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Hinoharu_Station Latitude and Longitude:

35°47′24″N 138°23′41″E / 35.790056°N 138.394694°E / 35.790056; 138.394694
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
CO49
Hinoharu Station

日野春駅
Hinoharu Station
General information
Location50, Nagasaka-cho Tomioka, Hokuto-shi, Yamanashi-ken
Japan
Coordinates 35°47′24″N 138°23′41″E / 35.790056°N 138.394694°E / 35.790056; 138.394694
Operated by JR East
Line(s) Chūō Main Line
Distance160.1 km from Tokyo
Platforms1 side + 1 island platform
Tracks3
Other information
StatusStaffed
Website Official website
History
OpenedDecember 21, 1904
Passengers
2017590 daily
Services
Preceding station Logo of the East Japan Railway Company (JR East) JR East Following station
Nagasaka
CO50
towards Shiojiri
Chūō Main Line
Local
Anayama
CO48
towards Tachikawa
Location
Hinoharu Station is located in Yamanashi Prefecture
Hinoharu Station
Hinoharu Station
Location within Yamanashi Prefecture
Hinoharu Station is located in Japan
Hinoharu Station
Hinoharu Station
Hinoharu Station (Japan)

Hinoharu Station (日野春駅, Hinoharu-eki) is a railway station of Chūō Main Line, East Japan Railway Company (JR East) in Nagasaka, in the city of Hokuto, Yamanashi Prefecture, Japan.

Lines

Hinoharu Station is served by the Chūō Main Line, and is 160.1 kilometers from the terminus of the line at Tokyo Station.

Station layout

The station consists of one ground level side platform and one ground level island platform, connected to the wooden station building by a footbridge. The station is staffed.

Platforms

1, 2   Chūō Main Line for Kobuchizawa, Shiojiri and Matsumoto
3  Chūō Main Line for Kōfu

History

Hinoharu Station opened on December 21, 1904 a station on the Japanese Government Railways (JGR) Chūō Main Line. The station was built as a watering point for steam locomotives, which were still used on the line until August 1964. A freshwater spring, called the Hino spring, occupied this location, and was a noted local landmark due to an ancient pine tree from which local legend stated that Takeda Shingen once hung his battle standard. When the government appropriated the land for the station, the local landowner insisted that the tree be spared. However, through neglect and due to smoke from the locomotives, the pine tree died in 1914. Descendants of the owner sued the Railroad Ministry in 1917, and won the case in 1919. A monument was erected in front of the station on the location of the pine tree in 1933 to commemorate the incident. The JGR became the JNR ( Japanese National Railways) after the end of World War II. Scheduled freight services were discontinued from February 1972. With the dissolution and privatization of the JNR on April 1, 1987, the station came under the control of the East Japan Railway Company.

Passenger statistics

In fiscal 2017, the station was used by an average of 590 passengers daily (boarding passengers only). [1]

Surrounding area

  • Hinoharu post office

See also

References

  1. ^ 各駅の乗車人員 (2017年度) [Station passenger figures (Fiscal 2017)] (in Japanese). Japan: East Japan Railway Company. 2018. Retrieved 5 June 2019.
  • Miyoshi Kozo. Chuo-sen Machi to eki Hyaku-niju nen. JT Publishing (2009) ISBN  453307698X (in Japanese)
  • JR全線全駅ステーション倶楽部編(上) [Complete JR Line/Station Compendium (Vol. 1)] (in Japanese). Tokyo, Japan: Bunshun Bunko. September 1988. p. 145. ISBN  4-16-748701-2.

External links

Media related to Hinoharu Station at Wikimedia Commons