Sierra Vista Line Explained

Sierra Vista
Type:Streetcar
System:Pacific Electric
Locale:Southern California
Start:Pacific Electric Building,
Downtown Los Angeles
End:Sierra Vista,
El Sereno,
Eastside Los Angeles
Owner:Southern Pacific Railroad
Operator:Pacific Electric

The Sierra Vista Line was a streetcar route mostly operated by the Pacific Electric Railway. It ran from 1895 to 1951 as the short turn making local stops along the Pasadena Short Line on the outside tracks of the Northern Division quadruple-track system.[1]

Route

The line ran from Downtown Los Angeles to the Sierra Vista Junction, at the corner of Huntington Drive and Main Street in the El Sereno community of Eastside Los Angeles.

History

The route began as a horsecar line. In 1894, the Pasadena & Los Angeles Electric Railway purchased, re-gauged, electrified, and double-tracked a section of the line for streetcar use. Service began on May 6, 1895. Pacific Electric acquired the route in 1898, and the line was again rebuilt to standard gauge. Upon opening on November 11, 1902,[2] [3] service ran between the Raymond Hotel and the junction with the Alhambra Line. Negotiations to cross the existing roads — the Santa Fe Railway, Terminal Railway, and California Cycleway — led Pacific Electric to build a bridge over the right of ways shortly after their service commenced. In 1908, double tracking was completed throughout.[4]

Between 1912 and 1914, the inbound terminus was moved to Ceres and Central in the rear of Southern Pacific's Arcade Depot. Starting August 1915, local services on the line were assumed by interurban runs. Independent service was reestablished in December 1916, instead terminating at the elevated concourse at the Pacific Electric Building. Alhambra–San Gabriel Line cars absorbed local services again between November 1918 and February 1920. The Sierra Vista Line operated exclusively in Pacific Electric's Northern District until 1938. Beginning March 20 of that year, the service was multiplexed with the Southern District Watts Line.[5] [6] The Aliso Street bridge opened in 1943, eliminating grade crossings with the Union Pacific and Santa Fe Railroad. From 1943 to 1948, local service was extended over the Short Line past Sierra Vista as far as Pasadena. Passenger volumes during World War II additionally necessitated cars terminating downtown to run via a loop on San Pedro, 6th, and Main streets.

Through-routing with the Watts Line virtually ended on October 22, 1950, with the franchise run discontinued on December 28. Service ended on September 30, 1951.[7]

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Down The Tracks Of Time El Sereno & the Pacific Electric RW . El Sereno Historical Society . 11 December 2022.
  2. News: Railroad Record: Ride to Pasadena in half an hour . 13 December 2022 . The Los Angeles Times . Newspapers.com . 9 November 1902 . 31.
  3. News: Rain pleases Pasadena . 13 December 2022 . Los Angeles Evening Express . Newspapers.com . 10 November 1902 . 7.
  4. Web site: Pasadena Short Line . Electric Railway Historical Association of Southern California . 20 September 2020.
  5. Map of Los Angeles, California Rail Systems . Bigmapblog.com . 1906 . with Pasadena Short Line labeled . https://web.archive.org/web/20111201232500/http://www.bigmapblog.com/2011/us40-2-los-angeles-california-rail-systems-1906/ . 1 December 2011.
  6. Pacific Electric map of Los Angeles . Bigmapblog.com . 1920 .
  7. News: PE Trolley Lines Yielded to Buses . 23 February 2022 . Los Angeles Times . Newspapers.com . September 30, 1951 . 26.