Year-End Highlights from the SFMTA Photo Archive
By Jeremy Menzies
As we approach the close of 2019, here's a short "year in review" of our favorite history blog posts of the year. So climb aboard and have your ticket to the past ready, 'cause this trip back in time is about to depart!
First on this year's list is our celebration of the 80th anniversary of the 1939 Golden Gate International Exhibition on Treasure Island. We unveiled dozens of beautiful large-format photos of the GGIE in our February post.
A view of Treasure Island and the Golden Gate International Exposition from Yerba Buena Island circa 1939. The "Tower of the Sun" and other fairground buildings were transformed at night into canvases for intensely colorful light displays.
Following the GGIE up in March was our post on historic Muni women in celebration of Women's History Month.
Muni's first female inspector, Evelyn Wells, monitors a bus line in this 1979 shot.
April brought a big anniversary with the 100th birthday of the L Taraval Line, which opened on April 12, 1919.
An L Taraval streetcar ("magic carpet" car 1005) passes by 24th Avenue in this 1940 shot.
August marked a slightly smaller milestone of the 35th year of Muni's articulated buses-- extra long buses put into service on our heaviest lines for extra capacity.
One of Muni's first articulated trolley coaches is in testing on the 24 Divisadero route in this 1994 shot.
In September we announced the return of Sacramento-Clay Cable Car 19 ("Big 19") to passenger service, ending the cars 75-year hiatus from the hills of San Francisco.
Cable Car 19, or "Big 19" to distinguish it from Powell Street car 19, heads down Washington Street on a test run in August 2019. Check out Archive photo U01684 for a 1908 view of the car at this same location.
And to wrap up October this year, we rolled out a spooky post on the long-buried history of San Francisco's funeral streetcar services.
United Railroads Co. Funeral Car 3 rolls into Olivet Memorial Park in this 1905 shot.
We hope you’ve enjoyed this look back at the history we revealed in 2019, more photos and more history is on its way in 2020 and always plenty to look at on the SFMTA Photo Archive and Instagram. As you celebrate the close of 2019 and the start of a new decade, don't forget that all Muni lines are FREE on the night of New Years Eve, from 8pm to 5am New Years Day.
Published December 31, 2019 at 12:15AM
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