A mass public-transport system for
Mumbai (then Bombay) was proposed in 1865 by an American company, which applied for a licence to operate a
horse-drawn tram system. Although a licence was granted, the project was never realised due to the city's economic depression. The Bombay Tramway Company was set up in 1873. After a contract was signed between the Bombay Tramway Company, the municipality and the Stearns and Kitteredge company, the Bombay Presidency enacted the Bombay Tramways Act, 1874 licensing the company to run a horsecar tram service in the city. On 9 May 1874, the first horse-drawn carriage made its début in the city, plying the
Colaba–
Pydhone via
Crawford Market, and
Bori Bunder to
Pydhonie via
Kalbadevi routes. The initial fare was three
annas (12
paise pre-decimalisation), and no tickets were issued. As the service became increasingly popular, the fare was reduced to two annas (8 pre-decimalisation paise). Later that year, tickets were issued to curb increasing ticket-less travel. Stearns and Kitteredge reportedly had a stable of 1,360 horses over the lifetime of the service. In 1899, the Bombay Tramway Company applied to the municipality to operate electric trams. In 1904, the
British Electric Traction Company applied for a license to supply electricity to the city with the Brush Electrical Engineering Company its agent. It received the Bombay electric license on 31 July 1905, signed by Bombay Tramways Company, the Bombay Municipality and the Brush Electrical Company. In 1905, the
Bombay Electric Supply and Tramway Company (BEST) was formed. BEST received a monopoly on electric supply and an electric tram service in the city, and bought the Bombay Tramway Company's assets for . Two years later, the first electric tram debuted in the city. Later that year, a
steam power generator was commissioned at Wari Bunder. In 1916, a power purchase from
Tata Power (a private company) began, and by 1925, all power generation was outsourced from Tata. To ease rush-hour traffic,
double-decker trams were introduced in September, 1920. The trams met travellers' needs until the betterment of the city's train network, and the service closed on 31 March 1964. ==Chennai (Madras)==