The Tanpà  Railway (Japanese: 端è±ÂéÂÂéÂÂæ ªå¼Âä¼Â社, Tanpà  Tetsudà  Kabushiki Kaisha; , Danpung Cheoldo Jusikhoesa), was a privately owned railway company in Japanese-occupied Korea.
The name of the railway was formed from the first characters of the names of the starting point, Tansen on the Kankyà  Line of the Chà Âsen Government Railway, and Hà Âzan, the county seat of Hà Âzan County. The initial section of the mainline, from Tansen to Kà Âkun, was opened on 26 August 1939. A branchline from Kojà  (now called Heocheon) to Mantoku was also opened, but the planned continuation from Kà Âkun to Hà Âzan was not completed before the fall of Japan at the end of the Pacific War.
Following the partition of Korea, the entirety of the Danpung Railway's network was located in the Soviet zone of occupation. The Provisional People's Committee for North Korea nationalised all railways in the northern half of the country on 10 August 1946, and following the establishment of North Korea, the Korean State Railway was created, which renamed the line HÃ Âch'Ã Ân Line. Damage sustained by the line during the Korean War was repaired, but the extension to Pungsan (renamed Kimhyonggwonin 1990) was never built.
In the November 1942 timetable, the last issued prior to the start of the Pacific War, the Tanpà  Railway was running three trains each day from Tansen to Kà Âkun, and four each day on the return trip.
One Class 4110 steam locomotive was sent from the Japanese Government Railway to the Danpung Railway after conversion to standard gauge.