Seattle Municipal Street Railway
Seattle Municipal Street RailwayOperation |
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Locale |
Seattle, Washington |
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Horse-drawn era: 1884 (1884)–1889 (1889) |
Owner(s) |
Various (1884–1889) |
Operator(s) |
Various (1884–1889) |
Propulsion system(s) |
Horse |
|
Cable car era: 1887 (1887)–1941 (1941) |
Owner(s) |
- Various (1887–1919)
- Seattle Municipal Street Railway (1919–1941)
|
Operator(s) |
- Various (1887–1919)
- Seattle Municipal Street Railway (1919–1941)
|
Propulsion system(s) |
Cable |
|
Electric streetcar era: 1889 (1889)–1941 (1941) |
Lines |
26 streetcar lines (1936) |
Owner(s) |
- Various (1889–1919)
- Seattle Municipal Street Railway (1919–1941)
|
Operator(s) |
- Various (1889–1919)
- Seattle Municipal Street Railway (1919–1941)
|
Track length (total) |
231 miles (372 km) (1936) |
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The Seattle Municipal Street Railway was a city-owned streetcar network that served the city of Seattle, Washington and its suburban neighborhoods from 1919 to 1941. In 1898 Stone & Webster began forming the system out of smaller lines, the oldest of which had roots from 1884. By 1900, they had amalgamated 22 lines, and gained a 40-year operating franchise. The system included cable car lines and regional interurban systems to Everett, Renton and Tacoma as well as city cars, and also included power generation. The Stone and Webster operation, stripped of rail, later became Puget Energy. In 1918, the city of Seattle bought many parts of the system, on terms which left the transit operation in financial trouble. In 1939, a new transportation agency, the Seattle Transit System, was formed, which refinanced the remaining debt and began replacing equipment with "trackless trolleys" (as then known) and motor buses. The final streetcar ran on April 13, 1941. Seattle Transit, in turn, was absorbed by King County Metro in 1973.[1]
A modern streetcar system debuted in 2007, with the introduction of the South Lake Union Streetcar. It has since been expanded to include a second line, the First Hill Streetcar, which will be extended downtown to connect the two lines.
References
Further reading
- Blanchard, Leslie (1969). The Street Railway Era in Seattle: A Chronicle of Six Decades. Harold E. Cox.
- Lane, Bob (1995). Better Than Promised: An informal history of the Municipality of Metropolitan Seattle. Seattle.
External links
Media related to Seattle Street Railway at Wikimedia Commons