Northern Virginia trolleys
| Washington-Virginia Railway | |
|---|---|
Mount Vernon trolley terminal between 1910 and 1920 | |
| Operation | |
| Began operation | 1892 |
| Ended operation | 1941 |
The Northern Virginia trolleys were the network of electric streetcars that moved people around the Northern Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C., from 1892 to 1941. At its peak, the network consisted of six lines that connected Rosslyn, Great Falls, Bluemont, Mount Vernon, Fairfax, Camp Humphries, and Nauck, with two of the lines crossing the Potomac River into Washington, D.C.
Two companies were founded in 1892: the Washington, Arlington and Falls Church Railway Company and the Washington, Arlington and Mount Vernon Railway. A number of communities developed along their routes. In 1910, they merged into the Washington-Virginia Railway. Its major lines converged at Arlington Junction, in the northwest corner of present-day Crystal City south of the Pentagon, and in Rosslyn at the south end of the Aqueduct Bridge, near today's Francis Scott Key Bridge. From Arlington Junction, the W-V's trolleys crossed the Potomac River near the site of the present 14th Street bridges and traveled to a terminal in downtown Washington on a site that is now near the Federal Triangle Metro station. The W-V entered receivership in 1922, was split into two companies in 1927, and stopped operating trolleys by 1939.
A third company and its successors operated electric cars from 1906 to 1912 as the Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad; then from 1912 to 1941 as the Washington and Old Dominion Railway and the Washington and Old Dominion Railroad. One of the company's branches terminated in Georgetown at a station on the west side of the Georgetown Car Barn after crossing the Potomac from Rosslyn over the Aqueduct Bridge. After 1923, the branch no longer crossed into D.C.; instead, Washington streetcars crossed the river on the new Francis Scott Key Bridge to a turnaround loop in Rosslyn.
After early success, the trolleys struggled. They were unable to set their own prices and found it difficult to compete with automobiles and buses as roads were paved and improved. Much of the system was shut down in 1932 after the trolleys lost their direct connection to Washington, D.C., and the last trolley ran in 1941.
Most of what remains of the network was affiliated with the Washington and Old Dominion Railway, whose right-of-ways have mostly become trails and parks, parts of I-66, and Old Dominion Drive.