Geary Street, Park and Ocean Railway explained

Geary Street, Park and Ocean Railway
Locale:San Francisco, California
Transit Type:cable cars
Began Operation:February 16, 1880
Ended Operation:May 5, 1912
Track Gauge:,
Ogauge:, converted in 1892
Operator:Geary Street, Park & Ocean Railway (1880–1887), Market Street Railway (1887–1912), San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency (1912–present)

The Geary Street, Park and Ocean Railway was a street railway in San Francisco, California, United States.

History

The company received a franchise from the city to operate a cable railway on November 6, 1878. Operations commenced on February 16, 1880 as a Russian gauge tram pulled by steam dummy locomotives. The route soon proved quite popular.[1] The line was purchased by the Market Street Railway in 1887;[2] operations were not consolidated as Market Street Railway did not own all of the outstanding stock in the Geary Street railway.

The company's operating franchise expired in November 1903, but it continued to operate and pay its fees to the city. Following the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, cars had actually operated in the few hours immediately following the tremor but were stopped until June due to damage at the power house. The company's operating permit was restored in 1907. In 1912, the city declined to renew the franchise and instead took over the right of way.[3] The last day of cable operations by the Geary Street, Park and Ocean Railway was on May 5, 1912.

The line was rebuilt into an electric streetcar line, forming the first element of the San Francisco Municipal Railway (Muni) that was to become synonymous with transit in that city. Streetcar service on the new B-Geary line began on December28, 1912, based out of a carhouse at Geary and Presidio Streets. Muni replaced the street cars with motor coaches in 1956, and the 38 Geary remains one of Muni's busiest bus routes, serving over 40,000 passengers per weekday.[4] [5]

Infrastructure

Cars terminated downtown at Geary, Market, and Kearny Streets. The powerhouse was in a two-story wooden building on the northwest corner of Geary Boulevard and Buchanan Street.[6] The car barn was in a building on the northwest corner of Geary Boulevard and Arguello Boulevard, later an Office Max store.[7]

Rolling stock

Baldwin Locomotive Works built four 0-4-0 tank locomotives for the line. Numbers 1 and 3 (C/N 4801 & 4817) had vertical boilers while numbers 2 and 4 (C/N 4827 & 5115) had more conventional horizontal boilers. The two locomotives with horizontal boilers were sold to redwood logging railroads when line was converted to cable car operation on August 7, 1892. Locomotive #2 became #6 for Hobbs, Wall & Company of Crescent City, California; and #4 was sent to the Glen Blair Redwood Company on the California Western Railroad.[8]

See also

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Thompson . Joe . The Cable Car Home Page - Geary Street Park and Ocean Railway . 24 December 2007.
  2. Web site: Cable Car Company - Geary Street Park & Ocean Railroad . Cable Car Museum . 24 December 2007.
  3. Web site: LaBounty . Steve W. . Run Out of Town - Western Neighborhoods Project . 24 December 2007.
  4. Web site: 2008-09-22 . What Might Have Been: Geary . 2024-08-15 . Market Street Railway . en-US.
  5. Web site: Average daily Muni boardings by route and month (pre-pandemic to present) . 2024-08-15 . San Francisco Municipal Transportation Authority . en.
  6. Web site: LaBounty . Woody . May 2002 . Streetwise: Run Out of Town . outsidelands.org . Western Neighborhods Project . en . 25 October 2020.
  7. Web site: Geary Street Car barn, Geary Street Park & Ocean Railway . outsidelands.org . Western Neighborhoods Project . en . 25 October 2020.
  8. Borden . Stanley T. . 1971 . San Francisco Steam Dummies . The Western Railroader . Francis A. Guido . 34 . 376 . 3.