Electrification and networking The desire to create a real electrified city system was felt throughout 1890s, especially with the arrival of the
electric streetcars in Montreal in 1892. The
Quebec, Montmorency and Charlevoix Railway Company and its president, businessman and engineer
Horace Jansen Beemer, got an exclusive franchise from the
Quebec City Council to this end. They created the Quebec District Railway Company, a subsidiary responsible for managing the city streetcar system. This branch purchased two existing tram companies. Major works were needed: the
Montmorency Electric Power Company had to modernize its facilities to provide the new energy demand from the electric network, a metal structure was essential for tram traffic between the Upper and Lower town with a very smooth slope, St. Jean's Gate was demolished to improve traffic flow with
Old Quebec, etc. In the summer of 1897, the four lines of this united and electrified public transport system were opened. Côte Dinan trestle, connecting St. Paul Street to the
Hôtel-Dieu de Québec, received its first trams in December. From then on, trams would be pulled by horses only when they broke down. New streetcars built in
New York could accommodate 25 to 27 passengers up to 50 people and are equipped with heaters. This new public transport participated in the rapid expansion of the city toward
Ville-Montcalm, which was growing in population and confirming its residential character.
Expansion, apogee and decline In 1899, railway and power companies merged to form the powerful Quebec Railway Light & Power Company, a trust in the power and transport sectors for the whole Quebec City area. This company, later known under the name Quebec Power, would run the tramway until its closure in 1948. In 1910, the network was expanded to
Sillery and in 1912, to
Beauport. The tramway was at its peak and covered almost the entire city. In 1932, the network stretched from Sillery to Montmorency. At the time, 11 lines in total were in service. From 1937 onwards, buses' popularity was increasing and caused the disappearance of the trams. On May 26, 1948, the last line serving Saint-Sauveur was permanently closed. La rue Saint-Jean a Quebec en 1938.jpg|Streetcars at
Place D'Youville in 1938. Les tramways au carre D Youville, 1944.jpg|Streetcars at
Place D'Youville in 1944. Grande Allee 1945.jpg|Rails,
Grande Allée, 1945. Tramway no. 901 de la compagnie Quebec Railway Light and Power a l angle de la cote Dinan et de la cote du Palais, 1947.jpg|Tram 901 in 1947. == See also ==