The Hamilton and Dundas Street Railway was incorporated in 1875 to run a steam railway between the two cities. It used
steam dummy locomotives, vehicles fully enclosed in a box-shaped body to resemble a streetcar, which pulled a train of passenger carriages. When service started, there were three dummy engines which could each pull up to six cars, but more typically one or two. The first test train ran on May 16, 1879, with revenue service starting on May 23, 1879. Initially, the line ran from Hatt and Foundry Streets in Dundas to the
Grand Trunk Railway station at
Ferguson Avenue in downtown Hamilton. At that time, the H&D entered downtown Hamilton from Aberdeen Avenue via Queen, Charlton, Macnab and Main Streets. On June 17, 1897, the
Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo Railway started operating steam train freight service over the H&D according to an agreement between the two companies. A track connection between the TH&B and the H&D had been built in West Hamilton. There was a TH&B freight station at McMurray Street with sidings without overhead wire as the TH&B would service these spurs. Work to electrify the line began in 1897 with electric service beginning on January 1, 1898. At about this time H&D service was cut back from Ferguson Avenue to Catherine Street in Hamilton. Effective 17, 1899, the Dominion Power and Transmission Company, owner of the
Hamilton Street Railway, took over the H&D. On December 1, 1899, the H&D was routed over HSR tracks to terminate at the Hamilton Radial terminal at Gore Street. After a new Hamilton Terminal Station was opened in November 1907 at King and Catherine Streets, the H&D was rerouted via James and Main streets to terminate there. Sometime after 1900, the line was extended west along Hatt Street and north on Bond street to King street in Dundas. On September 17, 1919, the HSR began 30-minute service to West Hamilton using the H&D line, but this wa a separate-fare service. On June 18, 1922, service frequency over the entire H&D line was increased to every 30 minutes to fight bus competition. Operating deficits for the line started to appear in 1916. Because of competing bus service, passenger volume dropped by half between 1920 and 1923. The last runs on the H&D were on September 5, 1923, the line being permanently replaced by buses on the following day. The HSR continued to operate service on Aberdeen Avenue until 1947. Unused H&D track along Aberdeen Avenue between West Hamilton and Longwood Road was removed in 1944. In 1927, the TH&B purchased the of H&D track that it used for freight service in Dundas and made it a TH&B branch, which was abandoned in 1987. ==References==