Seattle's Streetcar Era: An Illustrated History, 1884-1941

Seattle's Streetcar Era: An Illustrated History, 1884-1941

Hardcover

18 Nov, 2021

By Mike Bergman (author)

Seattle's population was growing rapidly during the 1880s, but steep hills and shorelines impeded residential development, pushing expansion northward and ...

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Last updated on 12 Jan, 2026

ISBN-10:

0874224071

ISBN-13:

9780874224078

Publisher

Washington State University Press

Dimensions

11.90 X 8.60 X 0.50 inches

Language

English

Description

Seattle's population was growing rapidly during the 1880s, but steep hills and shorelines impeded residential development, pushing expansion northward and creating a long, narrow corridor ideal for a public transportation route. Frank Osgood arrived from Boston in 1883, recognized the potential, and opened Seattle's first street railway the following year, operating from Pioneer Square north on Second Avenue to Pike Street. The tiny streetcars were pulled by horses.

Motivated by potential increases in real estate values, by 1896 thirteen private companies ran streetcar lines in the Emerald City. Horse-drawn streetcars were gone, replaced by electric trolleys and cable cars. But many of the lines were cheaply built or spaced too close together, and small, independent companies lacked economies of scale. Consolidation began, and the Seattle Electric Company acquired almost all of the independent street railways. The firm started a massive improvement and expansion program, and by 1910, ridership totaled 103 million annual passengers--a number equivalent to every Seattleite boarding a streetcar 435 times that year.

Following voter approval, Seattle became one of the country's first large cities with a publicly owned transit system. The new Seattle Municipal Street Railway took over operations in April 1919, initially adding new bus routes and extending some existing streetcar lines. But a huge debt load, declining ridership, and the Great Depression caused severe financial troubles and maintenance issues. By 1938, Seattle and San Francisco were the nation's only cities still operating cable cars. Over the next three years, Seattle converted its entire transit system to trolley coaches and motor buses.

Utilizing narrative, maps, and many previously unpublished photographs, author Mike Bergman offers a detailed jaunt through Seattle's fascinating streetcar era.

Product Details

ISBN-10

:0874224071

ISBN-13

:9780874224078

Publisher

:Washington State University Press

Publication date

: 18 Nov, 2021

Sub-Category

: Railroads - History

Format

:Hardcover

Language

:English

Reading Level

: All

No. of Units

:1

Dimension

: 11.90 X 8.60 X 0.50 inches

Weight

:886 g

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