Source: Unknown.Omnibus, London, Late 19th CenturyAlthough the first omnibus services appeared in Nantes in 1826 and
Bordeaux in 1827, the first wide scale commercial public transit ventures
began in 1828 in Paris. Stanislas Baudry, a retired French general,
had been experimenting with a scheme to draw new customers to his steam-bath
venture outside Nantes. Baudry introduced a type of stagecoach operation,
which, as it turned out, did not benefit his steam bath, but did prove
popular as a means of transportation. This transport service was given
the name omnibus as a play on words. The city terminus
for the service was located adjacent to a hatter by the name of Omnes,
whose sign read "Omnes Omnibus". The term seemed appropriate since omni
(Latin for all people) could use the service for a fee, regardless of
class. These early buses carried up to fourteen passengers. By 1836,
there were 16 omnibus operators in Paris, covering 35 routes.The innovation was carried to London in 1829 by George Shillibeer,
a successful English coach maker, who had been working in Paris. As
in France, the omnibus was used mostly by middle-class commuters. By
1854, more suburban commuters used the omnibus than steamboat and railroad
combined. The North American experience with the omnibus, although less
enduring than in France, proceeded at a quicker pace. Abraham Brower,
a Manhattan stagecoach operator who had started business in 1827, created
the first omnibus venture in the United States. The innovation was soon
adopted elsewhere, for example, in Philadelphia and Boston in the 1830s
and Baltimore in the 1840s. In Canada, omnibus services also flourished
in the larger cities of Toronto, Montreal and Halifax during the middle
of the nineteenth century.The omnibus was first adapted to a fixed rail system in 1832 by John
Mason, president of the Chemical Bank of New York and operator of the
N.Y. & Harlem Railroad. The smooth ride and low floor of these new horse-cars
provided passengers with superior comfort. The widespread adoption of
this technology to other cities was limited until engineers were able
to design a rail that could be installed flush with the street surface.
In 1853 New York opted to replace the elevated rails with this new,
obstruction-free design, and other cities followed suit:
1832 New York
1835 New Orleans
1856 Boston
1858 Philadelphia
1859 Baltimore, Pittsburgh and Chicago
1861 Toronto
The adoption of this new technology was less rapid in Europe. Paris
approved their first streetcar railway in 1854 after considerable grumbling
by skeptical officials. A six fold increase in ridership between 1855
and 1890 eventually confirmed the popularity of the horse-drawn railway
among the citizens of Paris. Rail-based horse cars were introduced in
England in 1860, but adoption was never widespread. By 1882 the North
American transit industry had ballooned to include 415 street railway
firms, 35 000 workers, 18 000 cars, 100 000 horses and mules, over 3
000 miles of track and total capital investment of $150 million. The
time was right for the formation of a professional trade association
to represent the young industry. The American Street Railway Association
was therefore formed in Boston in December in 1882 by representatives
from across the United States and Canada.The founding of this new trade organization coincided with a period
of technical innovation in public transit. Both San Francisco and Chicago
had opened cable-car lines to address the many deficiencies of horse-drawn
travel, including the need to have large stables to supply fresh horses
and the need to remove both snow and manure from the tracks. Cable cars
were quickly adopted in a number of cities. In 1893, cable-car trackage
peaked at 305 miles spread among 59 companies operating in 27 cities.
No Canadian systems converted from horse-cars to cable-cars, which is
just as well since the successful application of electricity quickly
rendered the cable systems obsolete, with the notable exception of San
Francisco. Within a few of years of its initial introduction in 1888, most major
cities in North America had adopted the electric street car including
Ottawa (1890); Winnipeg (1891); Toronto, Montreal and Hamilton (1892);
and Halifax (1896). Outside North America, the street car is commonly
referred to as a Tram.