Photo of the Month: Upon Reflection
Kevin Sheridan photo.
Kevin Sheridan photo.
The public is invited to take one last look around Transbay Terminal this Friday. The formidable ediface, which started life as a modern (and Moderne) home for trains from three different companies and is finishing it as a forlorn bus shed, was built by the State of California as a terminal for trains crossing the Bay Bridge from the East Bay and beyond — as far as Chico on the old Sacramento Northern.
Our 2011 calendar has just gone to the printer. We should have them in stock at our San Francisco Railway Museum around Labor Day. One of our best contributors over the years is Market Street Railway member Bill Storage, who takes fantastic night shots in particular.
We posted yesterday about a photographic technique that makes real-life scenes look like minutely detailed miniatures. Well, why have fake fakes when you can have real fakes? (Ease up, modelers — just kidding!)
When Muni’s T-Third light rail line opened in 2007, we asked Market Street Railway’s historian, Phil Hoffman, to share his childhood memories of the old Third Street streetcar operation, along with some history of the lines that ran there.
Eighty-four years after the Declaration of Independence was, er, declared on July 4, 1776, the first street railway on the Pacific Coast opened. It was an odd-looking railroad-type coach, powered by steam, running from Third and Market (pictured below) to 16th and Valencia. By 1867, the noisy steam engine aroused enough neighbors’ ire to be replaced by horsecars. (Guess they preferred the manure.) Cable cars took over as the predominant Market Street transit in 1883, succeeded by electric streetcars in 1906, which endure today as the F-line.Based on input from MSR member and historian Emiliano Echevveria, the Chronicle’s Carl Nolte paints a fascinating picture of this steam operation. It was called the Market Street Rail Road, first of at least five organizaitons (including ours) to bear a similar name. The picture is the only one we’ve seen of this particular operation. It was taken around 1862. Note the cool open seating on the upper deck. The back-to-back seating looking out the sides of the car was the common arrangement of the time for the top deck of transit vehicles in Britain, so perhaps that was the inspiration. Or not. As we say, this was a reasonably obscure operation, but we do know it was the first street railway on the Pacific Coast, and it opened July 4, 1860. We’re mounting a new exhibit at our San Francisco Railway Museum near the Ferry Building, matching historic photos of various transit modes and locations on Market (most provided by Emiliano) with shots of the same places today taken by our member Kevin Sheridan, a great photographer. It will open in mid-July; watch this space for details. We’ll also feature extensive coverage of the history of Market Street transit in the next issue of our member newsletter, Inside Track, due out at the end of July. Join Market Street Railway now, and be sure to get it.
Blackpool, England “boat tram” would become a daily sight in the Castro under SFMTA service improvement plan. Jamison Wieser photo.
When better than the 40th anniversary of the first Gay Pride marches to look even farther back to the heartland of LGBT America: Castro and Market Streets? As part of our commemoration of the 150th anniversary of rail transit on Market Street (coming up on July 4), photographer Kevin Sheridan is matching locales along Market featured in historic photos with their contemporary counterparts. These will make up a great show at our San Francisco Railway Museum opening in mid-July (watch this space for more info).Here’s a sneak peak at one of Kevin’s pairings: a Castro cable car has just run the length of Market Street from the Ferry Building and is starting to turn left onto Castro, to continue over the hill to 26th Street. It’s sometime between 1888 and 1906, the dates of that cable car service. Compare it to Kevin’s photo taken just a couple of weeks ago. And enjoy the parade, everyone!
Over the years, we’ve gotten a lot of suggestions for additions to the F-line fleet. But never one quite like this.