- Source: Streetcars in Indianapolis
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- Streetcars in Indianapolis
- Indianapolis streetcar strike of 1913
- Transportation in Indianapolis
- Indianapolis
- List of streetcar systems in the United States
- Streetcar suburb
- List of Indianapolis neighborhoods
- IndyGo
- Streetcar strikes in the United States
- Downtown Indianapolis
The streetcar system in Indianapolis, Indiana, was the city's original public transit system, evolving from horsecar lines that opened in 1864 and running through 1953. Mirroring its status as a hub of railroad activity, electric railways also concentrated services in Indianapolis with both a large system of local trolleys as well as a widespread network of interurbans.
Horse cars
Public transit arrived in Indianapolis on October 3, 1864, in the form of 12-seat mule-drawn streetcars which began operating between Union Station and Military Park. Citizens' Street Railway Company managed several streetcar lines running on a hub-and-spoke system radiating from downtown Indianapolis to outlying neighborhoods. Early lines were established on Virginia Avenue, Massachusetts Avenue, and Fort Wayne Avenue.
Electrification
The first electric streetcar began operation on June 18, 1890, replacing the last of the mule-drawn streetcars in 1894. Electrification of the city's streetcar system dramatically improved efficiency and expediency, allowing residents to live further from the civic and business center of downtown. The development of several streetcar suburbs occurred during this time, including Irvington, Riverside, and Woodruff Place.
= Interurbans
=On January 1, 1900, the first interurban arrived in Indianapolis from Greenwood, Indiana. To accommodate the growing popularity of interurban travel, the Indianapolis Traction Terminal opened in September 1904, serving all but one of the 13 interurban lines converging in the city. As the busiest interurban station in the world, the Indianapolis Traction Terminal was the hub for Indiana's extensive 1,825-mile (2,937 km) interurban network. At the height of ridership, the terminal served more than 600 trains daily and seven million passengers annually. As automobiles became increasingly prevalent, the interurbans' popularity waned. The terminal served its last interurban in September 1941.
= Subsequent owners
=After the bankruptcy of Citizens' Street Railway, the Indianapolis Street Railway Company purchased the operations in 1899 and began running streetcars. The company purchased the Broad Ripple line in 1902. The railroad's assets were wholly leased to the Indianapolis Traction and Terminal Company starting in 1903, and the two companies would eventually merge under the Indianapolis Street Railway Company name in 1919. The new company was acquired by the Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Company in 1920.
Despite hard years of deferred maintenance during the Depression, the Indianapolis' streetcars continued to run. Indianapolis Railways, Inc. purchased the city's operations in 1932. The company would go on to convert some lines to trackless trolley.
Decline
Like most American cities following World War II, Indianapolis's electric streetcar ridership declined as personal automobile ownership increased. In 1952, more than 400 public transit vehicles traveled more than 43,000 miles (69,000 km) daily, providing 72 million passenger trips annually. The city's last streetcar was decommissioned in January 1953, replaced by trackless trolleys and motor buses.
See also
Indianapolis streetcar strike of 1913
Transportation in Indianapolis
List of streetcar systems in the United States
References
= Bibliography
=Bodenhamer, David J.; Barrows, Robert G., eds. (1994). The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis. Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253112491. OL 40375984M.
Fujawa, Edward (2023). Vanished Indianapolis. History Press. ISBN 9781467154697.
Hilton, George W.; Due, John Fitzgerald (1960). The Electric Interurban Railways in America. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-4014-2. OCLC 237973.
Reed, Robert (2005). Central Indiana Interurban. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738532905.
Sulgrove, Berry R. (1884). History of Indianapolis and Marion County Indiana. Philadelphia: L. H. Everts and Company.