Sacramento Union Traction Depot Explained

The Sacramento Union Traction Depot was an interurban union railway station in Sacramento, California. Its building and tracks were situated on a parcel bordered by H, I, 11th and 12th Streets. Opened in 1925, it consolidated operations of several of the area's local electric railways in one location, offering simplified interchanges for passengers. The Depot was built by the predecessors of the Sacramento Northern Railway as well as the Central California Traction Company. Passenger train services ceased 1940, but the building remained in use for freight operations dispatching. The building was largely destroyed in a fire.

The Depot opened on September 20, 1925, as the new Sacramento terminal of the Sacramento Northern and the San Francisco–San Francisco Railroad (both later amalgamated under the same corporation).[1] Central California Traction began service here the following March,[2] having previously terminated at the corner of 8th and L Streets.[3] After passenger service ended, a market opened in the station building.

Operations

Large terminals were rare among interurban-style transit services — Sacramento was exceptional in this regard. The station was built as a loop, allowing cars to enter from both directions on I Street and resume running in either direction as well.

SN cars arriving from Oakland and continuing north had their third rail shoes added here (as the third rail on the Bridge Railway was incompatible with the top-contact system used on the Northern district).

References

Bibliography

38.5815°N -121.4908°W

Notes and References

  1. News: Big Throng Cheers First Train Leaving New Union Station . 24 May 2024 . The Sacramento Union . Newspapers.com . September 20, 1925 . Sacramento, California . 1–2.
  2. News: Traction Line Announced New Schedule Of Trains . 24 May 2024 . The Sacramento Bee . Newspapers.com . March 25, 1926 . Sacramento, California . 14.
  3. News: Transfer Facilities Of New Station To Benefit Public And Rail Lines / Terminal Is Result of Three Years' Planning By Railroad Officials . 26 May 2024 . The Sacramento Bee . Newspapers.com . September 18, 1925 . Sacramento, California . 26.