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Hollywood Line

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pacific Electric streetcar line (1909–1953)

Hollywood
Screencap from promotional filmHollywood Snapshots (1922)
Overview
OwnerSouthern Pacific Railroad
LocaleLos Angeles
Termini
Stations10
Service
TypeStreetcar
SystemPacific Electric
Operator(s)Pacific Electric
Rolling stockSteel 600 Class (last used)
History
Opened1909
ClosedSeptember 26, 1954 (1954-09-26)
Technical
Line length11.7 mi (18.8 km)
Track gauge4 ft 8+12 in (1,435 mm)standard gauge
Old gaugenarrow gauge
ElectrificationOverhead line600 V DC
Route map

discontinued
1941
Coldwater Canyon
discontinued
1923
11.7
Beverly Hills
11.5
Alpine Drive
11.1
Lewis
Palm Drive-Alta Drive
10.8
Doheny Drive
10.6
Almont Street
10.5
La Peer Street
10.4
Hilldale Avenue
10.3
West Hollywood
10.1
Huntley Drive
10.0
Westbourne Drive
9.9
Westmount Street
9.8
La Cienega Boulevard
9.6
Croft Avenue-Hacienda Park
9.5
Kings Road
9.4
Sweetzer Avenue
9.4
Harper Avenue
9.3
Havenhurst Drive
9.2
Crescent Heights Boulevard
9.1
Laurel Avenue
9.1
Edinburgh Avenue
8.9
Fairfax Avenue
discontinued
1953
Ogden Drive
Fountain Avenue
Stanley
Curson Avenue-De Longpre Avenue
Laurel Canyon
discontinued
1924
8.2
Gardner Street-Sunset Boulevard
Vista Street
Fuller Avenue
Formosa Avenue
La Brea Avenue
Sycamore Avenue
Orange Drive
7.4
Highland Avenue
Las Palmas Avenue
Whitley Avenue
Hudson Avenue
Wilcox Avenue
6.9
Cahuenga Boulevard
Ivar Street
Hollywood
Argyle Avenue
Vista Del Mar Avenue
Gower Street
Brokaw Place
Bronson Avenue
Van Ness Avenue
Wilton Place
St. Andrews Place
5.8
Western Avenue
Serrano Avenue
Harvard Boulevard
Stop (between Winona Blvd & Kingsley Drive)
Normandie Avenue
Alexandria Avenue
Kenmore Avenue
4.8
Edgemont Street
New Hampshire Avenue
4.6
Vermont Avenue
Melrose cutoff
1900–1915
Rodney Drive
Hillhurst Avenue
Commonwealth Avenue
Fountain Avenue
Bates Avenue
Shermanpre-1905 route
3.7
Hollywood Junction-Sanborn Avenue
Hyperion Avenue
Lucille Avenue
Edgecliffe Drive
Maltman Avenue
Micheltorena Street
Elza Avenue
Descanso Drive
Elk Street
Westerly Terrace
Silver Lake Boulevard
Benton Way-Lafayette
Coronado Street
Waterloo Street
Rosemont Avenue
Mohawk Street
Alvarado Street
Bonnie Brae Street
surface discontinued 1950
Glendale Boulevard
Park Avenue
Stop (between Santa Ynez & Park Ave)
Santa Ynez Street
Kane Street-Kent Street
Bellevue Avenue
Temple Street
Court-Council-La Veta
Colton-Patton
Beverly Boulevard &1st Street
surface stops
Lemoyne Street
Echo Park Avenue
La Veta Terrace
Portia Street
Douglas-Lilac Terrace
Elysian Park Avenue-Allison Street
Innes Avenue
Marion Avenue
Everett-Beatrice
Beaudry & Bellevue Avenue
Centennial Street
Figueroa Street
Bunker Hill
Grand Avenue
Sunset Boulevard & Hill Street
pre-1909 route
Temple Street
1st Street
2nd Street
3rd Street
4th Street
Subway Terminal
This diagram:

TheHollywood Line was a localstreetcar line of thePacific Electric Railway. It primarily operated betweenDowntown Los Angeles andHollywood, with some trips as far away asBeverly Hills andWest Los Angeles. It was the company's busiest route prior to the opening of theHollywood Subway.[1][2] Designated as route 32, the line operated from 1909 until 1954.

History

[edit]

The route was an amalgamation of different railroads. The Cahuenga Valley Railroad built tracks along Hollywood Boulevard between Western and Wilcox in 1888 as part of the company's extension from Western and Santa Monica.[3] The extension to Laurel Canyon after 1892 was opposed by residents, and was built quickly and covertly over a weekend to obviate any action by authorities.[3] TheSunset Boulevard segment was established in 1895 by thePasadena and Pacific Railroad as anarrow gauge line.Los Angeles Pacific Railway constructed the Melrose Cutoff in 1900, running betweenSanta Monica Boulevard and Virgil to Prospect Avenue andVermont Avenue. This was route was largely supplanted in 1905 by the Hollywood Cutoff, which ran from Sanborn Junction northeast to Hollywood and Vermont. Trips though theHill Street Tunnel began on September 15, 1909, allowing cars a more direct route to Downtown Los Angeles.[4] The route was converted tostandard gauge that same year,[5] with five miles (8.0 km) of trackrelaid to the new gauge the night before the tunnel's opening.[4] The line was acquired by Pacific Electric in 1911 as part of the Great Merger, and the company assumed operations.[6]

Under Pacific Electric, cars ran between theHill Street Terminal and Gardner Junction (Sunset Boulevard and Gardner Street). The Melrose Cutoff was abandoned in 1915.[7] Beginning in 1916, cars were through-routed past the Hill Street Station to serve the Venice Boulevard Local Line — the following year some rush hour trips began terminating at 11th and Hill Street.[8] On February 7, 1926 the route would begin operating with every-other trip terminating at the newSubway Terminal Building, running via theHollywood Subway.[9] By 1932, both subway and surface trips were operating past Gardner Junction. Between 1941 and 1943, trips on the surface line were through-routed with theVenice Short Line in addition to the Locals. Starting in October 1950, all trips on the line were made to terminate in the subway. Metropolitan Coach Lines acquired the service in 1953 and the final passenger trains ran over the line in the early hours of September 26, 1954.[10] Several bus routes were created or rerouted to replace service in the affected areas.[11]

Route

[edit]
Beverly Hills station,c. 1915–1920

The route began at the Hill Street Station which was located at the site of the Subway Terminal Building, on the west side of Hill Street between 4th and 5th Street. The Red Cars exited the station (or later the Subway Terminal Building) at ground level directly into Hill Street. The dual tracks ran north in the center of the pavement of Hill Street, crossing major intersections in Downtown Los Angeles to reach 1st Street. North of 1st Street was the first of the two tunnels on the route. The dual tracks ran through the first tunnel (under Bunker Hill) to Temple Street, while the Hill Street roadway passed through its own parallel tunnel directly to the east. The rails continued north of Temple Street through the second tunnel (under Fort Moore Hill) to Sunset Boulevard, while Hill Street ran above on a separate alignment.

On Sunset Boulevard, dual tracks ran westerly in the center of the pavement, crossing Grand Avenue, Figueroa Street, and over the Pasadena Freeway. The rails continued in a general northwesterly direction, past Beaudry, Elysian Park and Echo Park Avenues to arrive at Park Avenue, where cars routed through the Subway Terminal turned west into Sunset Boulevard. The line continued northwesterly on Sunset before turning west onto Hollywood Boulevard, then zig-zagged its way southwesterly, primarily on private right-of-way, between La Brea and Fairfax avenues down to Santa Monica Boulevard, continuing down Santa Monica before terminating at PE's Beverly Hills depot located on Canon Drive between "Big" and "Little" Santa Monica boulevards.

List of major stations

[edit]
StationMajor connectionsDate openedDate closedCity
Beverly HillsColdwater Canyon,Sawtelle,Venice via Hollywood,Westgate19021954Beverly Hills
ShermanSherman,Venice via Hollywood19021955West Hollywood
CrescentSherman,Venice via Hollywood19021955Los Angeles
Gardner JunctionLaurel Canyon19021955
HollywoodWestern and Franklin Avenue19021955
Sunset JunctionOwensmouth,San Fernando,Sherman,Venice via Hollywood,Western and Franklin Avenue19021955
Subway Terminal BuildingEcho Park Avenue,Glendale–Burbank,Owensmouth,Redondo Beach via Playa del Rey,San Fernando,Sawtelle,Sherman,Venice Short Line,Venice via Hollywood,Western and Franklin Avenue,Westgate19251955

Rolling stock

[edit]

Class 600 cars were designed and built for the service with the first fifty units fromSt. Louis Car Company delivered in 1922.[12] These cars would become so closely associated with the Hollywood Line that they quickly acquired the monikerHollywood cars.[13] Pacific Electric expanded this fleet with fifty more St. Louis Car Company units in 1924, fifty additional units fromJ.G. Brill Company in 1925, and a final order of ten from St. Louis Car Company in 1928.[13]

Venice via Hollywood

[edit]

A separate service operated locally all the way through toVenice after Beverly Hills via theSawtelle Line. Cars on theVenice via Hollywood Line began running out of the Subway in August 1928. This service lasted until August 1941.[14]

Shuttle routes

[edit]
  • TheColdwater Canyon Line ran from Beverly Hills station to theBeverly Hills Hotel by way ofRodeo Drive. It began service under the Los Angeles and Pacific Railway in 1907.[15] Pacific Electric ran through cars to downtown viaSan Vicente Boulevard andVenice Boulevard no later than October 1912 until October 1916. The shuttle was discontinued in 1923.[16]
  • TheLaurel Canyon Line ran from Gardner Junction to the foot ofLaurel Canyon by way ofSunset Boulevard. The route was originally a steam line of the Cahuenga Valley Railroad.[3] The line was regularly through-routed Downtown until about November 1921 when it became a shuttle route from Laurel Canyon to the main Hollywood line at Gardner Junction. The branch was abandoned in 1924.[17]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

 This article incorporates text from afree content work. Licensed under thepublic domain as a work of theState of California. (license statement/permission). Text taken from1981 Inventory of Pacific Electric Routes​, California Department of Transportation.Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

  1. ^Veysey 1958, p. 20
  2. ^Crump 1977, p. 92
  3. ^abcWalton, Dick (August 31, 1954)."Buses Replace Cars Sept. 26".Citizen-News. Hollywood, California. pp. 1–2. RetrievedFebruary 13, 2026 – via Newspapers.com.
  4. ^ab"L. A. & P. Made Broad Gauge in One Night".Santa Ana Register. September 15, 1909. p. 1. RetrievedJuly 29, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^"Getting Cars Ready".Los Angeles Daily Times. June 23, 1909. p. 10. RetrievedFebruary 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^"Hollywood Line". Electric Railway Historical Association of Southern California.
  7. ^Veysey 1958, p. 86
  8. ^Veysey 1958, p. 19
  9. ^Veysey 1958, pp. 20, 22
  10. ^Veysey 1958, p. 22
  11. ^"Hollywood Line Trains Bowing Out".Los Angeles Mirror. September 22, 1954. p. 14. RetrievedNovember 30, 2023 – via Newspapers.com.
  12. ^Walker 2006, p. 35
  13. ^ab"Pacific Electric 626".Southern California Railway Museum. RetrievedAugust 25, 2021.
  14. ^Veysey 1958, pp. 91–93
  15. ^"Coldwater Canyon Line". Electric Railway Historical Association of Southern California. RetrievedMay 3, 2024.
  16. ^Veysey 1958, p. 10
  17. ^Veysey 1958, p. 30

Bibliography

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Routes
Northern Division
Western Division
Southern Division
History
Infrastructure
Stations
Predecessors
Connecting services
Successors
Legacy
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