Train fans who regularly participate in cleaning the WWII-era Engine No. 31 from the Taimen Railway at Yasukuni Shrine were the ones who suggested the whistle blowing.
Yasukuni shrine and Steam engine

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A steam locomotive whistle echoed across the grounds of Yasukuni Shrine, in Tokyo’s Chiyoda Ward, on September 23. 

This C56 Model No. 31 steam locomotive ran between Thailand and Burma (now Myanmar) on the Taimen (Burma) Railway during World War II. The rail line was built by the Imperial Japanese Army during the war. 

After the war, the locomotive engine was returned to Japan and dedicated at Yasukuni Shrine (Chiyoda Ward, Tokyo). It is displayed at the Yushukan Museum inside the grounds of the shrine.

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Railroad fans who regularly participate in cleaning Engine No. 31, suggested the whistle blow as part of a memorial service for bereaved families. The commemoration honored the 80th anniversary of the founding of the Imperial Japanese Army’s 9th Railway Regiment, which served as one of the units that engaged in the construction of the Taimen Railway.

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The engine number
Inside the working engine

Due to deterioration of the piping leading to the steam whistle, a temporary air tank was prepared, and by pumping air through a hose the team was able to blow the whistle.   

Engineering of the wheels
A peek inside

The Taimen Railway connected Thailand and Burma as a supply route to transport military supplies. Japanese Imperial Army troops, Allied POWs, and civilian laborers worked on its construction and completed the approximately 415 km long railroad in about one year and three months.

With efforts made by those involved, in 1979, the engine was able to return to Japan and was dedicated to Yasukuni Shrine

This whistle blowing by the C56 Model No. 31 engine was the first one since the dedication ceremony.   

(Read the Sankei Shimbun column in Japanese at this link.)

Author: The Sankei Shimbun

Engine56 Model No. 31, at Yasukuni Shrine's Yushukan Museum.

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