History
The station opened on 25 February 1897 as Tsuzura Station, a Nippon Railway stop on what became the Jōban Line. From the late 1890s onwards it was the junction for several coal-mine industrial railways — the Joban, Iwaki and Yoshima company tramways and the Mihoshi colliery line — serving the surrounding coalfield. Nippon Railway was nationalised in November 1906. The station was renamed Uchigō on 20 December 1956, reflecting the former Uchigō City designation. Coal-line connections were progressively withdrawn through the 1960s and 1970s. It joined JR East at the 1987 privatisation, with Suica use beginning in 2009 and a new station building fully opened on 29 March 2015.
History summarized from Japanese & English Wikipedia · last reviewed 2026-06-09.
Where the English and Japanese sources differ, this account follows the Japanese source.
Notes
The 2015 station building incorporates a stone-effect wall in the forecourt that evokes the dressing-plant remains of the former Joban coal mine, deliberately referencing Uchigō's coal-mining heritage and the nearby National Treasure Shiramizu Amida-dō.