词条 | History of surface transit in Northern Virginia |
释义 |
Trolleys{{Main|Northern Virginia trolleys}}Northern Virginia did not have any street railways until 1892, when the Washington, Alexandria and Mount Vernon Electric Railway (WA&MV) opened an electric trolley line between Alexandria and Mount Vernon. It merged with the Washington, Arlington and Falls Church Railway (WA&FC) in 1913 to form the Washington-Virginia Railway. The company entered bankruptcy in 1924, and in 1927 the two former systems were split. The WA&MV was bought by the owner of the Alexandria, Barcroft and Washington Rapid Transit Company, a competing line of buses, and last ran in 1932; the WA&FC was reorganized as the Arlington and Fairfax Railway and operated until 1939. A third system, the Washington and Old Dominion Railway (W&OD), began in the 1850s as the Alexandria, Loudoun and Hampshire Railroad, a steam railroad. It was leased by the newly formed W&OD, which in 1912 connected the line to the electrified Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad. Electric trolleys last ran in 1941, but the company continued to operate freight trains (and passenger trains until 1951) until 1968. Local buses{{See also|List of Metrobus routes (Washington, D.C.)}}Until 1973, when WMATA began operating buses, the local buses in Northern Virginia were operated by two companies. The Alexandria, Barcroft and Washington Transit Company (AB&W) mainly operated along and south of Columbia Pike, while the Washington, Virginia and Maryland Coach Company (WV&M) mainly operated along and north of Arlington Boulevard. {{Main|Alexandria, Barcroft and Washington Transit Company}}The AB&W's first route was along Columbia Pike, now Route 16, in 1921. It eventually acquired a number of other routes, including several local Alexandria routes. {{Main|Washington, Virginia and Maryland Coach Company}}The WV&M acquired several routes in the late 1920s, mainly operating west from Rosslyn. In 1947, the WV&M absorbed the Arlington and Fairfax Motor Transportation Company, the successor to the Arlington & Fairfax Auto Railroad, but closed the route in 1948.[3] Intercity busesUntil 1987, when Greyhound Lines acquired Continental Trailways (part of the Trailways Transportation System), there were two systems of intercity buses - Greyhound and Trailways - in Northern Virginia. {{As of|2007}}, the only two routes still operated are southwest to Charlottesville via U.S. Route 29 and south to Richmond via U.S. Route 1. Greyhound's system once included three lines: one west to Winchester along State Route 7, operated by Capitol Greyhound Lines, one west to Winchester via U.S. Route 50, operated by Atlantic Greyhound Lines, and one south to Richmond via U.S. Route 1, operated by Richmond Greyhound Lines. These were all started in the 1920s and joined Greyhound by the early 1930s. {{Main|Virginia Trailways}}Virginia Trailways, officially Virginia Stage Lines, had lines west on State Route 55 to Front Royal, west on U.S. Route 211 to Luray, southwest to Charlottesville via U.S. Route 29, and south to Richmond via U.S. Route 1 and State Route 2. The first one of these operated by Virginia Stage was to Charlottesville; by 1936, it was operating all four. The company joined Trailways and changed its business name to Virginia Trailways in 1938. References1. ^Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, {{cite web|url= http://www.wmata.com/metrobus/maps/va.pdf |title=Metro System Route Map - Virginia and Washington, DC }} {{small|(4.83 MiB)}}, October 2005 {{DEFAULTSORT:History Of Surface Transit In Northern Virginia}}2. ^{{cite web|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150918174233/http://www.wmata.com/bus/timetables/va/13a-g.pdf?n|archivedate=2015-09-18|url=http://www.wmata.com/bus/timetables/va/13a-g.pdf?n|date=2011-09-25|title=Timetable: Metrobus Routes 13F,G: Reagan National Airport-Pentagon-Washington Line|publisher=Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority|accessdate=2016-01-03}} 3. ^{{cite news|title=N. Va. Trolley Era Stirs Last Echo: Landmark Bows to Fire, Wreckers|last=Templeman|first=Eleanor Lee|work=Northern Virginia Sun|date=1958-12-13}} 3 : Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority|Transportation in Alexandria, Virginia|Transportation in Arlington County, Virginia |
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