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When Boston Rode the El
When Boston Rode the El
When Boston Rode the El
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When Boston Rode the El

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The Boston Elevated Railway broke ground in 1899 for a new transit service that opened in 1901, providing a seven-mile elevated railway that connected Dudley Street Station in Roxbury and Sullivan Square Station in Charlestown, two huge multilevel terminals. When the EL, as it was popularly known, opened for service, it provided an unencumbered route high above the surging traffic of Boston, until it went underground through the city. The new trains of the EL were elegant coaches of Africanmahogany, bronze hardware, plush upholstered seats, plate glass windows, and exteriors of aurora red with silver gilt striping and slate grey roofs. They stopped at ten equally distinguished train stations, designed by the noted architect Alexander WadsworthLongfellow. All of this elegance, let alone convenience, could be had for the price of a five-cent ticket. The popularity of the EL was instantaneous. The railway continued to provide transportation service high above Boston's streets until 1987, when it was unfortunately ended after 86 years of elevated operation. Today, the squealing wheels of the Elevated trains, the rocking coaches, the fascinating views, and the fanciful copper-roofed stations of the line are a missing part of the character of Boston, when one could ride high above the city for a nickel.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 18, 2012
ISBN9781439627419
When Boston Rode the El
Author

Frank Cheney

Authors Frank Cheney, a photograph collector and transportation historian, and Anthony M. Sammarco, a Boston-area historian and author of numerous Arcadia books, have worked together to bring us this informative visual record of transportation history.

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    When Boston Rode the El - Frank Cheney

    Railway.

    INTRODUCTION

    June 10, 1901, was a day that gave Boston’s renowned civic pride a major boost; for on that bright summer day, the Boston Elevated Railway Company presented the most modern elevated rapid transit system in the nation to the city’s transit riders. On that day, Boston joined with New York and Chicago in possessing a true rapid transit system free from the congestion of crowded city streets. Boston had already opened America’s first subway back on September 1, 1897, the beginning of the present Green Line system. New York did not open its first subway until October 24, 1904, and Philadelphia’s elevated and subway system opened on March 4, 1907. It was therefore with justifiable pride that crowds of Bostonians gathered at 5:00 on that June morning outside the big new elevated terminals at Dudley Street in Roxbury and Sullivan Square in Charlestown, hoping to be aboard the first trains to roll over the new elevated system.

    As the station attendants swung open the big entrance gates at both the Sullivan Square and Dudley Street Terminals, the crowds surged up the stairs and rushed onto the platforms, after dropping their nickels into the coin boxes. On the platforms, they were met by throngs of people who had just arrived on the first trolley cars that had rolled up the ramps to the elevated level only moments before. At exactly 5:30 a.m., the departure gongs sounded in the terminals, and the jam-packed trains moved out, starting 86 years of elevated service in Boston. The Boston El cars that went into service that morning were painted a handsome aurora red with silver gilt striping and slate gray roofs. The interiors of the cars featured varnished African mahogany woodwork with sky-blue ceilings and bronze hardware features. The seats were upholstered in attractive red-and-black mottled plush. Many early risers in houses along the elevated routes were surprised on that first morning of operation to have scores of passing strangers observing their morning routines! Henceforth, most window shades were pulled down along the elevated routes. The aurora red trains rolled over elevated structures painted a deep olive green and stopped at handsome stations sheathed in burnished copper—a pity that color photography was decades away.

    The highly successful opening day of Boston’s elevated system was the culmination of decades of debates, heated disputes, and attempts to build an elevated railway system in the city that began shortly after Charles Harvey opened New York City’s first elevated line running above Ninth Avenue in December 1867. After inspecting the new Ninth Avenue El Line, the Boston Common (City) Council decided that such a system was not needed in Boston. However, a wide variety of proposals for elevated systems kept popping up like mushrooms on a lawn after a warm summer rain. These proposals encompassed various types of unproved technology, including the use of compressed-air or battery-powered locomotives, narrow gauge, and three rail and monorail systems. One of these, the Meigs Monorail system, received serious consideration from the state authorities in the 1884–1887 period, and a full size demonstration line was built near Lechmere Square in East Cambridge by the inventor, Joe V. Meigs. Meigs, however, failed to acquire sufficient financial backing for his system, and the demonstration line was dismantled in 1894. In July 1890, the West End Street Railway Company, the operator of Boston’s extensive surface streetcar system, was granted authority to build an elevated system to be operated with conventional electric trolley cars, but the company took no action to do so. Finally, in June 1891, the state legislature appointed a rapid transit commission to study Boston’s transit problems and come up with a solution. After considerable debate, legislation based on the Rapid Transit Commission’s recommendations was enacted in July 1894. The legislation created the Boston Transit Commission to build the Tremont Street Subway, which was to be leased to and operated by the West End Street Railway. The legislation also created a franchise for the Boston Elevated Railway Company to be awarded to private interests to build an elevated railway system to serve the Boston area.

    The Boston Elevated franchise was quickly acquired by a group that included Joe V. Meigs, who had failed in his earlier attempt to build a monorail system. Meigs and his group again failed to raise sufficient funding to build their steam-powered, standard two-rail elevated system and offered to sell their valuable elevated franchise to the West End Street Railway for $150,000. The conservative West End management declined the offer, which infuriated several leading West End stockholders, including Eben M. Jordan, Boston’s department store magnate, and Gen. William A. Bancroft, an influential lawyer and businessman. Obtaining backing from J.P. Morgan & Company, the Jordan-Bancroft Group purchased the elevated franchise from the Meigs group, after which they started a proxy battle that allowed them to gain control of the West End Street Railway Company. They then arranged the lease of the entire West End Surface Car System to the new Boston Elevated Company in December 1897, thus guaranteeing Boston an unified transit system, free from the damaging competition that prevailed between the elevated and surface systems in New York and Chicago.

    On January 20, 1899, the official groundbreaking ceremony for Boston’s new elevated system finally took place on Washington Street in the South End when the two-year-old son of company president William A. Gaston turned the first spade of earth—albeit with

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