Los Angeles Terminal Railway
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The Los Angeles Terminal Railway, aka The Altadena Railway, aka The Pasadena Railway, aka The San Pedro, Los Angeles & Salt Lake Railway, was a small steam engine line that operated between Altadena and Pasadena, California in the late 1880's. It was a byproduct of a land boom period and a victim of the land bust that occurred soon thereafter. It opened officially on Jan 31, 1888.
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[edit] Inception
Though the reason for establishing the small railroad is argued by historians, it is apparent to some that there was a need to provide some sort of public passenger service between the two communities. Others say that it was the whimsy of two particular, wealthy Altadenans to provide themselves with the refined means of a daily train ride to get themselves from home to office and back home in a style grander than that of a horse and buggy.
The service was originally organized as the Pasadena Railway Company in 1887 by investors John Woodbury, James Swartout, and the two prominent and wealthy Altadenans Andrew McNally and Col. G. G. Green, mutual friends from Chicago.
Swartout had a large estate between New York Dr. and Boston St. near Maiden Lane which lie in a lower section of Altadena near the Pasadena border. He already owned the horse drawn Highland Railroad Company which accessed his property. Brothers John and Frederick were the developers of the Altadena community located north of Pasadena against the San Gabriel Mountains. Frederick had a Ranch house near the Piedmont (Altadena Drive) and John had proposed building a mansion near the homes of McNally and Green.
Andrew McNally was the founder of the famed map making company Rand-McNally in Chicago and had retired to Altadena in 1887. Green had made his fortunes in patent medicines and elixirs in Chicago and was invited by McNally to move to Altadena in the same year. McNally and Green were heavily invested in the small railway, and each had a siding for his own private car to be pulled up along side their properties which stood on either side of Santa Rosa from each other.
[edit] Route description
The railway originated at a terminus near the Raymond Station by the Raymond Hotel which was the premier Pasadena winter residence for many eastern magnates. The rails roughly paralleled Fair Oaks Avenue, then crossed Lincoln Avenue to the east then again to the west and headed toward the Arroyo Seco. It turned northward to an area called Las Casitas (the little houses) then swung wide to the east to an alignment with today's Harriet Street in Altadena and ran between Mendocino and Calaveras streets to a terminus on Lake Avenue which would align with the present-day Altadena Post Office building. This right-of-way agrees with the original plan of a railroad on Woodbury's 1887 plot map, and lends support to the idea that this railroad had greater purpose than that of appeasing a couple of millionaires, even though they were often the only riders.
Depending on which end of the railway one might live, the line was called either the Pasadena Railroad or the Altadena Railroad. The Altadena terminus when adjoined by Professor Lowe's Mount Lowe Railway was then named "Mountain Junction."
[edit] Expansion of the line
By 1890 the Pasadena/Altadena Railway was assumed by a couple of other failing rail lines that connected it to Los Angeles. It became an immediate success. In July of 1891 it was joined again with a line that connected it to San Pedro. The line was renamed the Los Angeles Terminal Railway, and subsequently so was its San Pedro terminus at Rattlesnake Island, now Terminal Island.
The original Woodbury plan to have a line run from an Altadena railroad yard to Salt Lake City, Utah was still in the offing, but the land bust dashed it, however, not before the railroad was renamed the San Pedro, Los Angeles & Salt Lake Railroad Company in 1901.
[edit] Quarrying in the Arroyo Seco
By 1901 a spur track had been laid into the Arroyo Seco near Devil's Gate for the purpose of quarrying rock for the construction of the Los Angeles Harbor breakwater. By 1903 the trans-Altadena service was abandoned and the rails were pulled up. It took decades for the bordering properties to assume the abandoned right-of-way, and to this day slight traces of where the rail line passed through can be sleuthed out.
[edit] Abandonment
By 1916 quarrying in the Arroyo had been abandoned since the rock material proved to be too unstable for its intended purposes, and by 1921 the Arroyo-Windsor lines were taken up. Shortly thereafter, there being found no viable use for the railway, the line was abandoned altogether.
Today only a fenced right of way can been seen passing between the buildings and houses between Windsor and El Sol Avenues in Altadena. A fenced-in section can also be seen adjacent the northbound Lincoln Avenue off ramp of the 210 Freeway, where the train used to head toward the Las Casitas flats.