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Nom de l'objet : Photograph
Titre : Streetcar Crew Change in St. George's Square
Classification de l'objet : Costume 1900s Uniform, Street Car
Catégorie de l'objet : 8: Communication Artifact
Sous-catégorie de l'objet : Documentary Artifact
Médium : Paper, Cardboard/Paper, Photographic
Numéro d'accession : 1982.37.24
Culture : Canadian
Date de début de production : 1896
Date de fin de production : 1905
Date absolue : circa 1900
Description : Black and white photograph adhered to a dark grey coloured cardboard mount. Mount has been trimmed and remounted on white card. It is a view of 3 Guelph Street Railway cars in St. George's Square, Guelph. Post Office Building is in the background, blacksmith fountain in the centre. There is snow on ground. Spire of St. George's Church is visible. Several Guelph Street Car Co. employees are standing in front of the fountain.In white ink on original mount is "CREW CHANGE
Fonctions : This photograph is taken from a large montage of photographs of the employees of the Guelph Street Railway. The photographs, on the original mount have been separated and remounted on new cardboard. There is a Charles Wilson listed in 1900, Guelph in the Ontario Photographers Book. In 1877, the Guelph Street Railway Co. was formed to construct a railway operated by horsepower (as in other large urban centres). The scheme was eventually dropped because a charter couldn't be obtained. Finally in 1894, George Sleeman, owner of the Silvercreek Brewery and several times mayor of Guelph, approached the city for a charter to run a city railway. He was granted the charter, but the conditions were that he wouldn't gain much profit from the railway, but could run lines anywhere in the city. Sleeman wanted to run continuous shifts at the Silvercreek Brewery at the end of Waterloo Avenue, and run people back and forth from his company location. He later built a park and skating rink behind the brewery and sold combination return railway fare/park admission tickets. May 1, 1895, the first spike of the railway was driven by Sarah Sleeman, George's wife, in front of the Sleeman mansion (now The Manor) opposite the brewery on Waterloo Avenue. On Sept. 17, 1895, the first car operated over the line. The railway had been operating for only a year when the first fatality occurred: on October 10, 1896, Mrs. George Truckle was run over by a streetcar of the Guelph Railway Co. To prevent further fatalities, protective fender called the "cowcatcher" was invented in 1899; unlucky pedestrians could then be safely scooped out of the way. Sleeman sold this device to other cities such as Montreal and Sarnia. In 1902, the banks took control of the company of the company as a result of defaulted loans, and in 1903 it was purchased by the city. The city had wanted to gain possession of the franchise from Sleeman that gave him almost exclusive control of all the streets in Guelph. The city also wanted to be in a position to consider any proposals that might come from any company or corporation desiring to build a line to connect Guelph with other municipalities, thereby reducing the railway company's deficit. As such, the name was changed to the "Guelph Radial Railway Co." However, the idea of extending rail car lines out to surrounding municipalities was never realized. Eventually, most North American street railways came under public ownership when public service and private profit came to be seen as incompatible. The street railway was only marginally profitable in the best of years; it was felt that it, indirectly, would be of value by helping to build up out-lying sections of the city, an advantage to manufacturing establishments and their employees. Between 1902 and 1906, passenger traffic doubled but power problems occurred because the generators could not handle the increased traffic. At the time of its construction and for 2 decades after, the railway was mainly an instrument for civic boosterism. Rapidly rising costs and deferred maintenance created an unfavourable opinion of the railway in the minds of Guelphites about 1918-1919. From then until streetcars were removed from service on Sept. 30, 1937, they were as much a liability as an asset to the city. In 1920, Ontario Hydro took over the street railway, but by 1926 had decided to drop railway operations. Unfortunately, there were no willing buyers because the deficit would have to have been assumed by the new owners. The biggest attack on streetcars came in 1926 when the first bus line opened in a part of Guelph not served by the streetcars; the experiment proved successful and more buses were bought until they eventually replaced passenger streetcars altogether on Oct. 1, 1937. Freight service on the railway ceased in 1939.
Unité de mesure linéaire : cm
Établissement : Guelph Museums  Facebook-Guelph Museums  Twitter-Guelph Museums 
Ville de l'établissement : Guelph
Province de l'établissement : Ontario

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