Santa Barbara and Suburban Railway Co.
The streetcar system went through a variety of owners, name changes, and expansions, adding and extending lines and adding additional cars. However, by 1912 the company was losing money and the bondholders took over the company. With the blessing of
Southern California Edison, two men approached the city of Santa Barbara with a plan to reorganize and modernize the system as the Santa Barbara and Suburban Railway Co. Construction to replace the narrow gauge tracks with
standard gauge tracks began in 1913. The Oak Park line was further extended into that neighborhood, the Haley Street line was extended to Milpas Street, and a new line to the Santa Barbara State Normal School of Manual Arts and Home Economics (the predecessor of the
University of California, Santa Barbara) was built beyond the old Mission up a new right-of-way called Alameda Padre Serra. These lines further spurred the development of housing tracts in the Oak Park neighborhood as well as opened up the hilly Riviera around the Normal School to development. With the regauging came some of cut backs, though. The East Beach and West Victoria lines were discontinued. The streetcar lines continued in competition with the automobile through the 1910s and 1920s. The company attempted to sell their operations in 1924, but were blocked by the city from doing so. After failing to pay its bills, the railway was transferred to Southern California Edison. After the
1925 Santa Barbara earthquake destroyed much of downtown, the streetcar system, though largely undamaged by the quake, was unable to recover and closed permanently on June 30, 1929. == References ==