Here's another repost from my Jamaica Plain history blog Remember Jamaica Plain. Great stuff.
Boston Daily Globe   September 18, 1887
Boston Stage Coach Days.
Evolution of Locomotion in the Hub - From the Old Lumbering Buses to the Comfortable Horse Cars.
A  thousand horse cars now meander through the streets of Boston and its  suburbs each hour of the day. Trains on nine railways glide into and  empty hosts of passengers at as many stations in town at short intervals  during the day. The ferry boats from Chelsea and East Boston, and  sundry omnibuses that ply about our streets, add to the number making an  ingress until an aggregate of non-residents is reached amounting to a  quarter o four regular complement. These are again transported to their  homes at night.
What would happen to this mighty swarm of all the  means of conveyance were cut off for a time? Men and women abide with  us today who are still in active life, with vigorous memories recalling  the period when stage coaches, starting on alternate hours, were the  only means of conveyance to Roxbury, Cambridge or Charlestown, and these  seemed ample for the purpose intended. Five of these trips constituted a  day's business, and the number of passengers carried in the whole time  would not exceed a common horse car load at the present day.
This was but a little over 50 years ago. Compare it with out present status and observe how Boston as grown.
In  order to fully appreciate this matter and the progress of enlargement,  let us analyze the proceedings. Take the route to and from Roxbury as an  illustration. The enlivenment caused by the introduction of steam  railways in the early thirties, with their established stopping places  out of town, rendered it possible for an interchange of visits, and it  awakened desires in the thoughts of town residents that were novel.  Every favorable opportunity for making excursions was improved.
But  there came another longing in its train, a desire to create homes in  our beautiful suburbs, and it was to cater to this caprice that other  and better means of conveyance that the infrequent lumbering stage coach  were supplied by the omnibus - a series of omnibuses in fact, to wit,  five named President, Conqueror 1 and 2 and Regulator 1 and 2. These  were drawn by four horses, and carried 24 passengers inside, with seats  for six or eight more on top. The driver of these huge vans had naught  to do but to care for his horses, and obey the summons to stop or go on  given him by the bell boy, who looked up and attended to the passengers  and collected the fares.
These omnibuses made half-hourly trips  between 7 a.m. and 9 p.m. Business increased rapidly. Not only were  suburbans accommodated, but city people took frequent outings, similar  to the manner with horse cars now.
About 1840 a rival line  appeared with two omnibuses, named Vete and Thorn respectively; fare six  cents. Messrs Cheney & Averill also established  a line of  two-horse omnibuses (the first in Boston) to run between Dover street  and Dock square. This line became merged in another one in a short time  that was started by Hobbs & Prescott to run between Canton street  and Dock square, and this in process of time came into the ownership of  J.H. Hathorne & Co., who still own it.
About this period  likewise the first spider-like black cabs began to run, fare 10 cents,  and it was surmised that they would be popular because they were not  confined to arbitrary routes like the omnibuses, but they failed to  catch on, and had an evanescent existence.
Horace King, in whom  the Roxbury line became finally vested, was an enterprising man. He is  still alive today, or was recently, resting from a busy life upon the  resources gained from his skill in manoevering this line of omnibuses.  About 1850 Mr King made a radical change in the system, but supplanting  the "arks" was the four-horse omnibuses were called in disparagement,  with two-horse coaches of the New York pattern. The bell boys departed  likewise, much to the pleasure of the patrons, for they were a saucy and  overbearing set.
The driver took a hand - or rather a foot - in  regulating ingress and egress to the vehicle, by means of a strap  connected with the door, same as at present, and collected his freight  the same as his successors do, but the fares were taken by men who  boarded the coach midway of the Neck coming in, or between Dover and  Eliot streets going out. The fare was eight cents either way, no less  for short rides, and as the Canton-street line charged but five cents,  the short-distance riders took those 'buses as a rule, and the Robury  fare collectors were rarely eluded.
From omnibus to horse car was  another important evolution. This occurred in 1857, first on the  Cambridge route, then by the Metropolitan road.At first the service from  Roxbury was limited to two cars which ran experimentally. A line of  tracks with turn-outs was laid from the Norfolk House to Boylston  street. Great doubts were expressed as to the feasibility of this  innovation, and stress was placed upon the avowal that it would be  impossible to run the cars after a fall of snow.
No attempts were  made for several years to remove the snow and run cars in winter, but  to offset this state the company purchased the omnibus line of Mr King,  and made him a stockholder and director in the new enterprise. The  runners were provided for the deposed omnibuses and they handled the  winter traffic.
The first president of the corporation, Hamilton  Willis, a State-street broker, handled the reins on the inaugural of the  winter siege of coach running, much to the edification of the crowd  assembled to see him off.
The next move made by the Metropolitan  road to enlarge its service was to lay a single track through Boylston,  Tremont and Dover streets, to connect with the main track on Washington  street for the return trip.Cars likewise came down Tremont street, from  Jamaica Plain, Brookline and "Grab Village," and passed through Waltham  street, to connect with the Washington street track, returning by a spur  track about Dover street on Tremont street.
The next move was  made to the Tremont House, and business so increased that double tracks  were laid through the thoroughfares before long. Here is a good place to  make a note. In 1857 - 30 years ago - the Metropolitan road owned and  operated four cars. The number in use today is over 600; but this is  only a section of the means of conveyance which our citizens and those  prosecuting business here have at their command.
 
Grab Village? Anyone know what that refers to?
ReplyDeleteI had the same question when I first read this. Unfortunately, I couldn't find another reference to that place-name.
DeleteAnswer coming soon!
Delete