Overview | |
---|---|
Headquarters | San Francisco, California |
Locale | San Francisco Peninsula Santa Clara Valley |
Dates of operation | 1863–1870 |
Successor | Southern Pacific; Caltrain |
Technical | |
Track gauge | 4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge |
The San Francisco and San Jose Railroad (SF&SJ) was a railroad which linked the communities of San Francisco and San Jose, California, running the length of the San Francisco Peninsula. The company incorporated in 1860 and was one of the first railroads to employ Chinese laborers in its construction. [1] It opened the first portion of its route in 1863, completing the entire 49.5-mile (80 km) route in 1864. The company was consolidated with the Southern Pacific Railroad in 1870. Today, Caltrain and the Union Pacific Railroad continue to operate trains over part of the company's original route.
The Pacific and Atlantic Railroad Company (P&A) was founded on September 6, 1851, with the goal of building a railroad between San Francisco and San Jose. [2] The route was surveyed and published by the end of 1851, but the P&A was unable to raise funds locally; when the P&A turned to banking houses in New York and England, they were told that no funds could be disbursed without first obtaining local capital. [2] The company reorganized on October 29, 1853, just before the expiration of the construction permit, and US$2,000,000(equivalent to $73,250,000 in 2023) of stock was drawn up for sale, but an untimely downturn in the economy meant no investors were forthcoming. [2]
Public sentiment again turned to the idea of constructing a railroad in 1857–58 [2] and a new San Francisco and San Jose Railroad Company was incorporated in late 1859 with the idea to raise public funds by putting a referendum to the voters of the three counties served (San Francisco, San Mateo, and Santa Clara) asking them to purchase a total of US$900,000(equivalent to $30,520,000 in 2023) in stock of the new company. [2] This was portrayed in the news as "an attempted fraud upon the tax-payers of the counties" and the company dissolved in June 1860. [2] A new SF&SJ incorporated on August 18, 1860 [3] with San Francisco industrialist Peter Donahue stepping in as treasurer, choosing his friends Judge Timothy Dame as president and Henry Newhall, a successful San Francisco auctioneer, as vice-president, and placing the company headquarters in San Francisco. Donahue, Dame and Newhall are thus credited as the three co-founders of the line.
The construction contractors (Houston & McLaughlin) agreed to be paid $2 million consisting of $500,000 in cash, $500,000 in county-issued bonds, $500,000 in mortgage bonds, and $500,000 in company stock in exchange for completing the line between San Francisco and San Jose by October 1, 1863. [2] The SF&SJ issued US$2,000,000(equivalent to $67,820,000 in 2023) of stock in 1861 to fund construction, owned by the following major shareholders: [2] [4]
Voters in the counties of San Francisco, San Mateo, and Santa Clara passed the propositions to purchase the stock in May 1861. [2] The cost per mile was approximately US$40,000(equivalent to $1,360,000 in 2023), based on a total cost of $2 million for 49.3 miles (79.3 km) of rail, comparable to the average cost per rail mile based on railroads built nationwide through 1861. [2] However, the actual cash on hand was limited to the amount contributed by the three counties and approximately $100,000 from individual subscribers. [2] With the Civil War consuming men and material, iron suppliers were only willing to deal with cash, not credit, and several members of the SF&SJ board of directors, including Peter Donahue, Henry Newhall, and Charles B. Polhemus used their personal influence and effort to secure material for the railroad. [2]
Construction wage scale on railroads, at $27 per month with board, was substantially lower than that of common laborers in the mines or in the cities at the time. Partly because of the low wage scale, the SF&SJ Railroad was one of the first railroad to experiment with hiring Chinese railroad workers to keep cost down. [1] [5] Hiring Chinese in the early and mid 1860s was not controversial and garnered few notices, as it was a short period of time of less hostile anti-Chinese sentiments. [6]
Grading and construction of the line began in Santa Clara county [7] on July 15, 1861. [3] The hardest part of construction was the cut at Bernal Hill in San Francisco, which was being cut through at both ends in Spring 1862 in earnest with "heavy and continuous assaults of powder". [8] After ten months of labor, the Bernal Cut, about 2,700 feet in length and 43 feet in depth in the deepest part, was completed in March 1863. [9] Three months later, track laying began at Seventeen Mile House in June 1863. [10]
Four months later, the railroad was opened for excursion service between San Francisco and Menlo Park on October 17, 1863. The first train left Mission Station at approximately 10:30 AM; it consisted of six passenger cars, two baggage cars, and one freight car pulled by two locomotives and carried approximately 400 passengers. [4] The train ran to the end of the line in Mayfield (in Santa Clara county, modern-day Palo Alto, two miles south of Menlo Park) before turning around and returning to Menlo Park where the passengers disembarked for a SF&SJ-sponsored picnic. Among the passengers enjoying that day's excursion were two Governors: Leland Stanford of California and A. C. Gibbs of Oregon. [4] This occurred nine days before the first rail of the great Pacific Railroad was even laid in Sacramento. [11]
The shrill whistle of the engine, and the rattling of the cars so lately heard in your beautiful valley for the first time, will be sounds familiar to your children and children's children, until the angel, with one foot upon the sea and the other upon the dry land, shall declare that time shall be no more. Hereafter the citizens of San José and those of San Francisco will be neighbors, while the little county of San Mateo extends one hand over the iron track to her proud city sister of San Francisco, and the other to her charming rural sister of Santa Clara, and enfolds them in an embrace that can never be broken.
A few months later, the line to San Jose was completed on January 16, 1864. [2] The first train to San Jose departed at 9:55 AM and arrived in Santa Clara nearly three hours later after "liberal stopping periods" in San Mateo and Redwood City. The second train departed at 11:15 AM after adding several cattle cars to accommodate the estimated 700–800 passengers; that second train stopped briefly in San Mateo to take on fuel and water, and proceeded past waiting passengers at Redwood City and Mountain View, arriving in Santa Clara by 12:45 PM. [2] The two trains proceeded together to San Jose just after 1:00 PM, and were greeted by a thirteen-gun salute upon arrival. After several speeches by SF&SJ leaders and local dignitaries, a large barbecue was held, with the first return train departing around 4:00 PM, pulled by three locomotives, and the second return train departing around 9:00 PM. [2]
The railroad cut what had previously been an eight-hour trip by "steamboat and stagecoach" to three-and-a-half hours. [12] In February 1864, the SF&SJ advertised regular passenger service on four trains per day, with the trip scheduled to take two hours, twenty minutes each way. [13]
More importantly, the railroad opened a new economical means to transport goods to market. By June 1864 a regular freight train was added. In October 1864 the freight train (with passenger car attached) was leaving San Jose at 5am and arriving San Francisco at 8:50am; the return train leaving San Francisco 4:15pm and arriving San Jose 8:15pm. [14] With the decline of placer mining, the completion of the railroad enabled the ascendancy of agriculture as a major new industry in California. [6]
The Southern Pacific Railroad (SP) acquired the company in March 1868, [3] and the Southern Pacific and Central Pacific were consolidated as the Southern Pacific on October 12, 1870, [3] nearly seven years to the day after the first trains ran between San Francisco and Menlo Park. [15] : 214 SP upgraded the line in the early 20th century by laying down a second track and building several alternative routes and shortcuts, including the Dumbarton Cutoff, which created the first bridge across San Francisco Bay; and the Bayshore Cutoff, which rerouted the line between San Francisco and San Bruno to the east of San Bruno Mountain, along the San Francisco Bay shoreline. The original route between San Francisco and San Bruno became the Ocean View Branch, which was abandoned in stages beginning in 1942. Portions of Interstate 280 and Bay Area Rapid Transit later reused that alignment.
In 1977 SP petitioned the California Public Utilities Commission to discontinue the Peninsula Commute service, and the State of California took over financial responsibility in July 1980. SP eventually sold the entire Peninsula Commute right-of-way to the Peninsula Corridor Joint Powers Board in 1991, which currently operates the commuter rail service known as Caltrain over the route. The Union Pacific Railroad maintains trackage rights over the line for freight traffic. [16]
Distance [lower-alpha 1] | Station | Elevation [lower-alpha 2] |
---|---|---|
— | San Francisco [lower-alpha 3] | n/a |
2+1⁄4 mi 3.6 km | Mission | n/a |
4 mi 6.4 km | Brannan's | n/a |
4+1⁄4 mi 6.8 km | Bernal | n/a |
6+1⁄4 mi 10.1 km | San Miguel | n/a [lower-alpha 4] |
9 mi 14 km | School House | n/a |
11+1⁄2 mi 18.5 km | Twelve-Mile Farm | 12 ft 3.7 m |
14+1⁄4 mi 22.9 km | San Bruno | n/a |
16+3⁄4 mi 27.0 km | Seventeen Mile House | 6 ft 1.8 m |
20+3⁄4 mi 33.4 km | San Mateo | 22 ft 6.7 m |
25 mi 40 km | Belmont | 32 ft 9.8 m |
28+1⁄4 mi 45.5 km | Redwood City | 17 ft 5.2 m |
28+3⁄4 mi 46.3 km | East Redwood City | n/a |
32+1⁄2 mi 52.3 km | Menlo Park | n/a |
34+1⁄2 mi 55.5 km | Mayfield | 27 ft 8.2 m |
37+3⁄4 mi 60.8 km | Castro's [lower-alpha 5] | n/a |
40 mi 64 km | Mountain View [lower-alpha 5] | 96 ft 29 m |
43+3⁄4 mi 70.4 km | Laurence's [lower-alpha 5] | n/a |
46+1⁄2 mi 74.8 km | Santa Clara [lower-alpha 5] | 73 ft 22 m |
49+3⁄4 mi 80.1 km | San José [lower-alpha 5] | 87 ft 27 m |
The Daily Alta California (October 1863) called this SF&SJ segment the westernmost portion of the transcontinental Pacific Railroad, with another section planned by the Western Pacific Railroad Company to connect San Jose with Sacramento, where it would join with the Central Pacific's rail line being built then east to Truckee. [4] In order to preserve planned compatibility with transcontinental rail traffic, the line was laid at what is now standard gauge width using redwood ties and 50-pound-per-yard (25 kg/m) rail. [4] [15] : 214
The line was completed as a single track with no tunnels and only a few bridges, the longest of which was a 240-foot (73 m) trestle over Islais Creek. [4] The most extensive cut required was the big cut at Bernal Hill, more than 1⁄2 mile (0.80 km) long and 43 feet (13 m) deep at its deepest. [9] In October 1863, the line had only been partially completed between the Mission and Mayfield stations; the Daily Alta noted the SF&SJ had been negotiating with the Market Street Railway and speculated the SF&SJ might use the Market Street Railway approach to Fourth Street in San Francisco. [4]
The SF&SJ started excursion service in October 1863 with three locomotives, six passenger cars, and approximately twenty freight cars. [4] Each engine cost US$15,000(equivalent to $370,000 in 2023) and could haul six passenger cars; the passenger cars cost US$3,500(equivalent to $90,000 in 2023) each and had a seated capacity of sixty passengers; the freight cars each cost approximately US$1,200(equivalent to $30,000 in 2023). [4] The locomotives were named the San Francisco, San José, and T. Dame (after the president of the SF&SJ). [4]
With the exception of the single 0-4-0 switcher, number 8, all SF&SJ locomotives were the American 4-4-0 type typical of that era. The 17-ton San Francisco and San José were built in 1862 by Norris Locomotive Works of Philadelphia. The third locomotive was built in Massachusetts by Mason Machine Works, and weighed 30 tons. Locomotives numbered 4 and 5 weighing 23 tons each were built by Cooke Locomotive and Machine Works of New Jersey in 1863. [18]
The first full-sized steam locomotive produced in the state of California was built for the SF&SJ by the Union Iron Works in San Francisco. It was appropriately named the California. Its inaugural run was August 30, 1865, during which it set a speed record of 67 miles per hour (108 km/h). [19] Union Iron works also built a similar 28-ton locomotive number 7 and the 18-ton switcher number 8 in 1865. Norris built two more SF&SJ locomotives weighing 26 tons and 28 tons in 1867, while McKay and Aldus of Boston built two 30-ton locomotives. Rhode Island Locomotive Works built a 30-ton locomotive for SF&SJ in 1868, as did Cooke; and Schenectady Locomotive Works built two more. 1870 brought another 30-ton locomotive from Mason and two 33-ton locomotives from Cooke. [18]
In 1854, Charles B. Polhemus purchased the land which would later become Central Park (San Mateo) [20] he built a mansion on the grounds. [21] [22] [23] [24] [25]
In 1862, Commodore Robert F. Stockton sold Rancho Potrero de Santa Clara to Charles B. Polhemus and Henry Newhall, who planned to run railroad tracks through the Santa Clara Valley.
In 1868, the Robinson Trust was formed by Alfred Robinson, Abel Stearns, Samuel Brannan, E. F. Northam, Charles B. Polhemus, and Edward Martin.
In 1869, Polhemus bought Rancho San Miguelito de Trinidad and sold it in 1872 to his business partner, Henry Mayo Newhall. Polhemus bought Rancho El Piojo at a foreclosure sale, and sold it in 1871 to his business partner, Henry Mayo Newhall. Rancho El Piojo and Rancho San Miguelito de Trinidad became part of the Newhall Land and Farming Company. [26]
Caltrain is a California commuter rail line serving the San Francisco Peninsula and Santa Clara Valley. The southern terminus is in San Jose at Tamien station with weekday rush hour service running as far as Gilroy. The northern terminus of the line is in San Francisco at 4th and King Street. Caltrain has 28 regular stops, one limited-service weekday-only stop, one weekend-only stop (Broadway), and one football-only stop (Stanford). While average weekday ridership in 2019 exceeded 63,000, impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic have been significant: in August 2022, Caltrain had an average weekday ridership of 18,600 passengers.
The Capitol Corridor is a 168-mile (270 km) passenger train route in Northern California operated by Amtrak between San Jose, in the Bay Area, and Auburn, in the Sacramento Valley. The route is named after the two points most trains operate between, San Jose and Sacramento. The route runs roughly parallel to I-880 and I-80. Some limited trips run between Oakland and San Jose. A single daily round trip runs between San Jose and Auburn, in the foothills of the Sierra Nevada. Capitol Corridor trains started in 1991.
The Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway, often referred to as the Santa Fe or AT&SF, was one of the largest Class 1 railroads in the United States between 1859 and 1996.
Alameda Terminal was a railroad station and ferry wharf at the foot and west of present-day Pacific Avenue and Main Street in Alameda, California, on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay with ferry service to San Francisco. It was built in 1864 and operated by the San Francisco and Alameda Railroad. In 1869, it served as the original west coast terminus of the U.S. First transcontinental railroad, until the opening of Oakland Pier two months later. The western terminus was inaugurated September 6, 1869, when the first Western Pacific through train from Sacramento reached the shores of San Francisco Bay at Alameda Terminal, — thus completing the first transcontinental railroad "from the Missouri river to the Pacific ocean" in accordance with the Pacific Railroad Acts.
The South Bay Historical Railroad Society is located in Santa Clara, California and operates the Edward Peterman Museum of Railroad History in the Santa Clara Depot, as well as the Santa Clara Tower and two other buildings.
The Niles Canyon Railway (NCRy) is a heritage railway running on the first transcontinental railroad alignment through Niles Canyon, between Sunol and the Niles district of Fremont in the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area, in California, United States. The railway is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as the Niles Canyon Transcontinental Railroad Historic District. The railroad is operated and maintained by the Pacific Locomotive Association which preserves, restores and operates historic railroad equipment. The NCRy features public excursions with both steam and diesel locomotives along a well-preserved portion of the first transcontinental railroad.
San Jose Diridon station is the central passenger rail depot for San Jose, California. It also serves as a major intermodal transit center for Santa Clara County and Silicon Valley. The station is named after former Santa Clara County Supervisor Rod Diridon Sr.
The Coast Line is a railroad line between Burbank, California and the San Francisco Bay Area, roughly along the Pacific Coast. It is the shortest rail route between Los Angeles and the Bay Area. Though not as busy as the Surf Line, the continuation of the Coast Line southbound to San Diego, it still sees freight movements and lots of passenger trains. The Pacific Surfliner, which runs from the San Diego Santa Fe Depot to San Luis Obispo via Union Station in Los Angeles, is the third busiest Amtrak route, and the busiest outside of the Northeast Corridor between Washington D.C. and Boston.
Santa Clara Transit Center is a railway station in downtown Santa Clara, California. It is served by Caltrain, Amtrak Capitol Corridor, and Altamont Corridor Express (ACE) trains. It is the planned terminus for the Silicon Valley BART extension into Santa Clara County on the future Green and Orange Lines. The former station building, constructed in 1863 by the San Francisco and San Jose Railroad, is used by the Edward Peterman Museum of Railroad History.
The Peninsula Commute, also known as the Southern Pacific Peninsula or just Peninsula, was the common name for commuter rail service between San Jose, California and San Francisco, California on the San Francisco Peninsula. This service ran as a private, for-profit enterprise beginning in 1863. Due to operating losses, the Southern Pacific Railroad (SP) petitioned to discontinue the service in 1977. Subsidies were provided through the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) in 1980 to continue service, and it was renamed Caltrain.
Palo Alto station is an intermodal transit center in Palo Alto, California. It is served by Caltrain regional rail service, SamTrans and Santa Clara VTA local bus service, Dumbarton Express regional bus service, the Stanford University Marguerite Shuttle, and several local shuttle services. Palo Alto is the second-busiest Caltrain station after San Francisco, averaging 7,764 weekday boardings by a 2018 count. The Caltrain station has two side platforms serving the two tracks of the Peninsula Subdivision and a nearby bus transfer plaza.
Lawrence station is a Caltrain commuter rail station in Sunnyvale, California. The station has four tracks with side platforms serving the outer tracks.
The San Francisco and Oakland Railroad (SF&O) was built in 1862 to provide ferry-train service from a San Francisco ferry terminal connecting with railroad service through Oakland to San Antonio. In 1868 Central Pacific Railroad decided that Oakland would be the west coast terminus of the First transcontinental railroad and bought SF&O. Beginning November 8, 1869, part of the SF&O line served as the westernmost portion of the transcontinental railroad. It subsequently was absorbed into the Southern Pacific Railroad (SP). The track in Oakland was electrified in 1911 and extended across the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge in 1939. Service was abandoned in 1941.
The San Francisco and Alameda Railroad (SF&A) was a short-lived railroad company in the East Bay area of the San Francisco Bay Area. The railroad line opened 1864–1865 from Alameda Terminal on Alameda Island to Hayward, California, with ferry service between Alameda Terminal and San Francisco started in 1864. After being bankrupted by the 1868 Hayward earthquake, it was acquired by a subsidiary of the Central Pacific Railroad in August 1869. Part of the SF&A line between Alameda Terminal and San Leandro served as a portion of the First transcontinental railroad starting in September 1869, while the southern section was abandoned in 1873.
The Western Pacific Railroad (1862–1870) was formed in 1862 to build a railroad from Sacramento, California, to the San Francisco Bay, the westernmost portion of the First transcontinental railroad. After the completion of the railroad from Sacramento to Alameda Terminal on September 6, 1869, and then the Oakland Pier on November 8, 1869, which was the Pacific coast terminus of the transcontinental railroad, the Western Pacific Railroad was absorbed in 1870 into the Central Pacific Railroad.
The Dumbarton Rail Bridge lies just to the south of the Dumbarton road bridge. Built in 1910, the rail bridge was the first structure to span San Francisco Bay, shortening the rail route between Oakland and San Francisco by 26 miles (42 km). The last freight train traveled over the bridge in 1982, and it has been proposed since 1991 to reactivate passenger train service to relieve traffic on the road bridges, though this would entail a complete replacement of the existing bridge. Part of the western timber trestle approach collapsed in a suspected arson fire in 1998.
The Dumbarton Rail Corridor is a proposed transbay passenger rail line which would reuse the right-of-way that was initially constructed from 1907–1910 as the Dumbarton Cut-off. The Dumbarton Cut-off includes the first structure to span San Francisco Bay, the 1910 Dumbarton Rail Bridge, although the vintage Cut-off bridges would likely be replaced prior to activating new passenger service. Dumbarton Rail Corridor would provide service between Union City in the East Bay and Menlo Park on the Peninsula, with train service continuing to both San Francisco and San José along the existing Caltrain tracks. It has been in the planning stages since 1988, and would be the first above-ground transbay rail line since Key System electric trains stopped running on the lower deck of the Bay Bridge in 1958, and the first new transbay crossing of any kind since the completion of the Transbay Tube in 1974.
The Portal, also known as the Downtown Rail Extension (DTX), is a planned second phase of the San Francisco Transbay Transit Center (TTC). When complete, it will extend the Caltrain Peninsula Corridor commuter rail line from its current northern terminus at 4th and King via a 1.3-mile (2.1 km) tunnel. The new terminus will be near the Financial District and will provide intermodal connections to BART, Muni, Transbay AC Transit buses, and long-distance buses. In addition, the California High Speed Rail Authority (CHSRA) plans to use DTX and the Caltrain-owned Peninsula Corridor for service on the CHSRA San Francisco–San Jose segment. Because DTX uses a long tunnel, current diesel locomotives are not suitable and the Caltrain Modernization Project (CalMod), which includes electrification of the line and acquisition of electrified rolling stock, is a prerequisite.
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One of the earliest employment of Chinese for railroad building was on the construction of the California Central Railroad. [1858, Sacramento Union] ...Henry George [1869, New York Tribune] asserted that Chinese laborers were also used in the construction of the San Jose Railroad in 1860.
SAN FRANCISCO & SAN JOSE RAILROAD Incorporated August 18, 1860. This road, 49.50 miles from San Francisco to San Jose, California, was built between July 15, 1861 and June 6, 1864. The original line went from 16th and Valencia Streets in San Francisco through Bernal Cut to San Bruno (San Miguel Rancho) and thence via the present location to San Jose.
The white laborers at the time were mostly miners and the discipline of railroad work was irksome to them. The excitement of mining was upon them and they were unreliable and quarrelsome.
Though it was little known, the construction of the San Jose Railroad was a momentous event in the economic history of California. It was one of the very few major enterprises not designed primarily to serve the needs of the miners. Therefore, the foremost concern of the promoters and investors had been costs instead of completion date. A precedent for the low pay scale of construction laborers had thus been set.
from the S. F. Call.
Yesterday morning the contractor to build a section of eighteen miles laid the first rail on the western end of the Pacific Railroad, as described in the bill passed by Congress.
QUESTION: Will freight service continue to operate on the Caltrain Corridor?
ANSWER: Yes. Freight service will remain on the corridor. The agreement provides that UP will explore the potential for a third party (short-line operator) to assume responsibility for freight operations in the corridor. If a short line operator is not selected, UP will continue to serve as the provider of freight service.