Streetcars appear to be making a comeback in Washington, D.C.with lines being planned for the H street corridor in Northeast and Anacostia. With all the local debate about whether overhead wires should be used in the city's core, we might want to consider an alternative motive power: horses. While many Washingtonians know that DC's once vibrant street car system last clanged its bells in 1962, few are aware of DC's first streetcar a century earlier.
New York City first used horse-drawn streetcars on rails sometime in the 1830s, but the idea was slow to take hold in Washington. Washington residents not wishing to walk through the city's muddy roads had to rely on "omnibuses," an inconvenient, dangerous and dusty 19th century version of a microbus. This may have been fine when Pennsylvania Avenue was, as one newspaperman put it, "more a cornfield than the great thoroughfare of and Principal Avenue of a Metropolis." However, as a burgeoning wartime capital, improved transportation options were needed. Sound familiar?
On May 17, 1862 Congress granted a charter to the Washington & Georgetown Railroad Company to operate Washington's first horse-drawn streetcar. Rails were laid down Pennsylvania Avenue and service from the State Department to the Capitol commenced in July with nine streetcars. By October 1862, the streetcar ran from M and Wisconsin in Georgetown to the Navy Yard. The fare was less than five cents.The route traveled along M Street in Georgetown, then east along Pennsylvania Avenue past the Capitol, and then headed south on 8th Street, SE to the Navy Yard.
New York City first used horse-drawn streetcars on rails sometime in the 1830s, but the idea was slow to take hold in Washington. Washington residents not wishing to walk through the city's muddy roads had to rely on "omnibuses," an inconvenient, dangerous and dusty 19th century version of a microbus. This may have been fine when Pennsylvania Avenue was, as one newspaperman put it, "more a cornfield than the great thoroughfare of and Principal Avenue of a Metropolis." However, as a burgeoning wartime capital, improved transportation options were needed. Sound familiar?
On May 17, 1862 Congress granted a charter to the Washington & Georgetown Railroad Company to operate Washington's first horse-drawn streetcar. Rails were laid down Pennsylvania Avenue and service from the State Department to the Capitol commenced in July with nine streetcars. By October 1862, the streetcar ran from M and Wisconsin in Georgetown to the Navy Yard. The fare was less than five cents.The route traveled along M Street in Georgetown, then east along Pennsylvania Avenue past the Capitol, and then headed south on 8th Street, SE to the Navy Yard.
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A pair of streetcar tracks are clearly visible running down Pennsylvania Avenue in this photograph taken during the May 1865 Grand Army Review. (Library of Congress ) |