INTRODUCTION

Sacramento’s streetcars were a way for people to get where they wanted to go, whether the people in question were the passengers on the cars or the companies who owned them. Seldom was the streetcar an end in itself. For riders, the cars were a way to get to work, to school, to shopping, or to recreation. For those who built them, streetcars were rarely a profitable investment, but they helped make other ventures profitable. In both cases, once the streetcars had outlived their purpose, they were abandoned. Decades later, Sacramentans would rediscover the streetcar and all the places it could take them.

Sacramento evolved along its streetcar lines. Once the Central Pacific Railroad was completed in 1869, with Sacramento as its western terminus, traffic to Sacramento was increased to levels not seen since the gold rush. The downtown passenger depot became the nexus of the city’s transportation network. The downtown district along J and K Streets became the center of a network of streetcar tracks belonging to several different companies. Nearby downtown neighborhoods were also well served by the streetcar network. Feeder lines out to the suburbs spread like a spider’s web from downtown, usually ending at some form of park or recreational attraction. These destinations would bring residents from the central city to the edges of town to play, swim, and perhaps consider buying a home in the suburbs close to the car line.

Expenses for a streetcar line were high. In addition to the costs of maintaining cars and track, early horse-drawn streetcar companies had to feed and stable sufficient horses for their runs, and the working life of a horse in streetcar service was very short, only three to five years. Streetcar companies were responsible for sprinkling Sacramento’s dirt streets to keep down dust and later for paving the street around their tracks. Once electricity was introduced, streetcar company owners no longer had to pay for horses and hay, but electrical equipment and infrastructure had its own set of expenses. The high-voltage wires needed to power streetcars added, quite literally, overhead.

Investors hoping to build new housing developments on open tracts of land could attract customers with the promise of convenient access to a car line, and often streetcar service came before the construction and occupation of Sacramento’s early suburbs. Land speculators purchased farmland on the perimeter of Sacramento’s city limits and then built rails from downtown to their new tracts. Prospective home buyers were given rides to the new neighborhood on the brand new streetcar lines. These neighborhoods were often little more than lines on plat maps, a streetcar line down a road promised to be the future main street, and a stand offering free beer to potential customers.

Operating a streetcar that runs to an open field of for-sale lots was not a profitable enterprise, but it was an effective advertising tool. Potential home buyers could be certain that the promise of streetcar service to their future home was not an empty one. When a developer did not own a streetcar company, they could often pay a railroad to provide this service for the new suburb. Sometimes the process worked in reverse, and representatives of the streetcar company went into the real-estate business. When the new neighborhood was populated with new homeowners, they would provide natural customers for the streetcar line. Interurban railroad companies, hoping to secure right-of-ways through cities, offered local streetcar service as a way to gain permission to ship more profitable freight and long-distance passengers through town. Sometimes the freight business outlived the passengers and the streetcars.

Parks and other recreational destinations were often used by streetcar companies to attract customers and revenue, both for their streetcars and for their suburban land tracts. McClatchy Park and McKinley Park both began as private amusement parks owned by the streetcar line. Baseball fields, public baths and pools, and historic attractions were all considerations for a streetcar companies’ route planning, even when they were not owned by the streetcar company.

Once the land was sold and the homes built, however, the streetcar was not always profitable. If population density was not sufficient once a tract was developed, streetcars were not profitable to run. There were other routes to profit via the streetcar, however. The method that stood the greatest test of time was electric power. Inexpensive hydroelectric power, via long-distance transmission from Folsom, provided Sacramento with an inexpensive and plentiful supply of power. When entrepreneur Albert Gallatin built his powerhouse, he knew that a streetcar system would provide an excellent regular customer and promptly bought and consolidated the Sacramento system. This combination allowed the Sacramento streetcars to operate through the Great Depression, when many other cities’ streetcar companies went out of business. Electric power and electric streetcars operated together under the banner of Pacific Gas & Electric until 1943, when the streetcar system was sold to Pacific City Lines, a subsidiary of a national company, National Car Lines (NCL).

NCL, like other streetcar operators, had another profit-making motive. Many streetcar lines, stretched thin by the Great Depression, were losing money, and reinvestment in new equipment was generally not possible. By buying streetcar lines and then taking the cars out of service, they could buy buses, tires, and gasoline sold by their major shareholders—General Motors, Goodyear Rubber, and Standard Oil. Buses required no overhead power lines, were not responsible for street maintenance, and routes could be changed with little notice to reach new suburbs when the streetcar companies were unable to invest the money needed for expanded routes and service. The streetcars received one last burst of use during the gas rationing of the Second World War, but after 1945, the end was near.

Even before National City Lines cut the power to Sacramento’s streetcars in January 1947, it seemed that the day of the streetcar had passed. PG&E shut down several streetcar lines and replaced others with buses as early as the 1930s. Buses were considered more modern than streetcars, could change their routes without expensive engineering projects, and the roads were paid for by public tax funds rather than by the streetcar company. Most importantly, Sacramentans were buying private automobiles and moving out of the central city, abandoning the streetcars and the neighborhoods they had served. The streetcar system, closely tied to the central city, was no longer useful to a population that lived and worked in suburbs.

One group of people did appreciate the streetcars for their own sake: rail fans. Many rail fans are simply interested in steam or diesel railroads, but a special breed is attracted to streetcars and interurban electric railroads.

Native Sacramentans Birdie Boyles, Jack Davis, and Al Balshor all grew up in Sacramento during the era of the streetcars. All three shared their memories of Sacramento in the age of streetcars, where they went, and what they did. Other than their origin in Sacramento, they had very different lives—Birdie worked for the State of California in the Department of Education, Jack worked for Southern Pacific Railroad as a field engineer, and Al Balshor owns a florist business in Land Park. All three shared their stories of drugstore ice cream counters, K Street on New Year’s Eve, the Solons at Edmonds Field, the diverse ethnic neighborhoods, and of course the clanging, rattling streetcars that got them wherever they wanted to go in town for a nickel. Their memories and words are scattered throughout the text wherever appropriate.