The line from Andong (now Dandong) to Fengtian (now Shenyang) was originally built by the
Imperial Japanese Army as a narrow-gauge rail line during the
Russo-Japanese War. In accordance with the agreement signed between Japan and China after the end of the war, work to convert the line from narrow to
standard gauge began in August 1909 and was completed in October 1911. The Anpō Line connected to Mantetsu's
Renkyō Line at Fengtian. Double tracking of the line was completed in September 1944. The line was heavily damaged during the
Pacific War; after the defeat of Japan, it was, along with all other railway lines in the territory of the former Manchukuo, taken over by the
Soviet-controlled China Changchun Railway. In 1955, the Soviets returned control of the railways in
Dongbei, and the line became part of the
China Railway. Reconstruction of the line as a single-track line was completed in 1953, and it was renamed '''Shen'an Railway''', after Fengtian was renamed Shenyang. After Andong was renamed Dandong in 1965 the line was once again renamed, receiving its current name at that time. At present, the Sujiatun–Benxi–Nanfen and Qijiabao–Caohekou sections of the line are double tracked, but work is underway to double the entire line. In 2015, a new line was completed between Dandong and Jinshanwan, which allows passenger trains to bypass Hamatang and Shahezhen completely. This also shortens the distance from Shenyang to Dandong by . ==Route==