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Rainier
Avenue was built later and was a two-lane dirt road
beside the tracks. Because of the mud it was "paved"
with wood planks laid crossways the entire length of
the valley. With more people coming into Rainier Valley
a two lane road was added on each side of the tracks
and was paved with paving bricks from the "Denny Renton"
brickyard in Renton.
Note the car on the left is an open-ended car that could
be quite miserable for the motorman in our wet northwest
winter weather. However pioneer motorman Will Brown
stated in a newspaper interview that it had its advantages.
He took his shotgun along on his runs through the uninhabited
woods and meadows that were in abundance at that time
in Rainier Valley and occasionally bagged a bird or
two for dinner.
When
firewood was needed on cold winter days for the streetcarØs
pot bellied stove the motorman would stop in a wooded
area and the passengers would all get off and help to
gather wood along the tracks. The fare was 4 cents from
the foot of the Washington Street counter balance in
downtown Seattle to Columbia Station and an additional
5 cents to Rainier Beach Station.
The
lower photo shows car number 104, a steel streetcar
with a center door that was built by the Moran Shipbuilding
Company here in Seattle. This photo was taken in 1915,
24 years later than the one above. The men standing
in front of the car were the same crew and others that
were in the photo of 1891. The man with a newspaper
in his hand at the left is Dr. Snyder. He was the newsboy
in the 1891 photo. This photo was taken from almost
the same location as the 1891 photo. The building at
the far left, with an awning is currently the Rainier
Office Supply Co.
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