Japan marks its railways' 150th anniversary with series of events

Japan celebrated the 150th anniversary of its railway system on Friday with a series of events, observances and merchandising tie-ins in Tokyo and elsewhere.

At Shimbashi, one of the terminuses of Japan's first railway line opened in 1872, the E655 Nagomi train used by the emperor and other imperial family members set off from what is now an East Japan Railway Co. station to add color to the commemoration.

Also at a ceremony in the station square, which has been home to a classic steam locomotive since the railway's 100th anniversary, visitors shopped at a special market selling railway-themed merchandise, regional products and other items.

A JR East executive also laid flowers at the grave of Edmund Morel, a British engineer who contributed to establishing railways in Japan, at the Yokohama Foreign General Cemetery.

According to the transport ministry, further events are planned by other train operators in Japan.

Japan's first railway opened in 1872 between Shimbashi and Yokohama neighboring Tokyo. A first-class ticket would cost about 15,000 yen ($102) today.

Another line followed between Osaka and Kobe in western Japan in 1874, and railways soon spread across the archipelago as a symbol of modernization.

© Kyodo News