, constructed around 1893, was destroyed during the
Winter War The decision to build a railway from Viipuri to Joensuu was made by the
Diet of Finland in 1888. Work on the railroad started in 1890, immediately after the
Savonia railroad was finished. The track from Viipuri via
Antrea to
Vuoksenniska () was completed in November 1892, Antrea to Sortavala () in November 1893, and Sortavala to Joensuu () in October 1894. Six thousand men worked on the railroad at the height of construction in September 1892. A direct link between
Hiitola and
Finland Station in
Petrograd,
Russia, was opened in 1917, bypassing the
Riihimäki-Petrograd railroad (see
Saint Petersburg-Hiitola railroad). The bombing of the
Elisenvaara station of the Karelian railroad on 20 June 1944, during the final stages of the Continuation War, was the most fatal bombing in Finnish history; over one hundred civilians were killed when bombs hit a train of
Karelian evacuees. After the Winter War and Continuation War Karelian Isthmus and
Ladoga Karelia with Viipuri, Hiitola, Elisenvaara and Sortavala were ceded to the
Soviet Union, and most stations of the line got to the Soviet side of the new border. In the Moscow Peace Treaty on March 12, 1940, Finland lost the section Viipuri–Antrea–Hiitola–Jaakkima–Sortavala–Matkaselkä–Värtsilä () to the Soviet Union. Only the Joensuu–Niirala section () remained in Finland. Later, Finland has built a new railway leading from
Luumäki on the old
Riihimäki-Saint Petersburg railroad to
Onkamo, which lies on the remaining Finnish part of old Viipuri–Joensuu railroad between Niirala and Joensuu. From
Lappeenranta via
Simpele to Elisenvaara, there was already a railroad before the war, and in 1947, a track was built from Simpele to
Parikkala connecting this one and the old
Savonlinna-Elisenvaara railroad, which also had been split by the new border. The sections from Luumäki to Lappeenranta and from Parikkala to Onkamo where built on the 1960s. ==Branches==