Early transit in Washington Public transportation began in Washington, D.C., almost as soon as the city was founded. In May 1800, two-horse
stage coaches began running twice daily from Bridge and High Streets NW (now
Wisconsin Avenue and
M Street NW) in Georgetown by way of M Street NW and
Pennsylvania Avenue NW/SE to William Tunnicliff's Tavern at the site now occupied by the
Supreme Court Building. Service ended soon after it began. The next attempt at public transit arrived in the spring of 1830, when
Gilbert Vanderwerken's Omnibuses, horse-drawn
wagons, began running from Georgetown to the
Navy Yard. The company maintained stables on M Street, NW. These lines were later extended down 11th Street SE to the waterfront and up
7th Street NW to L Street NW. Vanderwerken's success attracted competitors, who added new lines, but by 1854, all omnibuses had come under the control of two companies, "The Union Line" and "The Citizen's Line." In 1860, these two merged under the control of Vanderwerken and continued to operate until they were run out of business by the next new technology: streetcars. but the technology did not really become popular until 1852, when
Alphonse Loubat invented a
side-bearing rail that could be laid flush with the street
surface, allowing the first
horse-drawn streetcar lines. The technology began to spread and on May 17, 1862, the first Washington, D.C., streetcar company, the
Washington and Georgetown Railroad was incorporated. The company ran the first streetcar in Washington, D.C., from the
Capitol to the
State Department (then housed at the current
Treasury Building) starting on July 29, 1862. It expanded to full operations from the
Navy Yard to Georgetown on October 2, 1862. Another line opened on November 15, 1862. It was built along 7th Street NW from N Street NW to the
Potomac River and expanded to the Arsenal (now
Fort McNair) in 1875. A third line ran down
14th Street NW from Boundary Street NW (now
Florida Avenue) to the
Treasury Building. In 1863 the 7th Street line was extended north to Boundary Street NW.
Metropolitan Railroad The Washington and Georgetown's monopoly didn't last long. On July 1, 1864, a second streetcar company, the
Metropolitan Railroad, was incorporated. It opened lines from the Capitol to the
War Department along
H Street NW. In 1872, the railroad built a line on 9th Street NW and purchased the Union Railroad (chartered on January 19, 1872). It used the Union's charter to expand into
Georgetown. In 1873, it purchased the Boundary and Silver Spring Railway (chartered on January 19, 1872) and used its charter to build north on what is now Georgia Avenue. In June 1874, it absorbed the Connecticut Avenue and Park Railway (chartered on July 13, 1868; operations started in April 1873) and its line on Connecticut Avenue from the
White House to Boundary Avenue.
Anacostia and Potomac River Railroad The
Anacostia and Potomac River Railroad was chartered on May 5, 1870. It received Congressional approval on February 18, 1875, and it was built that year. The streetcars traveled from the
Arsenal and crossed the
Navy Yard Bridge to Uniontown (now
Historic Anacostia) to Nichols Avenue SE (now Martin Luther King Avenue) and V Street SE, where a car barn and stables were maintained by the company. In 1888, the Anacostia and Potomac River expanded from the Navy Yard to
Congressional Cemetery, and past
Garfield Park to the Center Market (now the
National Archives) in downtown. It also expanded up Nichols Avenue past the Government Hospital for the Insane (now
St. Elizabeths Hospital).
Capitol, North O Street and South Washington Railway The last streetcar company to begin operation during the horsecar era was the
Capitol, North O Street and South Washington Railway. It was incorporated on March 3, 1875, and began operation later that year. It ran on a circular route around downtown D.C. A track on P Street NW was added in 1876. In 1881, the route was extended north and south on 11th Street West and tracks were rerouted across the Mall. It changed its name to the Belt Railway on February 18, 1893. Richmond's example drew intense interest from many cities, including Washington. In 1890, the District authorized companies to sell stock to pay for the upgrades. In 1892, one-horse cars were banned within the city, and by 1894 Congress began requiring companies to switch to something other than horse power.
First wave: 1888 By 1888, Washington was expanding north of Boundary Street NW into the hills of
Washington Heights and
Petworth. (The street would be renamed
Florida Avenue in 1890 after landowner complained that the "boundary" moniker was depressing the value of their land.) Climbing the hills to the new parts of the city was difficult for horses, but electric streetcars could do it easily. In the year after the successful demonstration of the Richmond streetcar, four electric streetcar companies were incorporated in Washington, D.C.
Eckington and Soldiers' Home Railway The first of these new electric streetcar companies was the Eckington and Soldiers' Home Railway, chartered on June 19, 1888, and opened for operations on October 17. Its tracks started at 7th Street and New York Avenue NW, east of
Mount Vernon Square, and traveled 2.5 miles to the
Eckington Car Barn at 4th and T Streets NE via Boundary Street NE, Eckington Place NE, R Street NE, 3rd Street NE and T Street NE. Another line ran up 4th Street NE to Michigan Avenue NE. A one-week pass cost $1.25. In 1889, the line was extended along T Street NE, 2nd Street NE and V Street NE to
Glenwood Cemetery, but the extension proved unprofitable and was closed in 1894. At the same time, the company built an extension was along Michigan Avenue NE to the
Baltimore and Ohio Railroad's
Metropolitan Branch line. In 1895, the E&S removed its overhead trolley lines in accordance with its charter and attempted to replace them with batteries. These proved too costly and the company replaced them with horses in the central city. In 1896, Congress directed the Eckington and Soldier's Home to try
compressed air motors and to substitute underground electric power for all its horse and overhead trolley lines in the city. and then onto the Georgetown and Rockville Road (now
Wisconsin Avenue NW) to the extant village of
Tenleytown. That same year, the
Tennallytown and Rockville Railway received its charter—the fourth and final of 1888—and began building tracks from the G&T's northern terminus to today's D.C. neighborhood of
Friendship Heights and the Maryland state line. Finally, the
Washington and Rockville Electric Railway was incorporated in 1897 Controlling interest in the companies was obtained first by the
Washington Traction and Electric Company, then in 1902 by the
Washington Railway and Electric Company. Streetcar service in Maryland was replaced with buses in 1935.
Second wave: 1892-1905 In the summer of 1892, two more streetcar companies that aimed to operate in D.C. and Maryland were incorporated by acts of
Congress, and others followed in later years.
Washington and Great Falls , showing the Washington and Great Falls Electric Railway, the
Great Falls division of the
Washington and Old Dominion Railway, the
Washington-Mount Vernon line, and the
East Arlington Branch of the
Washington-Virginia Railway. Congress approved the
Washington and Great Falls Electric Railway Company's charter on July 28, 1892, permitting the company to build an electric streetcar line from Georgetown to
Cabin John, Maryland. Its tracks reached the District–Maryland line on September 28, 1895, and Cabin John in 1897.
Maryland and Washington Railway Congress approved the Maryland and Washington Railway's charter on August 1, 1892. That railroad's tracks ran on
Rhode Island Avenue NE from 4th Street NE reaching what is now
Mount Rainier on the Maryland line in 1897. At its southern terminus, it connected to the Eckington and Soldier's Home Railway.
Baltimore and Washington The
Baltimore and Washington Transit Company was incorporated before 1894, with authorization to run from the District of Columbia across Maryland to the Pennsylvania border. On June 8, 1896, it was given permission to enter the District of Columbia and connect to the spur of the Brightwood line that ran on Butternut St NW. Between 1903 and 1917, a line was added running south on 3rd St NW and west on Kennedy St NW to Colorado Avenue where it connected to Capital Traction's 14th Street line. On March 14, 1914, it changed its name to the Washington and Maryland Railway.
Capital Railway The first electric streetcar to operate in Anacostia was the Capital Railway. It was incorporated by Colonel Arthur Emmett Randle on March 2, 1895, to serve
Congress Heights. It was to run from Shepherds Ferry along the Potomac and across the Navy Yard Bridge to M Street SE. A second line would run along Good Hope Road SE to the District boundary. In 1897 it experimented with the "Brown System", which used
magnets in boxes to relay power instead of overhead or underground lines, and with double trolley lines over the Navy Yard Bridge. Both were failures. By 1898, the streetcar line ran along Nichols Avenue SE to
Congress Heights, ending at Upsal Street SE. By 1917 it had been extended out Pennsylvania Avenue past 33rd Street SE., but the company ceased operations by 1923.
Washington, Spa Spring, and Gretta On July 5, 1892, the District of Columbia Suburban Railway was incorporated to run streetcars on Bladensburg Road NE from the Columbia Railroad tracks on H Street NE to the Maryland line and from
Brookland to Florida Avenue NE. It was never built. But the route was reused by the final streetcar company to form in D.C.: the Washington, Spa Spring, and Gretta Railroad. It was chartered by the state of Maryland on February 13, 1905, and authorized to enter the District on February 18, 1907. Construction began by March 22, 1908. In 1910, the company began running cars along a single track from a modest
waiting station and car barn near 15th Street NE and H Street NE along Bladensburg Road NE to
Bladensburg. Although initially planned to go as far as
Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, the line never ran further than an extension to
Berwyn Heights, Maryland. The route was intended to promote development of company-owned land near the tracks, but it never successfully competed with established rail lines in the same area. the day after the Eckington and Soldier's Home began operation, Congress authorized the Brightwood Railway Company to electrify the Metropolitan's streetcar line on Seventh Street Extended NW or Brightwood Avenue NW (now known as
Georgia Avenue NW) and to extend it to the District boundary at
Silver Spring. In 1890, they bought the former Boundary and Silver Spring line from the Metropolitan, but continued to operate it as a horse line. In 1892 it was ordered by Congress to switch to overhead electrical power and complete the line. In 1898, the Brightwood was ordered to switch to underground electric power or have its charter revoked. It also extended its service from Connecticut Avenue to Mount Pleasant, running up Columbia Avenue and Mount Pleasant Road to Park Road.
Virginia trolleys operating in Washington, D.C. Two electric trolley companies serving Northern Virginia also operated in the District; a third received permission to do so, but never did. The
Washington & Arlington Railway was the first Virginia company approved to operate in Washington. It was incorporated on February 28, 1892, with the right to run a streetcar from the train station at 6th Street NW and
B Street NW to Virginia across a planned new
Three Sisters Bridge. The company was never able to build the new bridge, and so never operated in Washington. The
Washington, Alexandria, and Mount Vernon Electric Railway began operating between Alexandria and Mount Vernon in 1892. On August 23, 1894, it was given permission to enter the District of Columbia using a boat or barge, but never did. The railroad completed its tracks in 1896 and began serving a waiting station at
14th Street NW and B Street NW. From the waiting station it used the Belt Line Street Railway Company's tracks on 14th Street NW to reach the
Long Bridge, a combined road and rail crossing of the Potomac River. In 1906, the Long Bridge's road and streetcar tracks were moved to a
truss bridge (the Highway Bridge), immediately west of the older bridge. This span was removed in 1967. In 1902, the railroad moved its station, as the Belt Line's tracks were circling the block containing the site of a planned new District Building (now the
John A. Wilson Building). The new station at 1204 N. Pennsylvania Avenue extended along 12th Street NW from Pennsylvania Avenue NW to D Street NW, near the site of the present
Federal Triangle Metro station and across 12th Street from the
Post Office building. On October 17, 1910, the Washington and Arlington, by then the
Washington, Arlington & Falls Church Railroad, and the Washington, Alexandria and Mount Vernon merged to form the
Washington–Virginia Railway. The company had difficulty competing and in 1924 declared
bankruptcy. In 1927 the two companies were split and sold at
auction. The former Washington, Arlington & Falls Church Railroad reemerged as the
Arlington and Fairfax Railway This consolidated
Capital Traction Company replaced its cable cars with an electric system after its powerhouse at 14th and E NW burned down in 1897. The various branches switched to electric power by the end of 1898. In 1898, the Eckington and Soldier's Home purchased the Maryland and Washington Railway and the
Mount Rainier-to-
Laurel Columbia and Maryland Railway; it changed its name to the
City and Suburban Railway of Washington. Also that year, the
Anacostia and Potomac River bought the Belt Railway; the next year, it bought the Capital Railway. Between 1896 and 1899, a three-person consortium purchased controlling interests in several regional streetcar companies: the Metropolitan; the Columbia; the Anacostia and Potomac River; the Georgetown and Tennallytown; the Washington, Woodside and Forest Glen; the Washington and Great Falls; and the Washington and Rockville railway companies. This consortium also gained control of the
Potomac Electric Power Company and the
United States Electric Lighting Company. They incorporated the
Washington Traction and Electric Company on June 5, 1899, as a
holding company for these interests. But the holding company had borrowed too heavily and paid too much for the subsidiaries and quickly landed in financial trouble. To prevent transit disruption, in 1900 Congress authorized the Washington and Great Falls to acquire the stock of any and all of the railways and
power companies owned by Washington Traction, which
defaulted on its loans a year later. Washington and Great Falls moved in to take its place in 1902 and changed its name to the
Washington Railway and Electric Company (WREC, sometimes WRECO), reincorporated as a holding company and exchanged stock in Washington Traction and Electric one for one for stock in the new company (at a discounted rate). and the Georgetown and Tennallytown operated as
subsidiaries of the WREC until 1926, when it purchased the remainder of their stock. In 1908, the
Washington, Baltimore and Annapolis Electric Railway began service from Washington to
Baltimore and
Annapolis. Though technically an
interurban, this railway used streetcar tracks from its terminal at 15th and H Streets NE and across the
Benning Road Bridge where it switched to its own tracks in
Deanwood. It was the main source of transportation to
Suburban Gardens, known as "the black
Glen Echo", the first and only major
amusement park within Washington. But the streetcars faced increasing competition. The first threat to the streetcars was
gasoline-powered
taxicabs. The
taximeter, invented in 1891, combined with the
combustion engine, created a new form of public transportation. The first taxicabs hit Washington streets in 1908, and their numbers grew thereafter. Buses were the next competitors. In 1909, the Metropolitan Coach Company began to switch from horse-drawn coaches to gasoline-powered coaches. It had completed the transition by 1913, becoming a precursor to the bus companies. But it failed financially and on August 13, 1915, the company ceased operations. The first formal bus company in the nation's capital, the
Washington Rapid Transit Company, was incorporated in 1921. By 1932, it was carrying 4.5% of transit customers. In 1923, three streetcar companies
switched to buses. The first was the East Washington Heights, which replaced its two streetcars and one mile of track with a bus line. In 1931, Capital Traction abandoned the decades-old service of delivering freight aboard its streetcars. The last Arlington and Fairfax streetcar departed from 12th Street NW and D Street NW, on January 17, 1932. The Arlington and Fairfax Motor Transportation Company was established to replace the streetcar service. After the merger, Capital Transit closed the Capital Traction generating plant in Georgetown (it would be
decommissioned in 1943) and thereafter used only conventionally supplied electric power. In the summer of 1935, Capital Transit converted several major lines from streetcar to buses: the line from
Friendship Heights to
Rockville (formerly the Washington and Rockville), the P Street line (Metropolitan), the Anacostia-Congress Heights line (Capital Railway) and the Connecticut Avenue line in
Chevy Chase (Rock Creek). At the same time, the
Chesapeake Beach Railway and the
Washington, Baltimore and Annapolis interurban ceased operations. In 1936, the system introduced route numbers. and converted the Columbia Railway Company Car Barn to a bus barn. The last streetcar on the Anacostia-Congress Heights line ran on July 16, 1935. In 1948, Capital Transit substituted buses on the Benning-Rosslyn line between Kenilworth and the Seat Pleasant loop; and between the corner of 13th and New York Avenue. Still, it continued to invest in its streetcar fleet. On August 28, 1937, the first
PCC streetcars began running on 14th Street NW. By early 1946, the company would place in service 489 of the streamlined, modern PCC model and, in the early 1950s, become the first in the nation to have an all-PCC fleet. During
World War II, gasoline
rationing limited automobile use, but transit companies were exempt from the rationing. Meanwhile,
wage freezes held
labor costs in check. With increased
revenue and steady costs, Capital Transit conservatively built up a $7 million cash reserve. on December 14, 1949, the Connecticut Avenue subway tunnel under
Dupont Circle, running from N Street to R Street, was opened. the Supreme Court upheld the
Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935 and forced North American, because it also owned the Potomac Electric Power Co., to sell its shares of Capital Transit. Buyers were hard to come by, but on September 12, 1949,
Louis Wolfson and his three brothers purchased from North American 46.5% of the company's stock for $20 per share and the WREC was dissolved. For $2.2 million they bought a company with $7 million in cash. The Wolfsons began paying themselves huge
dividends until, in 1955, the company's bank account was down to $2.7 million. During the same period, transit trips dropped by 40,000 trips per day and automobile ownership doubled. unsuccessfully sought permission to increase fares. That spring, employees asked for a raise and the company refused. Frustrated, employees went on strike on July 1, 1955. The strike, only the third in D.C. history and the first since a three-day strike in 1945, lasted for seven weeks. Commuters were forced to
hitch rides and walk in the brutal summer heat. With the strike still unsettled, Eisenhower signed the bill on August 15, 1955. In late 1955, Capital Transit decided to abandon the tracks across the Key Bridge to the Rosslyn Station rather than pay the much higher cost to rebuild them with the bridge. On August 26, the last streetcar ran across the bridge, ending the operation of streetcars in Virginia. Bids were requested for a new company to take over transit operations in D.C., and on July 24, 1956, Public Law 84-757 (An Act to grant a franchise to D. C. Transit System, Inc., and for other purposes) was approved giving the franchise to D.C. Transit. Just past midnight on August 15, 1957,
O. Roy Chalk, a New York financier, bought the franchise for $13.5million (equivalent to $million in ) Chalk controlled D.C. Transit through his controlling interest in
Trans Caribbean Airways. According to 1959 Congressional testimony, Trans Caribbean owned 85% of the stock of D.C. Transit. At that time, Trans Caribbean was a small scheduled carrier flying from New York to San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Abandonment As part of the sale of Capital Transit to Chalk, Congress required him to
replace all streetcars with buses by 1963. The remaining system, including lines to the Navy Yard, the Colorado Avenue terminal, and the
Bureau of Engraving (Routes 50, 54) and to the Calvert Street Loop, Barney Circle, and Union Station (Routes 90, 92) was shut down in January 1962. Early on the morning of Sunday, January 28, 1962, preceded by cars 1101 and 1053, car 766 entered the Navy Yard Car Barn for the last time, and Washington's streetcars became history. The last scheduled run, filled with enthusiasts and drunken college students, left 14th and Colorado at 2:17am and arrived at Navy Yard ten minutes late at 3:05am. One last special trip, carrying organized groups of trolley enthusiasts, set out after that and returned at 4:45am. By the afternoon of the 28th, workers began tearing out the streetcar tracks and platforms along 14th Street. In 1972, when WMATA took over transit operations from D.C. Transit, it was allowed by law to force the sale of any D.C. Transit properties that it thought it would need to provide transit. It purchased the Decatur Street carbarn, the Colorado Terminal and loop, the Calvert Street Bridge terminal and loop, the Chevy Chase terminal and loop, the Quincy Street NE terminal and loop, the Friendship Heights terminal and loop, and the Seat Pleasant terminal. It chose not to buy the carbarn on East Capitol Street, the Navy Yard carbarn, the Georgetown carbarn, the M Street Shops, the Eckington carbarn, the Grace Street powerhouse, the Cabin John Trolley right-of-way and several bus properties. ==Remnants==