Object Details
Summary
The collection documents the Chicago Surface Railway System.
Scope and Contents
The collection consists of blueprints, working drawings, line drawings, tracings, and plans of the Chicago Surface Railway system from 1896-1926; 1948. The majority of the drawings are on linen and are 24" x 36" or larger. Some of the drawings are annotated. The drawing number, title of drawing and the date are provided for each sheet.
sova.nmah.ac.0212
Creator
Chicago City Railway Company.
West Chicago Street Railroad Company.
Pennsylvania & West Virginia Railway.
Chicago Transit Authority.
Chicago Surface Lines.
Names
Chicago Board of Traction Supervising Engineers.
Chicago Consolidated Traction Company.
Chicago Railways Company.
Chicago Union Traction Company.
D.T. Steelwork Company.
Garden City Construction Company.
Gilbert Car Manufacturing Company.
Lake Street Elevated Railroad (Chicago, Ill.).
Former owner
National Museum of American History (U.S.). Division of Transportation
Names
North Chicago Street Railroad Company.
United States Construction Company.
Place
Chicago (Ill.)
Topic
Railroads -- Equipment and facilities
Railroads -- Rolling-stock
Railroad engineers
Civil engineers
Civil engineering
Railroads
Railroads -- Buildings and structures
Engineering and technology
railroads, cable
Provenance
Gift of the Chicago Transit Authority.
Creator
Chicago City Railway Company.
West Chicago Street Railroad Company.
Pennsylvania & West Virginia Railway.
Chicago Transit Authority.
Chicago Surface Lines.
See more items in
Chicago Surface Lines Drawings
Biographical / Historical
The first street cars in Chicago were horse cars run by the Chicago City railway Company and the North Chicago City railway Company around 1858-1861. This method, however, was slow and expensive, and the companies began substituting cable cars in the 1880s. Chicago City was the first railway company in 1881, with the addition of the Chicago Passenger Railway in 1883, and the West Chicago Street Railroad Company in 1887. Chicago had the largest cable railway system in the world.
In the 1880s, electric powered trolleys first became practical. The Chicago companies hesitated at first to install these faster and more efficient systems because of their heavy investment in cable cars. Smaller Illinois cities and the Calumet Electric Street Railway of the South Side of the city built successful systems, causing the Chicago companies to feel themselves dropping behind. By the mid 1890s most companies began the conversion to electricity.
The 1890s saw the consolidation of many of the Chicago companies and through this reorganization continued into the next century. In 1905 the city voted that the surface railways should come under municipal ownership but not operation, provided the companies rehabilitate their systems, and give the city the right to buy the property at a fixed value. In addition, new construction was to be approved by a new bureau, the Board of Traction Supervising Engineers.
The continuous reorganization was finally completed by the Unification Ordinance of 1913 which stipulated that all lines would come under the management of a single operating company called the Chicago Surface Lines (CSL). Four companies made up the CSL-the Chicago Railways Company, Chicago City Railway, Calumet and South Chicago Railway, and Southern Street Railway. At this time Chicago had the largest street railway system, the longest one-fare ride, the longest average ride, and the most liberal transfer privileges in the world.
The 1920s saw continued growth despite the increasing competition from the automobile, but the Depression dealt a heavy blow to traffic. By 1948 the Chicago Transit Authority, which took over the Chicago Surface Lines in 1927, had abandoned all but four lines in favor of buses. By 1958 the remaining lines were "bustituted."
Extent
4.6 Cubic feet (13 oversized folders)
Date
1880-1948
Custodial History
Collection transferred to the Archives Center from the Division of Transportation (now Division of Work and Industry) on July 2, 1996.
Archival Repository
Archives Center, National Museum of American History
Identifier
NMAH.AC.0212
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Tracings
Drawings
Blueprints
Citation
Chicago Surface Lines Drawings, 1880-1948, Archives Center, National Museum of American History.
Arrangement
The collection is divided into seven series:
Series 1: West Chicago Street Railroad Company
Series 2: Chicago Board of Traction Supervising Engineers/Chicago Railway Company
Series 3: Chicago Traction System (Car Drawings)
Series 4: Chicago Cable Blueprints
Series 5: Chicago Union Traction Company
Series 6: Pennsylvania & West Virginia Railway
Series 7: Miscellaneous
Processing Information
Collection processed by David Stevens and Robert Harding, August 1986
Rights
Collection items available for reproduction, but the Archives Center makes no guarantees concerning copyright restrictions. Other intellectual property rights may apply. Archives Center cost-recovery and use fees may apply when requesting reproductions.
Genre/Form
Tracings
Drawings
Blueprints
Restrictions
Collection is open for research.
NMAH.AC.0212
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ep8f18ea1eb-50e1-48e6-a09e-991265c857e8
NMAH.AC.0212
ACAH
Record ID
ebl-1503512513340-1503512513349-0
