Seattle Renton & Southern Railway -- King County's First True Interurban

  • By Walt Crowley
  • Posted 10/17/1999
  • HistoryLink.org Essay 1756

The Seattle Renton & Southern Railway built King County's first true interurban railroad beginning in 1891, and spurred development of the then largely agricultural Rainier Valley. The line was begun by J. K. Edmiston and extended by W. J. Grambs, Frank Osgood (1852-1934), and W. R. Crawford. In 1912, its name was changed to the Seattle & Rainier Valley Railway. The line suffered from safety problems, lack of capital, and lax management. The City of Seattle attempted to buy it in 1914 and finally (in 1936) revoked its franchise. The last Renton inturban finished its run early on the morning of January 1, 1937. The rails were removed and paved over to widen Rainier Avenue S.

First True Interurban

Beginning in the late 1800s, the City of Seattle promoted the development of streetcar lines by awarding franchises and street-use permits to private developers. Frank Osgood built the city's first line in 1884 and shuttled passengers up and down 2nd Avenue on horse-drawn streetcars. Three years later, J. M. Thompson constructed a cable car line between Pioneer Square and the distant "suburb" of Leschi, on the west shore of Lake Washington. Leschi, then undeveloped, is now firmly entrenched as a Seattle neighborhood. Frank Osgood retired his "hayburners" in 1889 and began using electricity to drive his expanding streetcar system. Other developers followed suit and before long a tangle of privately owned electric streetcar and cable car lines crisscrossed Seattle.

Amid this period of entrepreneurial enthusiasm, J. K. Edmiston undertook development of the County's first "interurban" railroad to link Seattle with cities to the south. Seattle issued a franchise for the new Rainier Avenue Electric Railway on July 21, 1891. Edmiston built his line up Washington Street to 14th Avenue S, then to Jackson Street and south along the route of today's Rainier Avenue.

Historian Leslie Blanchard describes Rainier Valley as an "almost uninhabited wilderness" at the time and credits the Rainier Avenue Electric Railway for spurring the area's development. The line hauled produce as well as passengers, linking Rainier Valley farmers with downtown Seattle shoppers.

Soon after service began, Edmiston lost control of the railway to W. J. Grambs, who extended it to Columbia City and then to Rainier Beach. The aforementioned Frank Osgood took over in 1895 and one year later, pushed the rails south to Renton, creating King County's first true interurban rail transit service, which was renamed the Seattle Renton & Southern Railway (SR&S).

Derailments

Osgood sold the SR&S to W. R. Crawford in 1907. Crawford introduced the region's first true interurban railway cars -- self-propelled electric railroad cars considerably larger than conventional streetcars -- which residents dubbed "Bull Moose." The SR&S remained independent after 1900, when the owners of the Seattle Electric Company consolidated control of most of Seattle's streetcar system and later began development of new interurban lines to Tacoma and Everett.

Although a busy and vital transit conduit, the SR&S suffered from an assortment of travails. Chronic mismanagement led to one of the region's worst transit accidents in 1909. Later, an attempt to impose zoned fares sparked a passenger riot.

On March 7, 1911, disgruntled Seattle voters approved an $800,000 bond to purchase the SR&S and put it under municipal management. The line's owners immediately raised their asking price to $1.2 million, which the City refused to pay. The bond funds were diverted in 1914 to create a city-owned streetcar line to Ballard, and Seattle took over operation of all remaining streetcar lines in 1919 -- except for the SR&S.

End of the Line?

The SR&S declared bankruptcy in 1912 and was reorganized as the Seattle & Rainier Valley (S&RV) Railway, but service did not improve with the new name. The S&RV stubbornly refused to allow the City to pave Rainier Avenue between its tracks, creating what residents called a "thoroughfare of death" as drivers and pedestrians tried to cross the central streetcar rails. The City Council retaliated by refusing to renew the line's franchise in 1934. Two years later, the City ordered the S&RV to rip up its lines so Rainier Avenue could be widened and resurfaced for automobiles.

The last Rainier Avenue interurban car finished its run at 1:45 a.m., January 1, 1937. City buses took over the route. By early 1941, Seattle's remaining interurbans and streetcars would share the same fate.

In 1999, the old route of the Renton Interurban prompted a new controversy as Sound Transit proposed to run “Link” light rail trains down Rainier Ave. and Martin Luther King Jr. Way (formerly Empire Way). Few local critics recalled that their Rainier Valley neighborhood owed its existence in large part to the “light rail” system of a century earlier.


Sources:

Leslie Blanchard, The Street Railway Era in Seattle: A Chronicle of Six Decades (Forty Fort, PA: Harold E. Cox, 1968; Walt Crowley, Routes: A Brief History of Public Transportation in Metropolitan Seattle (Seattle: Metro Transit, 1993).


Licensing: This essay is licensed under a Creative Commons license that encourages reproduction with attribution. Credit should be given to both HistoryLink.org and to the author, and sources must be included with any reproduction. Click the icon for more info. Please note that this Creative Commons license applies to text only, and not to images. For more information regarding individual photos or images, please contact the source noted in the image credit.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License
Major Support for HistoryLink.org Provided By: The State of Washington | Patsy Bullitt Collins | Paul G. Allen Family Foundation | Museum Of History & Industry | 4Culture (King County Lodging Tax Revenue) | City of Seattle | City of Bellevue | City of Tacoma | King County | The Peach Foundation | Microsoft Corporation, Other Public and Private Sponsors and Visitors Like You