Phoenix Street Railway

Washington Street Line, 1938
Legend
(West to East)
On West Adams:
22nd Avenue

ATSF Ry.
19th Avenue
State Capitol
17th Avenue
On Washington:
15th Avenue
7th Avenue
(Grand Ave. line abandoned 1934)
3rd Ave.
2nd Ave. / Kenilworth Line
Central Ave.
4th St. / Indian School Line
12th St.
Car Barn1304 E. Washington St.
16th 1/2 St.
Hollywood/Asylum line
abandoned after 1929
24th St.
North-South Lines, 1938
Legend
Indian School Rd.
Maricopa Canal
Fairmount Ave.
(Orangewood Line) abandoned 1930s
Osborn Rd.
Thomas Rd.
Sheridan Ave.
Little Maricopa Canal
Encanto Blvd.
Oak St.
McDowell Rd.
McDowell Rd.
Brill St.
Kenilworth School
Moreland St.
Portland St.
Roosevelt Rd.
Roosevelt Rd.
Pierce St.
Monroe St.
Monroe St.

2nd Avenue

Washington St.
This former dentist's office houses exhibits of the Phoenix Trolley Museum, and is adjacent to METRO's McDowell Station on Central Avenue.

The Phoenix Street Railway provided streetcar service in Phoenix, Arizona, from 1887 to 1948. The motto was, "Ride a Mile and Smile the While."[1]

History

The line was originally founded in 1887 by Moses Hazeltine Sherman and used horse-drawn carts. Beginning in 1893, however, the railway was completely electrified. The line was popular with the locals and was partly responsible for the growth patterns observed in the early history of Phoenix. In 1911, the first of several planned interurban lines opened to Glendale; additional lines were planned but never built to Tempe, Mesa, and Scottsdale.[1] The system reached its height in the 1920s with several line extensions. In 1925 there were 33.6 miles of track on six lines.[2] Line voltage was 550 VDC.[3]

A potential competitor, the Salt River Valley Electric Railway, in 1912 hired engineers to build lines east from downtown Phoenix to Mesa via Tempe and Scottsdale, and a Southside line, to run from Phoenix to Tempe on the south side of the Salt River.[4] The Salt River company later announced its lines would "connect Phoenix, Scottsdale, Tempe, Mesa, Chandler, Alhambra, Glendale and Peoria."[5] However, other than some digging on Van Buren and Monroe Streets, the line never managed to complete any construction, and was abandoned in 1914.[6][7]

In 1925, the city of Phoenix purchased the Street Railway line and soon instituted numerous reforms, including increased frequency and new streetcars, which increased ridership. Two of the new fleet of streetcars, which entered service Christmas Day 1928, may still be seen at the Arizona Street Railway Museum in downtown Phoenix.

On October 3, 1947, a catastrophic fire destroyed most of the streetcar fleet. City officials faced the decision to either rebuild the fleet or use buses. Buses were ultimately chosen, and the streetcar system was abandoned in February 1948. The Phoenix area turned its focus to the automobile, suburbs, and highways; and until recently relied solely on buses for public transportation. Rail transit returned when Metro opened its modern light-rail system on December 28, 2008—nearly sixty years after the Street Railway's last run.

Gallery

Phoenix Trolley Museum
The Phoenix Trolley Museum, located at 25 W. Culver St. The main exhibit of the museum is trolley car #116, a restored 1928 trolley which served the original Phoenix trolley system.
Historic Trolley Car #116 . The restored 1928 trolley served the original Phoenix trolley system from 1928 to 1947. The trolley is on exhibit in the Phoenix Trolley Museum at 25 W. Culver St. 
Inside the historic Trolley Car #116 . 
Front inside view of the historic Trolley Car #116 . Pictured is a restored farebox. 
Different view of the historic Trolley Car #116 . 

Operating Pattern, 1938

The City of Phoenix Street Railways, in 1938 were numbered and operated as follows:

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Fleming, Lawrence J. (1977). Ride A Mile and Smile the While; A history of the Phoenix Street Railway 1887-1948. Phoenix, Arizona: Swaine Publications. p. 179. LCCN 75027581.
  2. Line segment map (Map). Ariz. Capitol Library call: 4334 P5 P3 1925. Phoenix Street Railway. 1925.
  3. McGraw Electric Railway List August, 1918. Trade Investigation and Directory Department of the Electric Railway Journal. 1918.
  4. Electric Railway Journal. XL (6): 234. August 10, 1912. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. Electric Railway Journal. XL (24): 1257. December 21, 1912. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. Electric Railway Journal. XLIV (13): 594. September 26, 1914. Missing or empty |title= (help)

External links

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