There are many reasons why electric
streetcar lines became so popular - and were built so quickly - in cities across
the United States. According to one transportation historian, the first and
foremost factor was that the electric streetcar "proved itself once to be
effective, easy and inexpensive to rig up, and swiftly profitable" as proven by Frank J. Sprague's experiment. Frank Julian
Sprague, the so-called "father of electric traction", had confounded his critics
in 1888 by building an urban electric railway that was safe, convenient, and
reliable.
An Available Infrastructure
Frank J. Sprague deserves great credit,
of course, but other factors also played an role in the rise of the electric
streetcar. Electrical wires already ran through the streets of American cities
and the infrastructure for power distribution was becoming robust. By the
1890s, hydroelectric and coal-powered steam plants were already producing and
delivering electricity throughout most major cities. In many of these same urban
areas, electric wires hung above city streets.
Travel Times
Another important reason for the
rise of the electric streetcar was the savings in travel time that it provided.
In American cities, a horse-drawn
streetcar averaged a speed of 4 miles an hour (mph). The cable car was limited
to how fast the cable was running beneath the city street. Moreover, the cables
that powered the cable cars of San Francisco and
Chicago moved
at a maximum speed of 8 mph.
An electrified streetcar could
travel more quickly. A trolley could run at 10, 20 or 30 mph throughout the city
and up to 60 mph outside of the city center. For workers and their families,
this was significant. Businessmen could see more clients, doctors could make
more house calls, and families could do more things together, such as gathering
provisions for the home or going to the park. The design of the electric streetcar
also allowed it to maneuver through the turns of tight streets in early
industrial cities.
Push and Pull
As congested cities expanded farther
away from their centers, the demand for mass transit exploded. Typically, American
cities expanded horizontally to accommodate the massive influx of people
looking for work in manufacturing centers. Because of this horizontal expansion, housing was
built away from the city's urban manufacturing core.
Eventually, it became difficult for
employees to walk to work when their homes and apartments were located so far
from urban factories. The massive number of people who needed to commute to work
became a political and economic issue, and both city leaders and factory owners
supported the development of electric streetcar lines.
Editor's Note: Part 8 of this multi-part series will run in one week.
Previous Blog Entries in This Series
The American Streetcar (Part 1)
From Stagecoach to Streetcar (Part 2)
From Horse-Drawn Streetcars to Cable Cars (Part 3)
The Birth of the Electric Streetcar (Part 4)
Electric Streetcars and Trolley Technology (Part 5)
Electric Streetcars: Private Lines and Public Roads (Part 6)
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