3rd Street Streetcar Lines: Difference between revisions

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--from "A History of the California Historical Society's New Mission Street Neighborhood" by Anne B. Bloomfield in ''California History'' magazine, Winter 1995/96
--from "A History of the California Historical Society's New Mission Street Neighborhood" by Anne B. Bloomfield in ''California History'' magazine, Winter 1995/96


[[Image:Transit-tour-button.jpg]] [[United Railroads Streetcar Strike 1917|-->continue Transit History Tour]]
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[[Image:Tours-transit.gif]] [[United Railroads Streetcar Strike 1917| Continue Transit History Tour]]


[[1906 FIRE AND AFTERMATH |Prev. Document]]  [[traffic jam 1946 |Next Document]]
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[[category:SOMA]] [[category:Transit]] [[category:1900s]] [[category:1910s]] [[category:1930s]] [[category:1890s]]  [[category:1870s]]
[[category:SOMA]] [[category:Transit]] [[category:1900s]] [[category:1910s]] [[category:1930s]] [[category:1890s]]  [[category:1870s]]

Revision as of 06:05, 20 August 2009

Historical Essay

by Anne B. Bloomfield

Soma1$3rd-steet-looking-south-1936.jpg

Looking south down 3rd Street from Market c. 1936.

Photo: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library

It was still an age of public transportation. By 1913 all the pre-fire transit lines south of Market had been rebuilt, with electric power. They included routes that dated back to or beyond the early 1860s, along Howard, Folsom, and three of the numbered streets. The Mission Street route had commenced by 1871.

Two more parallel and several numbered streets acquired streetcar lines about 1890. The number of lines reflected the density of population south of Market in the nineteenth century and funneled workers and customers into the downtown from outlying residential areas, including San Mateo County via Southern Pacific steam trains. The redundant routes had been established by competing companies, but were gathered into United Railroads by 1902. This company rebuilt them all after 1906, and the company, renamed the Market Street Railway, maintained them until around 1940. Some of the routes still run today, now under municipal operation.60

--from "A History of the California Historical Society's New Mission Street Neighborhood" by Anne B. Bloomfield in California History magazine, Winter 1995/96


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