Station

Iyo-Nagahama

伊予長浜

Iyo-Nagahama
Wikimedia Commons (see file page for author + license)

History

Iyo-Nagahama Station opened on 14 February 1918 as Nagahama-machi Station, the eastern terminus of the privately operated 762 mm-gauge Ehime Railway in what is now Ōzu, Ehime Prefecture. When the company was nationalised on 1 October 1933, Japanese Government Railways renamed it Iyo-Nagahama and absorbed it into the Ehime Line. On 6 October 1935 the track was regauged to 1067 mm and connected to the Yosan Main Line from Kitanada; the station was simultaneously shifted 200 metres towards Kitanada and became a through station. JR Shikoku inherited it at the 1 April 1987 privatisation of JNR. After a new inland route via Uchiko opened on 3 March 1986 this coastal branch lost its main-line role; the station was made unstaffed on 1 October 2010.

History summarized from Japanese & English Wikipedia · last reviewed 2026-05-22.

Notes

On 20 March 1950 Emperor Shōwa's imperial train stopped here for five minutes during his postwar progress through Japan, and a brief station-front welcoming reception was held — a small ceremonial footnote for what is today an unstaffed branch-line stop.

Sources

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