The planning began in 1953. The idea was supported by the regional party and the
Komsomol, but it was only implemented very slowly. Volunteers refurbished a steam locomotive and some waggons and prepared the signalling and paraphernalia. Members of the Komsomol supported the project, which was also reviewed with great interest by the General Director of the South Sakhalin Railways Michail Olona. The track in the park for culture and relaxation, which is named after the
cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, was inaugurated on 6 June 1954.
Nikita Khrushchev, the General Secretary of the Central Committee of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union reacted adversely about its construction, which he saw as a waste of public resources, as it became known only 40 years later. In the first year the track was used in counter-clockwise direction. In the subsequent year, 1955, the steam locomotive was turned around on a temporary
turning wye. Initially the steam locomotive UK-159-238 was used, until it was taken out of use in 1959. Originally an electric token system was used, which was replaced by half automatic signal locking and finally, as the country's first children's railroad, with automatic signal locking. The diesel locomotive
TU2-029 was used since 1971 and the
TU2-127 since 1982. In 2009 the diesel locomotive
TU7A-3351 and several new carriages were acquired and in 2011 the diesel locomotive
TU10-005. == See also ==