The Paech'à Ân Line is a partially electrified standard-gauge secondary railway line of the Korean State Railway in South Hwanghae Province, North Korea, running from Changbang on the Hwanghae Ch'à Ângnyà Ân Line to à ¬nbit.
By the end of 1930, the Chosen Railway (abbreviated Chà Âtetsu), the largest privately owned railway in colonial Korea, had extended its Hwanghae Line network to run from Sariwà Ân to Sugyo in the west and to Haeju in the south, completing the latter line in December of that year. Chà Âtetsu then began building eastwards from Haeju to create a southern connection to the Kyà Ângà Âi Line, the state-owned Chosen Government Railway's (abbreviated Sentetsu) mainline from Kyà Ângsà Âng to Sinà Âiju and Andong, Manchuria, opening the first section of a new narrow-gauge line, from East Haeju to Yà Ân'an, on 21 December 1931. The second section was opened on 1 September 1932, running from Yà Ân'an across the Ryesong River to connect to the Kyà Ângà Âi Line at Tosà Âng (later renamed Kaep'ung). A extension west from East Haeju to Haeju was opened on 1 July 1933.
Chà Âtetsu sold the Hwanghae Line network to Sentetsu on 1 April 1944, which absorbed the split the network into separate lines, with the HaejuâÂÂTosà Âng line becoming known as the Tohae Line.
Following the end of the Pacific War and the subsequent partition of Korea, most of the Tohae Line was located in the US zone of occupation that later became South Korea, with the line being divided along the 38th Parallel between Changbang and Kalsan, and the Korean National Railroad operated passenger trains on the line between Tosà Âng and Ch'à Ângdan until 1950. The line was heavily damaged during the Korean War, and the destruction of the Ryesong River bridge left the line truncated at Paech'à Ân. The truncated line ended up in North Korea after the Korean Armistice, becoming part of the Korean State Railway which gave the line its current name of Paech'à Ân Line. The Korean State Railway completed the conversion of the HaejuâÂÂPaech'à Ân line to standard gauge in 1971, at the same time adding an extension from Paech'à Ân to the current terminus, à ¬nbit.
Electrification of the section from Changbang to Ch'Ã Ângdan was completed by April 1982.
A yellow background in the "Distance" box indicates that section of the line is not electrified.
Opened in 1931 by Chà Âtetsu. Not electrified; closed.