Hawthorne–El Nido Line Explained

Hawthorne–El Nido
System:Pacific Electric
Start:Hawthorne
End:El Nido
Open:1902
Operator:Pacific Electric
Linelength Mi:3.66
Map State:collapsed

Hawthorne–El Nido was a line of the Pacific Electric Railway. It initially hosted local services between Hawthorne and El Nido, though services were eventually routed through to Downtown Los Angeles and as far south as Clifton and Redondo Beach.

History

The route was constructed by Los Angeles and Redondo Railway in 1902.[1] [2] Service was operating between Los Angeles and Redondo Beach by September 22.[3] That line was split up after the Great Merger of 1911, with the segment between Hawthorne and El Nido going to the Pacific Electric and the tracks north of Hawthorne becoming the Los Angeles Railway E Line. The PE segment was converted to standard gauge the following year. Between 1914 and 1916, some trips were through-routed to El Segundo on the north end. As that ended, the line began to see service through to the Pacific Electric Building via Watts and Delta interspersed with a complicated schedule of other routings. At that time, select trips made the full run from Los Angeles to Clifton over the Hawthorne–El Nido segment with most trips being short turns at South Los Angeles. By 1931, all trips were running the length from Los Angeles to Redondo or El Nido. Service ceased after October 25, 1933, and more service was directed to the Redondo Beach via Gardena Line to serve Delta-area passengers.

References

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. News: Redondo Brevities . 13 December 2022 . The Los Angeles Times . Newspapers.com . March 22, 1902 . 17.
  2. Web site: Hawthorne - El Nido Segment . Electric Railway Historical Association of Southern California . 30 August 2021.
  3. News: Brevities . 13 December 2022 . The Los Angeles Times . Newspapers.com . September 22, 1902 . 14.