Tōbu Keishi Line
| Tōbu Keishi Line | |
|---|---|
| Overview | |
| Owner | Tobu Railway | 
| Locale | Tokyo | 
| Termini | 
 | 
| Stations | 3 | 
| Service | |
| Type | Heavy rail | 
| History | |
| Opened | 1943 | 
| Closed | 22 July 1959 | 
| Technical | |
| Line length | 6.3 km (3.9 mi) | 
| Track gauge | 1,067 mm (3 ft 6 in) | 
| Electrification | Not electrified | 
The Tōbu Keishi Line (東武啓志線, Tōbu Keishi-sen) was a 6.3 km freight railway line operated by Tobu Railway, which ran from Kami-Itabashi Station on the Tōbu Tōjō Line, initially to a Japanese Army arsenal depot in modern-day Hikarigaoka. Following the arrival of US military forces immediately after World War 2, the area was converted to the Grant Heights housing complex (in present-day Hikarigaoka in Tokyo, Japan). The line was named in 1946 after Hugh Boyd Casey, the project engineer for Grant Heights.
The line opened in 1943 as a freight-only line, and following the opening of Grant Heights, a passenger service was introduced in December 1947, with through services operated to and from the Tojo Line terminus at Ikebukuro, but ceased in February 1948.[1] The line closed on 22 July 1959.[1]
References
This article incorporates material from the corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia.