SAN FRANCISO RAILWAY MUSEUM – IT’S ALL ABOUT VINTAGE STREETCARS
by Ted and Sylvia Blishak

High on Adventure, May 2015

 

It would make sense to call this museum the "San Francisco Streetcar Museum" even though the street cars, also known as trams or trolleys, belong to the San Francisco Municipal Railway. They do qualify as trains, however, in that their steel wheels roll on steel tracks.

San Francisco Railway Museum sign

San Francisco's Municipal Railway (Muni) has assembled  a diverse collection of working vintage streetcars, trolleys, and trams. Up to 20 of these “Moving Museums,” wearing their original colors, carry passengers along Market Street and The Embarcadero every day.  Popular with both locals and tourists, they transport riders back to earlier decades. The motors vibrate and rumble, and as Judy Garland once sang, “…….clang, clang, clang went the trolley.”  

Milan streetccar in San Francisco
Streetcar from Milan, Italy, 1920s.

In 1892,  streetcars began service here in  San Francisco, replacing steam trains, horse drawn carts, and some cable cars (which had been running here since 1873).  

San Francisco Railway Museum onboard warning sign
An on-board sign from the 1950s warning of the dangers of stepping off a trolley car.       

  

San Francisco streetcar motorman t-shirt 
A copy of an actual tee-shirt worn by motormen to discourage chit-chat is for sale here.

The current display is called ‘”Car vs. Car” with photos showing how automobiles impacted streetcars (literally!) showing what happens when autos or trucks challenge streetcars. The sturdy streetcars usually survive with little damage, but not so the unfortunate wrecked vehicles. One photo shows a crumpled automobile lying on its side next to a trolley. 

San Francisco Railway Museum motorman's platform San Francisco Railway Museum, inside motorman's platformThe museum displays a motorman’s platform from a 1911 streetcar
where visitors can stand at the controls and play motorman.

Large colorful wall calendars along with a collection of books, tee-shirts, posters, postcards, and other souvenirs are for sale here.

When World War II started, many of the conductors and motormen were drafted into the armed forces,  leaving the San Francisco Municipal Railway short-handed.  While previously they had hired only white males, this crisis forced Muni to change their requirements.  Thus women and people of color were eventually considered eligible. A true pioneer in this change was a determined, 15-year-old Maya Angelou.

"They turned me down, even though I lied about my age and said I was 18,” she remembers. “I really needed a job. I went back every day and sat in the employment department and kept asking. Finally they hired me as a conductor."

The city boasted fifty streetcar lines in the 1920s, but by 1982, there were only five lines remaining. They were run underground subway style. The other 45 lines were downgraded to “modern” motorcoaches.

San Francisco Railway Museum streetcar snatchers poster

But San Franciscans are proud of their history—they like to keep it visible. A non-profit volunteer group, called the Market Street Railway, stepped in 1983. Their mission was and continues today to educate the public to the value of historic transit.          

Mayor Dianne Feinstein, Muni, and local leaders arranged the Historic Trolley Festival which brought streetcars in from other cities and countries to run on Market Street, which they still do.

San Francisco Market Street streetcar

The most popular streetcars came from Blackpool, a coastal resort in Great Britain. These 1934 open-to-she-sky vehicles are called Boat Trams. One is in service now; another is under repair.

San Francisco Railway Museum boat tram poster

The Railway Museum is located on the corner of Steuart Street  and Don Chee Street, just one block off The Embarcadero and across from the Ferry Building. It is an excellent  spot from which to watch these streetcars at work as they turn from Steuart Street onto Don Chee Street, providing various angles appropriate for photographing.  

San Francisco streetcar turning corner

Admission is free. The museum is open Monday through Sunday 10:00am to 6:00pm, but closed Mondays during winter months.  

Ted Blishak, Train Travel Consulting at Accent on Travel.       ted@traintravelconsulting.com
NAMED ONE OF THE WORLD'S TOP TRAVEL SPECIALISTS BY CONDE NAST TRAVELER MAGAZINE SINCE 2002.
3939 S. Sixth St. Suite 331, Klamath Falls, OR 97603 Phone:  1 800 347 0645      http://www.traintravelconsulting.com

 
Ted and Sylvia
 

We are Ted and Sylvia Blishak, who not only write about trains, but also plan customized North America vacations -- with more experience booking rail trips than any other travel agents in the US!

Our travel agency, Train Travel Consulting, has been named as one of the World's Top Travel Specialists by Conde Nast Traveler Magazine since 2002.

Are you a vacationer who wants to travel at your own pace -- to destinations that you choose?

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