Rock Creek Railway

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The Rock Creek Railway was one of the first electric streetcar company to operate in Washington, D.C. It was incorporated in 1888 and started operations in 1890. After expansion, the line ran from the Cardoza/Shaw neighborhood of D.C. to Chevy Chase Lake, Maryland. On September 21, 1895 the company purchased the Washington and Georgetown Railroad Company and the two formed the Capital Traction Company.

[edit] Start-up and Expansion

The Rock Creek Railway was incorporated by Francis Newlands on June 23, 1888 - four days after the Eckington and Soldiers' Home Electric Railway was chartered.[1] Service began on Florida Avenue between Connecticut Avenue NW and 18th Street NW in 1890. The company built an iron bridge across Rock Creek at Cincinnati Street NW (now Calvert Street NW), which was completed on July 21, 1891.[2] On September 16, 1892 the line was extended up 18th Street to the neighborhood now known as Adams Morgan,[3] across the Cincinnati Street Bridge and northward on Connecticut Avenue NW all the way to the District Line. The company also acquired trackage built by the Chevy Chase Land Company, extending the line to Chevy Chase Lake, Maryland.[2] Along the way it connected to the Metropolitan Railroad's Connecticut Avenue Line, and to the power house at the crossing of the Georgetown Branch of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad in Chevy Chase. Power was supplied by an overhead trolley wire.[4] See a photo of the Rock Creek here

On March 2, 1893, a line was added east along U Street NW through Shaw to 7th Street NW, intersecting with several downtown lines and making Adams Morgan more readily accessible from downtown.[3] This line used the Love Electric Traction Company's system of conduit electrification. The place where cars changed between the Rock Creek Railway and the Metropolitan Railroad was located at U and 18th Streets.

Extensions east on Florida Avenue to North Capitol Street, and north to the National Zoo, were authorized on April 30, 1892, but never built.[1]

[edit] The End of the Line

By the mid-1890s there were numerous streetcar companies operating in the District. Congress tried to deal with this fractured transit system by requiring them to accept transfers, set standard pricing and by allowing them to use one another's track. But eventually it became clear that consolidation was the best solution.

On March 1, 1895, Congress authorized the Rock Creek Railway to purchase the Washington and Georgetown. It did so on September 21, 1895 forming the Capital Traction Company, the first company created during "the great streetcar consolidation" and spelling the end of the Rock Creek Railway as a unique entity.[5]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b (1896) Laws Relating to Street-railway Franchises in the District of Columbia. Washington, D.C.: United States, District of Columbia Board of Commissioners. 
  2. ^ a b Tindall, Dr. William (1918). Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C.: Beginning of Street Railways in the National Capital. Charlottesville, VA: Columbia Historical Society, 24-118. 
  3. ^ a b Laura V. Trieschmann, Patti Kuhn, Megan Rispoli, Ellen Jenkins, and Elizabeth Breiseth, (July 2006). "Washington Heights National Register of Historical Places Application" (pdf). . United States Department of the Interior Retrieved on 2007-01-19.
  4. ^ Washington Post, Rock Creek Road is Ready, September 17, 1892
  5. ^ Tindall, William (1914). Standard History of the City of Washington from a Study of the Original Sources. Knoxville, TN: H. W. Crew & Co., 414-429.