Market Street Railway (transit operator)

Last updated

Market Street Railway
Market Street Railway brass logo.JPG
Market Street Railway brass logo.
Overview
Locale San Francisco, California
Dates of operation1857 (1857)1944 (1944)
Successor San Francisco Municipal Railway
Technical
Length284 miles (457 km) (in 1929) [1]

The Market Street Railway Company was a commercial streetcar and bus operator in San Francisco. The company was named after the famous Market Street of that city, which formed the core of its transportation network. Over the years, the company was also known as the Market Street Railroad Company, the Market Street Cable Railway Company and the United Railroads of San Francisco. Once the largest transit operator in the city, the company folded in 1944 and its assets and services were acquired by the city-owned San Francisco Municipal Railway. Many of the former routes continue to exist into the 2020s, but served by buses.

Contents

The company should not be mistaken for the current Market Street Railway, which is named after its predecessor but is actually a legally unconnected non-profit support group for San Francisco's heritage streetcar lines.

History

Steam and horses

Horsecar at Market & Post, c. 1865 SF Woodwards-Gardens-no-14-horsecar-at-Post-and-Market-1860s.jpg
Horsecar at Market & Post, c.1865

The franchise for what would become the Market Street Railway was granted in 1857 to Thomas Hayes. The line was the first railway to open in San Francisco, commencing service on July 4, 1860 as the Market Street Railroad Company. [2] [3] Traction was provided by steam power as steam dummy locomotives pulling a trailer car. [4] Four Portland gauge tank locomotives were built by San Francisco's Albion Foundry. Locomotives #1 and #4 were 24 feet (7.3 m) long with engine, baggage and passenger compartments driven by the front wheel only 0-2-2T. Locomotives #2 and #3 were 18-foot (5.5 m) 0-4-0Ts with a baggage compartment. Both types pulled 40-foot (12 m) double-truck trailers with seating for 64 passengers. Baldwin Locomotive Works built two 0-4-0T steam dummies (C/N 5004 & 5009) in 1880 to operate over the standard-gauge railway extension from Valencia Street to Castro Street until 1888. [5]

Horses began to replace steam as traction in 1867. [6] In 1895 the company placed a newspaper advertisement in The San Francisco Examiner offering horse cars for $20 ($10 without seats). [7] Many of these became the basis for the impromptu community built from streetcars called Carville-by-the-Sea. [8]

Cable

Market Street Cable Railway Co.
"MARKET STREET CABLE R. W. CO." in 1889 map detail, Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from San Francisco, San Francisco County, California. LOC sanborn00813 005-9 (cropped).jpg
Powerhouse at Market and Valencia in 1889 Sanborn map
Title Sheet - San Francisco Cable Railway, Washington and Mason Streets, San Francisco, San Francisco County, CA HAER CAL,38-SANFRA,137- (sheet 1 of 8).tif
Routemap of all cable hauled railroads in San Francisco

Following the opening of the cable hauled Clay Street Hill Railroad in 1873, pressure grew to convert the city's horsecar lines to the new form of traction. In 1882, Leland Stanford and associates bought the Market Street Railroad Company and converted its lines to cable haulage. In the process, the company's name was changed to the Market Street Cable Railway Company (MSCRy). This company was to grow to become San Francisco's largest cable car operator. At its peak, it operated five lines all of which converged into Market Street to a common terminus at the Ferry Building; during rush hours a cable car left that terminus every 15 seconds. [3] The main line, which began operation from the Ferry Building down Market to Valencia and Twenty-Ninth in August 1883, was joined by four lines that branched off Market by the end of 1888: McAllister, Hayes, Haight, and Castro. [9]

Electric and United Railroads

Market Street Railway bonds and stocks
Bond coupons issued by Market Street Railway Co., c. 1900 - San Francisco Cable Car Museum - San Francisco, CA - DSC04028.jpg
Bond coupons c.1900
Market Street Railway Co. San Francisco stock certificate c1920.jpg
Stock certificate c.1920

However transit technology was still moving on, and the new electric streetcar quickly proved to be cheaper to build and operate than the cable car, and capable of climbing all but San Francisco's steepest hills. In 1893, Stanford died and the company was taken over by the Southern Pacific Railroad. The company was again renamed to the Market Street Railway Company, and began converting its lines to electric traction. In 1895, MSRy inaugurated service on the Fillmore Counterbalance, which was the steepest rail line to date, operating as a hybrid of counterbalance funicular and electric traction.

In 1902, the Southern Pacific Railroad sold their San Francisco railways to a group of eastern investors: Patrick Calhoun's Baltimore Syndicate. [10] It consolidated them with other San Francisco lines into a new company called the United Railroads of San Francisco (URR). [11] [12]

A United Railroads of San Francisco standard car c. 1905 Standard-Car-for-United-Railroads-of-San-Francisco.jpg
A United Railroads of San Francisco standard car c.1905

Conversion to electricity was resisted by opponents like Rudolph Spreckels and other property owners who objected to what they saw as ugly overhead lines on the major thoroughfares of the city center. At 5:12 am on April 18, 1906, those objections were swept away as the great San Francisco earthquake struck. The race to rebuild the city allowed the company to replace all but the steepest of its cable car lines with electric streetcar lines. [3]

On May 14, 1906, Supervisors permitted United Railroads to string overhead trolley wires on Market St. The next day the Examiner accused United Railroads of exploiting the disaster to push through its overhead trolley franchise but they proceeded to install overhead power on all of its lines. [13] The San Francisco graft trials were a series of attempts from 1905 to 1908 to prosecute both government officials accused of receiving bribes. These included members of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, San Francisco Mayor Eugene Schmitz, attorneys Abe Ruef and Tirey L. Ford, and the business owners who were paying the bribes. [11]

Consolidation and decline

Over the years many independent lines had been absorbed, including the Clay Street Hill Railroad, the San Francisco and San Mateo Electric Railway, the Presidio & Ferries Railway, and the Ferries and Cliff House Railway. Ironically the earthquake that brought so many benefits to the company also sowed the seeds of its demise, as the independent Geary Street, Park & Ocean Railway was acquired by the city and became in 1912 the beginning of the San Francisco Municipal Railway (Muni). Horsecars were finally withdrawn from city streets on June 3, 1914. [14] By 1918, and assisted by the construction of several tunnels under the city's hills, Muni was in direct competition with the URR down the length of Market Street. The two operators each operated their own pair of rail tracks down that thoroughfare, which came to be known as the 'roar of the four'. The two Market Street Railway tracks were on the inside and the two San Francisco Municipal Railway tracks were on the outside. [3]

Competition, labor troubles and a bad accident in 1918 led to the reorganisation of the URR, to re-emerge again as the Market Street Railway Company. This continued to operate electric streetcars throughout the city, the Powell St. cable car lines, and a growing fleet of buses. But relations were not good with the city, who controlled their franchises, and on May 16, 1944, after defeating the proposal six times previously, voters elected to purchase the operative properties of the Market Street Railway for $7.5 million ($130 million in 2023 adjusted for inflation) and the company sold all its assets and operations to Muni. [3]

Surviving vehicles

Car 578 in operation during the 2015 Muni Heritage Weekend 1895-built Market St Railway streetcar 578 turning onto Steuart St (2015).jpg
Car 578 in operation during the 2015 Muni Heritage Weekend
Car 798 undergoing restoration at Pharr Yard (Duboce Yard) in 2008 Car798UndergoingRestorationAtDuboceYard.jpg
Car 798 undergoing restoration at Pharr Yard (Duboce Yard) in 2008

These are the only surviving vehicles from the Market Street Railway fleet: [15]

Passenger Cars

Maintenance Equipment

Routes

The last of the company's streetcar routes were discontinued or converted to bus or trolleybus by 1949. Two of the former cable lines were integrated into the current San Francisco cable car system. The company operated the following routes:

xxLine acquired by Muni in 1944
No. [24] [25] Name [24] [25] Service type (1943) [25] Notes
1Sutter and California Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1949 under Muni; continued as 1 California under Muni until 1982 when combined with former 55 Sacramento to form a new 1 California.
2Sutter and Clement Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1949 under Muni
3Sutter and Jackson Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1949 under Muni; became 3 Jackson trolleybus
4Sutter and Sacramento Streetcar, motor coachStreetcar service ended 1948 under Muni
5McAllister Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1948 under Muni; became 5 Fulton trolleybus
6Haight and Masonic Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1948 under Muni; became 6 Haight/Parnassus trolleybus
7Haight and Ocean Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1948 under Muni; trolleybus service ended 2009.
8Market and Castro Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1949 under Muni with a replacement trolleybus service. Route was restored as the F Market historic streetcar in 1995.
9Valencia Street Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1949 under Muni without replacement [26]
10SunnysideMotor coachStreetcar service ended 1942
11Mission and 24th Street Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1949 under Muni
12Ingleside and OceanMotor coachStreetcar service ended 1945 under Muni
14Mission Street Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1949 under Muni; became 14 Mission trolleybus
15Kearny and North BeachMotor coachStreetcar service ended 1941
163rd and KearnyStreetcar service ended 1941
17Haight and Ingleside Streetcar
18Daly City and CemeteriesRegular streetcar service ended 1935; one yearly franchise car ran in 1936 and 1937. [27]
19Ninth, Polk, and Larkin Streetcar, motor coachStreetcar service ended 1945 under Muni; became 19 Polk bus
20Ellis and O'Farrel Streetcar
21Hayes Street Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1948 under Muni; became 21 Hayes trolleybus
22Fillmore Street Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1948 under Muni; became 22 Fillmore trolleybus
23Fillmore and ValenicaMotor coach
24Mission and RichmondMotor coachStreetcar service ended 1935; became 24 Divisadero trolleybus
25San Bruno Avenue Streetcar, motor coach
26Guerrero Street Streetcar, motor coach
27Bryant StreetMotor coachBecame 27 Bryant
28Harrison StreetMotor coachStreetcar service ended 1940
29Kearny and BroadwayStreetcar service ended 1941
30Army StreetArmy Street extension built in 1918 to provide access to Union Iron Works. [28] Streetcar service ended 1940.
31Balboa Street Streetcar Streetcar service ended 1949 under Muni; became 31 Balboa trolleybus
32Hayes and OakStreetcar service ended 1932
33Eighth and Park Trolleybus Converted to trolleybus in 1935. Became 33 Ashbury/18th Street
346th and SansomeStreetcar service ended 1936
35Howard StreetThe city revoked the company's Howard Street operating permit in 1939. [29]
3524th StreetMotor coach
36Folsom Street Streetcar, motor coach
40San Mateo Interurban Streetcar Former San Francisco and San Mateo Electric Railway route.
41Second and Market
42First and FifthStreetcar service ended 1941
43Broadway and S.P. DepotStreetcar service ended 1941
50Geneva AvenueMotor coach
51Silver AvenueMotor coach
52ExcelsiorMotor coach
53Southern HeightsMotor coach
55Sacramento StreetMotor coachReplaced Sacramento Cable in 1942. [30] Continued as Muni 55 Sacramento until 1982.
Bosworth StreetStreetcar service ended 1928
Parkside
Post and LeavenworthStreetcar service ended 1934
Visitacion ValleyStreetcar service ended 1937
Pacific Avenue CableCable service ended 1929
Castro Street CableCable service ended 1941, route integrated into 24 Mission and Richmond.
Sacramento Clay Cable Cable service ended 1942, converted to 55 Sacramento bus. [30]
59Powell Mason CableCable carIntegrated into the San Francisco cable car system
60Washington Jackson CableCable car
Fillmore Counterbalance Part of 22 Fillmore route, closed 1941
South San Francisco

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">San Francisco Municipal Railway</span> Public transport agency in San Francisco, California, USA

The San Francisco Municipal Railway ( MEW-nee; SF Muni or Muni), is the primary public transit system within San Francisco, California. It operates a system of bus routes, the Muni Metro light rail system, three historic cable car lines, and two historic streetcar lines. Previously an independent agency, the San Francisco Municipal Railway merged with two other agencies in 1999 to become the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (SFMTA). In 2018, Muni served 46.7 square miles (121 km2) with an operating budget of about $1.2 billion. Muni is the seventh-highest-ridership transit system in the United States, with 142,168,200 rides in 2023, and the second-highest in California after the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">San Francisco cable car system</span> Historic cable car system in San Francisco, California

The San Francisco cable car system is the world's last manually operated cable car system and an icon of the city of San Francisco. The system forms part of the intermodal urban transport network operated by the San Francisco Municipal Railway, which also includes the separate E Embarcadero and F Market & Wharves heritage streetcar lines, and the Muni Metro modern light rail system. Of the 23 cable car lines established between 1873 and 1890, only three remain : two routes from downtown near Union Square to Fisherman's Wharf, and a third route along California Street.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">F Market & Wharves</span> San Francisco heritage streetcar line

The F Market & Wharves line is one of several light rail lines in San Francisco, California. Unlike most other lines in the system, the F line runs as a heritage streetcar service, almost exclusively using historic equipment from San Francisco's retired fleet and from cities around the world. While the F line is operated by the San Francisco Municipal Railway (Muni), its operation is supported by Market Street Railway, a nonprofit organization of streetcar enthusiasts which raises funds and helps to restore vintage streetcars.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">San Diego Electric Railway</span> Mass transit system (1892–1949)

The San Diego Electric Railway (SDERy) was a mass transit system in Southern California, United States, using 600 volt DC streetcars and buses.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Geary Street, Park and Ocean Railway</span>

The Geary Street, Park and Ocean Railway was a street railway in San Francisco, California, United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">San Francisco Railway Museum</span> Railway museum in California, US

The San Francisco Railway Museum is a local railway museum located in the South of Market area of San Francisco.

W. L. Holman Car Company was a streetcar and cable car manufacturer based in San Francisco, California. It mainly built equipment for rail operation, including San Francisco Municipal Railway's first publicly owned streetcar, and some of the cable cars still operating on San Francisco's California Street line. Holman also constructed heavy interurban coaches and combines that ran on inland California electric railroads including Petaluma and Santa Rosa Railroad, Sacramento Northern Railway, and Central California Traction Company, as well as the Sierra Railroad, a Common Carrier line which operated out of Jamestown, California.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">San Francisco Municipal Railway fleet</span> LRV and Bus Fleet of the San Francisco Municipal Railway (Muni)

With five different modes of transport, the San Francisco Municipal Railway runs one of the most diverse fleets of vehicles in the United States. Roughly 550 diesel-electric hybrid buses, 300 electric trolleybuses, 250 modern light rail vehicles, 50 historic streetcars and 40 cable cars see active duty.

The San Francisco and San Mateo Electric Railway (SF&SM) was the first electric streetcar company in San Francisco, California. The company was only in business for ten years, starting from 1892 until it was merged into the United Railroads of San Francisco (URR) in 1902.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">St. Francis Circle station</span>

St. Francis Circle is a light rail stop on the Muni Metro K Ingleside and M Ocean View lines, located in the St. Francis Wood neighborhood of San Francisco, California. It opened around 1907 when the United Railroads (URR) expanded its Ocean Avenue line west to Ocean Beach; Muni service followed with the K in 1918 and the M in 1925.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Junipero Serra and Ocean station</span>

Junipero Serra and Ocean is a light rail stop on the Muni Metro K Ingleside line, located in the St. Francis Wood neighborhood of San Francisco, California. It originally opened around 1896 on the United Railroads 12 line; K Ingleside service began in 1919.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ocean and Dorado / Ocean and Jules stations</span>

Ocean and Dorado (inbound) and Ocean and Jules (outbound) are a pair of one-way light rail stops on the Muni Metro K Ingleside line, located between the Mount Davidson and Ingleside neighborhoods of San Francisco, California. The stops consist of one side platform each, with the eastbound (outbound) platform located on Ocean Avenue west of the intersection with Dorado Terrace and Jules Avenue, and the westbound (inbound) platform located east of the intersection. It originally opened in 1895 on the United Railroads 12 line; K Ingleside service began in 1919.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Trolleybuses in San Francisco</span>

The San Francisco trolleybus system forms part of the public transportation network serving San Francisco, in the state of California, United States. Opened on October 6, 1935, it presently comprises 15 lines and is operated by the San Francisco Municipal Railway, commonly known as Muni, with around 300 trolleybuses. In San Francisco, these vehicles are also known as "trolley coaches", a term that was the most common name for trolleybuses in the United States in the middle decades of the 20th century. In 2023, the system had a ridership of 42,240,000, or about 142,700 per weekday as of the second quarter of 2024.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">California car (streetcar)</span> Type of tram or street car with both open sided and enclosed sections


A California Car is a type of single-deck tramcar or streetcar that features a center, enclosed seating compartment and roofed seating areas without sides on either end. These cars were popular in California's mild Mediterranean climate offering passengers a choice of shaded outdoor seating during hot weather, or more protected seating during cool or rainy weather. They were also used in other climates to provide separate outdoor smoking and enclosed non-smoking areas. Some very early motor buses also used the combination car design.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">San Francisco Historic Trolley Festival</span> Discontinued streetcar service in San Francisco

The San Francisco Historic Trolley Festival was a heritage streetcar service along Market Street in San Francisco, California, United States. It used a variety of vintage streetcars and operated five to seven days a week, primarily in summer months, between 1983 and 1987. Sponsored by the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce and operated by the San Francisco Municipal Railway, it was the predecessor of the F Market & Wharves heritage streetcar line that opened in 1995. It used historic streetcars from several different countries, as well as a number of preserved San Francisco cars. The impetus behind the Trolley Festival was that the city's famed cable car system, one of its biggest tourist attractions, was scheduled to be closed for more than a year and a half for renovation, starting in September 1982. The Trolley Festival was conceived as a temporary substitute tourist attraction during the cable car system's closure.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">21 Hayes</span>

21 Hayes is a trolleybus line operated by the San Francisco Municipal Railway (Muni). It connects the Civic Center to the neighborhoods northeast of Golden Gate Park in San Francisco.

References

  1. O'Shaughnessy, Michael (May 1929). Report on the street railway transportation requirements of San Francisco with special consideration to the unification of existing facilities (Report). City and County of San Francisco Department of Public Works. Retrieved October 30, 2018.
  2. "Board of Supervisors". Daily Alta California. July 3, 1860. p. 1. Retrieved September 4, 2024 via California Digital Newspaper Collection. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "A Brief History of Market St. Railway". Market Street Railway (nonprofit). 2004. The Market Street Railroad Company, 1860-1882. Archived from the original on September 21, 2005. Retrieved September 23, 2005.
  4. Nolte, Carl (July 4, 2010). "150th anniversary of first Market St". The San Francisco Chronicle. San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved July 4, 2010.
  5. Borden, Stanley T. (1971). "San Francisco Steam Dummies". The Western Railroader. 34 (376). Francis A. Guido: 3 & 5.
  6. "Board of Supervisors". Daily Alta California. March 5, 1867. p. 1. Retrieved September 4, 2024 via California Digital Newspaper Collection. Open Access logo PLoS transparent.svg
  7. "At the end of their trip". San Francisco Examiner. September 22, 1895. p. 19 via Newspapers.com.
  8. Cowan, Natalie Jahraus (1978). "Carville, San Francisco's Oceanside Bohemia". California History. 57 (4): 308–319. JSTOR   25157867.
  9. Callwell, Robert; Rice, Walter (March 2005). Of Cables and Grips: The Cable Cars of San Francisco (2nd ed.). Friends of the Cable Car Museum. ISBN   978-0-9726162-2-5.
  10. Echeverria, Emiliano; Rice, Walter (Spring 2007). "Why the Octopus Left the Streets of San Francisco". Bay Area Electric Railway Association Journal (2): 9–20.
  11. 1 2 Bean, Walton (1974). "Cable cars and trolleys". Boss Ruef's San Francisco: The Story of the Union Labor Party, Big Business, and the Graft Prosecution . Berkeley: University of California Press; republished Greenwood Press, 1981. pp.  108. ISBN   9780520000940.
  12. "Market Street Railway". Streetcar.org. March 5, 2021. Retrieved September 11, 2024.
  13. Hichborn, Frank (1915). The System. San Francisco: The James H. Barry Company. Retrieved June 6, 2013.
  14. "LAST HORSE CARS ARE DRIVEN BY ROLPH, CALHOUN". The San Francisco Examiner. June 4, 1913. Retrieved June 12, 2016.
  15. "Roster of Preserved North American Electric Railway Cars: previously owned by the Market Street Railway". Branford Electric Railway Association. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  16. "No.578: Market Street Railway Company". Market Street Railway.
  17. "No.798: Market Street Railway Company". Market Street Railway.
  18. "Presidio and Ferries 28". Western Railway Museum. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  19. "Market Street Railway 'San Francisco'". Western Railway Museum. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  20. "San Francisco Municipal Railway 0109". Western Railway Museum. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  21. "San Francisco Municipal Railway 0130". Western Railway Museum. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  22. Rice, Walter; Echeverria, Emiliano. "San Francisco's pioneer electric railway: San Francisco & San Mateo Railway Company". The Museum of the City of San Francisco. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  23. "Roster of Preserved North American Electric Railway Cars: San Francisco Municipal Railway No.0304". Branford Electric Railway Association. Retrieved December 6, 2021.
  24. 1 2 Vielbaum et al. 2005 , p. 4
  25. 1 2 3 Records and Briefs of the United States Supreme Court. Washington, D.C.: Judd & Detweiler. October 1944. pp. 179–180.
  26. Laflin, Addison H. Jr. (June 1953). "A CHRONOLOGY OF CHANGES IN SAN FRANCISCO STREET ROUTES SINCE 1944". Timepoints (Special Reference Supplement No. 7). Vol. 6, no. 6 via Electric Railway Historical Association of Southern California.
  27. Vielbaum et al. 2005 , p. 79
  28. Vielbaum et al. 2005 , p. 100
  29. Vielbaum et al. 2005 , p. 115
  30. 1 2 Perles & McKane 1982 , p. 236

Bibliography

Further reading