Nong Pladuk Junction Railway Station
History
Nong Pladuk Junction railway station was opened in June 19, 1903 as part of the first phase of the Southern Line construction between Thon Buri and Phetchaburi.
Burma Railway
During the Second World War, Nong Pladuk Junction became the start of the Death Railway, which ended in Thanbyuzayat in Burma. Construction of the railway was coordinated by the Imperial Japanese Army, who was permitted to build due to an armistice signed with Thailand. Camp Nong Pladuk was constructed near the junction station to serve as a transit camp carrying prisoners of war, especially from occupied British Malaya and Singapore. On 16 September 1942, construction started at both ends of the planned railway line. At the end of the war, the railway was confiscated by the British, who later sold it to the State Railway of Thailand.
In June 1963, a railway line from Nong Pladuk was opened to Suphan Buri by Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat, then prime minister.
References
- ^ "Non Pladuk". Japanse Krijsgevangenkampen (in Dutch). Retrieved 27 January 2022.
- ^ "The Thailand-Burma Railway". PBS. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
- 岡本和之 (1993). タイ鉄道旅行 (in Japanese). めこん. ISBN 4-8396-0080-5.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - 杉本聖一 (2000). 魅惑のタイ鉄道 (in Japanese). 玉川新聞社. ISBN 4-924882-29-1.
- 柿崎一郎 (2010). 王国の鉄路 タイ鉄道の歴史 (in Japanese). 京都大学学術出版会. ISBN 978-4-87698-848-8.
- 渡邉乙弘 (2013). タイ国鉄4000キロの旅 (in Japanese). 文芸社. ISBN 978-4-286-13041-5.
- "หนองปลาดุก - จุดเริ่มต้นของทางรถไฟสายมรณะ" [Marsh catfish - the beginning of the Death Railway]. OKNation (in Thai). December 13, 2007.
- "'ร้านป้าน้อย' ปลื้มปีติ! ปรุงอาหารถวายสมเด็จพระเทพฯ" ['Pa Noi's shop' has ecstatic cooking for Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn]. Thai Rath (in Thai). 2015-10-17. Retrieved 2018-10-27.