Thursday, January 23, 2025

The Final Days of Steam in Yamatagata Prefecture

By Minoru Shinozaki

I spent my preteen and teenage years up north in Tsuruoka along the coast of the Sea of Japan in Yamagata prefecture in the early 1970s. Just before Japanese railway’s centenary in 1972, JNR initiated the “Discover Japan” campaign to boost tourism by train, putting up posters featuring beautiful scenery along the local lines, and railfans began to record obsessively the final days of Japanese steam, the final one of which was to be withdrawn in the early spring 1976 in Hokkaido. Around my hometown, mainline steams survived up until autumn of 1972 and so I was lucky enough to be able to record the final days of steam on the Uetsu and Riku’u West Lines. The Uetsu Main Line, running 271.7 km from Niitsu (now the starting point of “Ban-Etsu Monogatari Go”) in Niigata prefecture to Akita prefecture, was one of the latest JNR main lines to be electrified together with the San’in Main Line. Because of this and also because the district in which it runs is flat, the standard mainline engines types D51 and C57 for freight and passenger trains respectively survived into the 1970s in scheduled mainline service. As the line, located along the coastline of the Sea of Japan, commands a good view of sea, especially from the northern Niigata all through Yamagata prefecture, the scenes of C57s and D51s hauling long trains in the seaside setting were really impressive.

On 23 September 1972, one week before the completion of electrification and withdrawal of steam on 1 October, JNR ran “Farewell” special between Niitsu and Sakamachi. The train was hauled by 3 D51s with semi-streamlined D51 63 as the pilot engine. One of my friend’s father drove us to Niitsu to shoot the train on the Aganogawa Viaduct and we planned to catch the train up and shoot twice or more on our way. But, alas, the line was so flat and the tripleheader was so powerful that the train ran far faster than the scheduled time and we could not catch the train again!

One week after that, we had another “Farewell” train, this time on the Riku’u West line. The line (43.0 km from Amarume to Shinjo both in Yamagata prefecture) is the western half of the cross-country line which connects the coasts of the Sea of Japan and the Pacific Ocean. Although the East Line was more famous because of its autumnal tints and steeper gradients, the West Line, running along the Mogamigawa River also boasted a charming setting. C58s were in service for freights on both the West and East Line and Shinjo-based engines were in charge of the West Line. In the morning of 1 October, I took a down train on the Uetsu Main Line at Tsuruoka and transferred to the Riku’u West Line at Amarume, to get to Kiyokawa station, near which lied my favourite shooting point by a long, curved viaduct. At Amarume a sad spectacle wainted for us — the sight of D51 63 without its front number plate: as it had been the pilot engine of the Uetsu Main Line’s memorial special, some maniac had stolen the plate! Also, we saw C58 401 in a siding with a plate saying “Goodbye SL” on its head waiting to go out for the final journey. Leaving her behind we went to Kiyokawa and spent the whole day on the banks overlooking the viaduct capturing the final operations of C58’s including a doubleheader. For one of the freight trains, which was supposed to be hauled by C58, a newly built DE10 was used and it came home to me that that was the final day.

Among illustrations for this article I looked for negatives of the Uetsu Main Line’s “Farewell” special but couldn’t find them. Those days are gone for ever.