History Daily - The First Bullet Train

Episode Date: October 1, 2025

October 1, 1964. The first Shinkansen high-speed train enters service between the Japanese cities of Tokyo and Osaka. This episode originally aired in 2024. Support the show! Join Into History for ...ad-free listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.

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Starting point is 00:00:01 Salku X, we're again. Vy number, five vhietta, Arvauksia, Patheria. Palkintone X-Pengue, Sacko, Towsin'emps,
Starting point is 00:00:16 afto, 10-weekcua, write to code insoitess Power.5-couttax. Don't get it to-cudist. It's just after midnight on March 10th, 1945,
Starting point is 00:00:42 and the city of Tokyo is under attack. 34-year-old French journalist Robert Gillon runs through the streets of the Japanese capital. It's late, but he has no problem seeing his way. A huge fire is raging, lighting up the night sky. Robert has chosen not to seek the safety of an air raid shelter, though. Instead, he's joining the effort to battle the inferno. A few hours ago, dozens of American B-29 bombers
Starting point is 00:01:08 appeared in the sky over Tokyo. They dropped incendiary. bombs on the city's docks and industrial district, and a combination of high winds and highly flammable building materials soon whipped up a firestorm. The flames spread across the city, and the blaze is now so ferocious that Tokyo's fire crews have put out a call for help. Robert stops running as he reaches a burning building a few blocks from his own home. A handful of firefighters are trying to tackle the fire, their face is black and sooty. Robert grabs a pump from an exhausted-looking fireman
Starting point is 00:01:42 and begins cranking the handle. The fireman nods and thanks and takes the hose that's attached to the pump. He aims it at the flames, but little more than a dribble emerges from the end. The city's water supplies are running out. So the fireman waves Robert forward, trying to get closer to the burning building.
Starting point is 00:02:01 But then the roof caves in and the walls collapse. Robert stares in horror, hoping that the people who lived in the house got out time. The fireman pulls his sleeve and points urgently down the street. More houses are ablaze, and if they don't move fast, they'll all soon be surrounded by deadly flames. At the end of World War II, the Japanese will face the huge task of rebuilding their country. Despite the firestorm in Tokyo and the devastating atomic bombs dropped on the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the reconstruction will be a phenomenal success. Japan's transformation from vanquished
Starting point is 00:02:42 enemy of America into a friendly regional powerhouse will be termed the economic miracle. And there's no greater sign of the country's astonishing recovery than when it leads the world in opening the first high-speed train line on October 1, 1964. Hey there, Lindsay Graham here. Before we get to the rest of the show, a quick word about something exciting I'm planning, a live show, me on stage with a microphone in one hand and a fistful of stories in the other. You, hopefully in the audience, enjoying history. Live. If you want to be the first to hear about tour dates, which cities I'll be visiting,
Starting point is 00:03:18 special VIP opportunities, and to get a discount on tickets, head to historydailylive.com. That's historydaily live.com. I'm excited to hit the road and hopefully get to see you, so go to historydaily live.com. Tapa we're again. Viased. Five number. Vizement. Arvokesia. Parenthood. 6, S Sacko Auto, Towsin'omax. 10-weekcoa time to write
Starting point is 00:03:54 to codeozoiteess Power.5. Coutta X. Don't get chidist. 5 and 6- carrocks in pastes
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Starting point is 00:04:21 Well, how much made it? I'm pretty bad. What you laid out? What you laid out? I laid up one elamics and then par a lothackortia. Maista.
Starting point is 00:04:32 Vaasan Club. Osta Vaasan Tuotteita, and runnasta Palkintoa. We're again 5 numbera, 5 vizette,
Starting point is 00:04:46 Arvuxia, Pouveria. Palkintona K-G-K-Shacko. From From noisor Aika Rackackack
Starting point is 00:04:59 Power.com F. KautaX. Don't Jail from Noiser in Airship. I'm Lindsay Graham and this is
Starting point is 00:05:13 History Daily. History is made every day. On this podcast every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that
Starting point is 00:05:37 shaped our world. Today is October 1, 1964, the first bullet train. It's May 4th, In 1946 in Tokyo, one year after the bombing of the Japanese capital. 67-year-old foreign minister Shigero Yoshida knocks on the door of a large house. Its size is imposing, though its blackened wall suggests it's only just survived the firestorm last March.
Starting point is 00:06:05 After a moment or two, the door opens, and Yoshida greets the home's owner, Ichiru Hatoyama, the leader of Japan's newly formed Liberal Party. Two days ago, the Liberal Party won Japan's first post-war general election. Hatoyama was excited to then take charge as the new prime minister, but earlier today, the democratic process hit a snag. The Americans occupying Japan informed Hatoyama that he has been barred from holding public office. Hatoyama served in the pre-war Japanese government that invaded other Asian nations, and the Americans are determined to stop him becoming prime minister.
Starting point is 00:06:42 But this intervention has sparked a constitutional crisis. Now it's unclear who should take charge in Japan. Shigero Yoshida takes a seat in Hatoyama's home, and the two men immediately get down to business. Unlike Hatoyama, Yoshida is not allied with any political party, and he's trusted by the Americans as well. So he offers to act as a middleman and negotiate with the Americans on Hatoyama's behalf. Perhaps with Yoshida's intervention,
Starting point is 00:07:10 the Americans might reverse their decision, and allow Hatoyama to become prime minister. But Hatoyama just shakes his head. He knows there's no way the Americans will change their minds. So instead, Hatoyama comes up with an alternative plan. He asks Yoshida to join the Liberal Party and become its new leader. Since the liberals won the recent election, that would mean Yoshida would become Japan's new prime minister.
Starting point is 00:07:35 But Yoshida is hesitant to agree. He's a diplomat, not a politician, and he envisioned retiring to his villa in the countryside. when Japan's first post-war elections were over. But Hatoyama insists that only Yoshida has the skills needed to lead Japan at this crucial juncture. So reluctantly, Yoshida agrees, and over the next few weeks, he secures the backing of the Americans and his appointed prime minister. With a broad base of support in the country,
Starting point is 00:08:02 Yoshida is able to pass a succession of laws to stabilize post-war Japan. He introduces a new American-approved constitution to establish a parliamentary system of government. He overhauls the education system to improve the skills of Japan's workers, and he averts a national crisis when he sees off a general strike called by the Japanese Communist Party. By the late 1940s, the American occupation of Japan is drawing to a close. And in these years since World War II's end, the United States policy towards Japan has shifted. The country is no longer viewed as a defeated enemy that must be punished for its past crimes, but as a potential ally in the new Cold War with the Soviet Union.
Starting point is 00:08:43 Even though Japan will soon be free to determine its own course, Yoshida decides to maintain a strong relationship with the United States. Under the Yoshida doctrine, as his approach becomes known, Japan will spend very little on its military and instead continue to rely on America for security. Although some in Japan see this as humiliating, it's all part of Prime Minister Yoshita's plan. Rather than spend funds on an expensive army, Yoshida wants to focus all of Japan's resources on economic recovery. He increases production of steel and coal, seeing them as crucial to the rebuilding process.
Starting point is 00:09:20 And under the advice of an American economist, he enacts strict austerity measures to curb rampant inflation. But it's the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950 that really transforms Japan's economic prospects. Thousands more American troops are deployed to East Asia, Stokker's. demand for goods and services from Japanese businesses. It's a development that Yoshida calls a gift from the gods. And six years after he took charge, with Japan on the road to recovery, the American occupation formerly comes to an end in 1952. But the departure of American troops and administrators also means the end of the ban on Ichiro Hatoyama serving in government. His return to the political arena sparks conflict in the Liberal Party. By this time, Yoshida has been the
Starting point is 00:10:07 Liberal Party leader and Prime Minister for six years, but Hatoyama still expects him to stand down so Hatayama can resume his old role. And when Yoshida refuses to resign, Hatoyama sets up a rival political party. Many original Liberal Party members defect, and Yoshida soon loses a vote of no confidence and is forced to resign in December 1954. But the Japan that Yoshida leaves behind will be very different from the one he took over. It will have one of the fastest growing economy, in the world. And a nation that was on its knees, less than a decade earlier, will be ready to become a global leader in a new technology. 5th and 6th-perioderxes in piquoes in,
Starting point is 00:10:51 after his lateran whooping, who's been, monasurer-in'clock chan filet and hallowmia. This-basket, now, how much made it, how much made, pay for it? What's been it, on the table? What? What you said you had to be it on the other side? I laid up.
Starting point is 00:11:12 I laid this one elamicsen and then a pari-lacortia. Maista. Vaasan Club. Osta Vaasan tuotteita, Kerepiste and lunasta Palkintoa. We're again.
Starting point is 00:11:27 Visi numbera. Vibeyevietta. Arvauxia. Palkintona. Palkintona X-Peng G-K-Sahcuh Sackcov. Towsin'embourg. Kementu-a-a-a-a-actcaised
Starting point is 00:11:42 code in the codeozoitees, power.5.5th caretion, out of the five-and-the-cern in-cunnering pestered, when his
Starting point is 00:11:57 valetone who came into tortillaan, which in, mu-mossed paneroidtie and hall-oomia. This-vallel
Starting point is 00:12:06 tautil, now only 7.50. It's the summer of 1958 at Osaka Station Japan, four years
Starting point is 00:12:26 after the resignation of Prime Minister Shigero Yusida. 74-year-old Jinji Sogo stands back and covers his mouth as a diesel train stops at the platform, billowing black smoke. Shinji is the president of Japanese national railways, but when the carriage doors open, even he joins the collective groan from other passengers on the platform. They can all see that the train is already jam-packed. Japan's rail system was built during the 19th and early 20th century.
Starting point is 00:12:55 The narrow railroad lines were good for snaking through the country's tough terrain, but the cars they carried were cramped and slow. Nevertheless, Japan's railways quickly became popular, and no line is busier than the one connecting Japan's two biggest cities, Osaka and Tokyo. It transports a quarter of the country's passengers and freight, and today, Shinji is getting a firsthand experience so the hardships his customers have to endure. A guard blows his whistle, signaling that the train is about to deploy.
Starting point is 00:13:25 heart, but Shinji and countless other passengers are still on the platform. Shinji and the rest of the crowd try to squeeze their way onto the train. And after a moment, Shinji feels a shove from behind. He turns to see one of the station workers, pushing him forward, trying to fit as many passengers inside the carriages as possible. Shinji has just made it on board when the doors slammed shut and the train moves off. For the next few hours, Shinji suffers through an uncomfortable journey. but he makes good use of the time.
Starting point is 00:13:56 Shinji is on his way to Tokyo for a meeting with government ministers to discuss the future of Japan's railways, and during his cramped ride, Shinji concludes that the line between Osaka and Tokyo is no longer fit for purpose. Rather than just upgrading the current narrow-gauge track, though, Shinji comes up with a radical solution, a completely new railway. Shinji wants the new main line, or Shin-Kanssen, to be built on wider rails. This will allow trains to travel much faster and reduce congestion since the new trains will be larger and able to make more journeys in a day.
Starting point is 00:14:32 But when Shinji pitches this idea to government ministers, he encounters resistance. Building a completely new rail line means buying up land, laying track, building new stations, and purchasing new trains and carriages. It's an expensive proposition, and the Japanese government simply isn't willing to bankroll it. But Shinji doesn't give up. And to get the funds he needs, he fudges the numbers. He deliberately keeps the estimated cost as low as possible at 200 billion yen, although it's still the equivalent of more than $5 billion U.S. dollars today. That convinces the government to pledge at least some of the money he needs,
Starting point is 00:15:08 and he starts construction immediately. He then secures the rest of the funding through a loan from the World Bank. These loans come with stringent conditions that could result in hefty penalties if repayments aren't made on time. But Shinji thinks that the backing of the World Bank is worth it. He knows that financial support from overseas will make it harder for the Japanese government to pull out of the project without losing face internationally. So over the course of the next six years, Japanese engineers design and build a railway
Starting point is 00:15:39 like none the world has seen. They use a new type of rail with longer segments, eliminating bumpy transitions and ensuring a more comfortable ride. Each carriage is equipped with its own electric, motor, removing the need for a heavy locomotive at the front. And the engines are streamlined to lower the air resistors, creating a distinctive shape that soon earns them the nickname, Bullet Train. With all the modern technology and innovation incorporated into its design,
Starting point is 00:16:07 the bullet train is phenomenally fast. The first test in October 1962 sees a prototype train reach 118 miles an hour, smashing the record for the fastest electric-powered train. Over the next few months, subsequent tests increase that record to 159 miles an hour. But such groundbreaking technology pushes the cost of the project even higher, and its budget soon spirals out of control. The extra expense will cost Shinji Sojo his job. He'll be forced to resign as president of Japanese National Railways in 1963,
Starting point is 00:16:42 just as the last few miles of track are being laid, making it too late to call off the project. With the money already spent, all that will remain is to see whether the bullet train will be worth it. Well, how much been there's been a day. I don't know. What you've laided on the table? I laid down one elamics and then a pair oflarktia. Maista.
Starting point is 00:17:07 Vaasan Club. Osta Vaasan tuotteita, kerapist, and lunasta palkintoes. We're back. Weean number, five vizietta. Five vihett, Arvaks, pouttell. Poveria. Rankingt NG-6, Sacko, Towsin'omax.
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Starting point is 00:18:03 What's the way? What, you laid out? What you laid up? I laid up myself, one elamux, and then par lariacortia. Maista. Vaasan Club.
Starting point is 00:18:12 Osta Vaasan tuotteita, kerap, and lunasta palkintoa. It's October 1, 1964 at Tokyo Station. Two years after prototype models first broke the electric train speed record. On a packed platform,
Starting point is 00:18:38 78-year-old Reiskei Ishida waits for the crowd's applause to die down. Then as cameramen record the occasion, Reiske cuts a ribbon attached to the nose of a bullet train. The audience burst into applause again because Reiske has just officially opened the Shinkansen to the public. A year ago, Reiske took over from Shinji Sogo as president of Japanese National Railways. Many were surprised by his appointment, given his age of 78,
Starting point is 00:19:04 but Reiske is a successful businessman, and the Japanese government saw him as a safe pair of hands. When he took charge of the railways, though, Reiske realized there was too little time to bring the Shinkansen costs down, so all he could do was greenlight the high-speed service and hope it would make a profit. After the opening ceremony is over, Reiske boards the bullet train and makes his way to the seats reserved for him and his guests.
Starting point is 00:19:30 A ripple of excitement floods through the carriage as the train pulls out of the station. Passengers are delighted by how smooth and quiet the ride is, compared to the old diesel trains, and just four short hours later, they arrive in Osaka. The train's arrival breaks another record. At 130 miles per hour, the Shinkansen is now the fastest passenger service in the world,
Starting point is 00:19:53 and it's opened just in time. Nine days after the first train departs, the opening ceremony of the 1964 Olympic Games takes place in Tokyo. Thousands of visitors descend upon Japan, and many make use of the new bullet trains. But the Shinkansen remains busy after the Olympics, too, thanks especially to its popularity with business commuters. Within less than three years, 100 million journeys will have been made on bullet trains. And as the decades pass, the network will be expanded and upgraded,
Starting point is 00:20:24 and most of Japan's major cities will be connected by services traveling at speeds of up to 200 miles an hour. Although train lines in China and Indonesia have since surpassed the Shinkansen in terms of speed, the Japanese rail network is still one of the fastest and busiest in the world. It may not be a record breaker anymore, but the bullet trains remain an enduring symbol of Japan's post-war recovery, as it has been ever since the first train departed Tokyo Station on October 1, 1964. Next on History Daily, October 2nd, 1944. After two months of fighting Nazi occupation, Polish rebels surrender to German forces ending the Warsaw uprising.
Starting point is 00:21:17 From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham. Audio editing by Mohamed Shazzy, sound designed by Gabriel Gould, music by Thrum. This episode is written and research by Scott Reeves, edited by Dorian Marina, managing producer Emily Byrne. Executive producers are William Simpson for airship and Pascal Heard. used for noisor.

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