi Station (Kyoto Prefecture). November 3, 1895: A line 1 mile and 9 chains long began operations between Fushimi Station and Momoyama Station. January 25, 1896: A line 12 miles and 46 chains long began operations between Momoyama Station and Tamamizu Station. March 13, 1896: A line 4 miles and 50 chains long began operations between Tamamizu Station and Kizu Station (Kyoto Prefecture). April 18, 1896: A line 4 miles and 32 chains long began operations between Kizu Station and Nara Station. May 11, 1898: A line 11 miles and 10 chains long began operations between Sakurai Station (Nara Prefecture) and Kyobate Station. February 11, 1899: Freight transport began along a tentative link line between Kyobate and Nara. October 14, 1899: A line 1 mile and 5 chains long began operations between Kyobate and Nara. February 8, 1905: All lines were transferred to Kansei Railway Company.

Lines

At the time of the transfer to Kansei Railway Company, the total length of the lines was 38 miles and 15 chains (unit).

From Kyoto Station to Nara Station

The section between Shichijo and Momoyama stations was different from the JR Nara Line's current route in that the route passed through Fushimi Station (Kyoto Prefecture), the origin of the current Kintetsu Kyoto Line.

From Nara Station to Sakurai Station (Nara Prefecture)

Rolling stock

Kansei Railway Company took over 12 locomotives, 91 passenger coaches and 106 freight wagons.

Locomotives

From 1 to 5
Tank Locomotives, Type 2-6-2 (1C1) from Baldwin Locomotive Works, U.S.A.
Kansei Railway Company: Type 93, Kasuga, Nos. 93 - 97
Tetsudo-in (Railway Bureau): Steam Locomotive, Type Kokutetsu (JNR) 3030
From 6 to 12
Tank Locomotives, Type 2-6-0 (1C) from Swiss Locomotive and Machine Works
Kansei Railway Company: Type 98, Mikasa, Nos. 93 - 104
Tetsudo-in: Steam Locomotive, Type Kokutetsu (JNR) 2800

[Original Japanese]