Hamilton Street Railway


The Hamilton Street Railway commonly known as the HSR is a public transport agency in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. The name is a legacy of the company's early period, when public transit in Hamilton was primarily served by streetcars. Although streetcars are no longer used in the city today, the HSR operates bus and paratransit services, with a ridership of 21 million passengers a year. The HSR uses the Presto card as its method of fare payment, allowing for connections with GO Transit and other transit systems in the Greater Toronto area.

History

From 1873 to 1889, the HSR was owned by Lyman Moore and operated as a private business. In 1889 HSR was sold to Hamilton Cataract Interests, later known as Dominion Power and Transmission Company. The HSR was later acquired by Ontario Hydro.
Provincial ownership ended in 1946 when HSR was bought by Canada Coach Lines. CCL was purchased by the city of Hamilton in 1960. Hamilton-Wentworth Region began ownership of CCL and HSR in 1977, and in 2001 regional amalgamation placed its ownership back to the city of Hamilton.

Other streetcar systems

Bus routes

Route histories

In the early 1990s the HSR eliminated many routes by expanding current routes. The following is a list of replaced and withdrawn routes:

Streetcar routes

The HSR operated horsecars from 1874 to 1892 and electric streetcars from 1892 to 1951. Trolley buses replaced streetcars in Hamilton in December 1950 and 1951.
Streetcar routes in Hamilton prior to 1951

  • Belt Line 1913-1946
  • * James St 1874
  • * King St 1874
  • * Bartonville shuttle 1907
  • Burlington-Westdale 1941-1946
  • * James Street North 1874 - later as Westdale-James North
  • * Burlington Street 1896 - opened by Hamilton Radial Electric Railway; later as Burlington-James South
  • * King Street West & Westdale 1874 - later as Westdale-James North 1930
  • Aberdeen-King West 1874-1947
  • * York Street 1874
  • * Herkimer Street between James and Queen 1883 - renamed King West-York 1892
  • * Aberdeen late 1870s by Hamilton & Dundas Street Railway; later acquired by HSR and merged by West Hamilton 1923; renamed Aberdeen-Stuart
  • * York & Aberdeen 1930 - replaced Aberdeen-Stuart line; sections closed 1939 and ceased operations along entire route 1947
  • Crosstown Shuttle 1924-1948
  • Firestone shuttle 1927-1939
  • Wentworth 1874-1913 - renamed Wentworth-Stuart and used until 1942

Trolley bus routes

were used by the HSR from 1950 to 1992 on the routes listed in the table below. Hamilton's trolley bus system opened on 10 December 1950, and the last day of trolley bus service was 30 December 1992.
Trolley bus routes of the HSR from 1950 to 1992

  • King-Barton
  • * later as 1 King - until 1990
  • * later as 2 Barton - until 1992
  • Cannon 1950-1989
  • * later 3 Cannon

Trans-Cab

Introduced in 1998 as a two-year pilot project, Trans-Cab is a shared-ride taxi service between HSR and specific local taxi providers, currently offered in portions of Glanbrook and Stoney Creek.

Accessible transportation

Accessible Transportation Services is the section that administers a variety of accessible services on behalf of the City
In 1981, during Bill Davis's Progressive Conservative administration, the Province of Ontario offered to finance the construction of a light rail line in Hamilton, from Lloyd D. Jackson Square to the Lime Ridge Mall.
The line would have used the same technology as the Scarborough RT in Toronto. The plans triggered a lot of grass-roots opposition, and Hamilton-Wentworth Council turned the proposal down.
The plan called for an elevated track—one of the elements that triggered opposition, with residents being concerned commuters would be invading their privacy, by looking down on their back-yards and in their second floor windows.
When the CBC News compared the rejected 1981 plan with the 21st Century rapid transit plan, they quoted the individual who had been the planning and development manager for Hamilton-Wentworth Regional Government, Doug Lychak, who pointed out that Vancouver's introduction of the same elevated light rail technology, just four years later, is widely acknowledged to have been very successful.
The 1980s light rail plans were to use the UTDC ICTS technology, but the project was scrapped and no lines were created for the HSR.
Hamilton and Metrolinx will build a provincially-funded LRT line in the early 2020s. Land acquisition and building demolition for a 14 kilometre line from McMaster University to Eastgate Square will proceed in 2019. No vehicles have been chosen, but the trains may be similar to the Flexity Freedom to be used in Waterloo Region's Ion rapid transit and Toronto's Eglinton Crosstown LRT.
In December 2019, the Government of Ontario cancelled the B-line LRT project in favour of providing investment in existing transit services.

Facilities

Barns/garages

Terminals and connections

HSR routes from downtown to the Mountain currently use MacNab Transit Terminal, while several lower city routes have an on-street terminal layover at the intersection of Main and James Streets. Route 34 has a layover location on Main at MacNab.
HSR connects with GO Transit at Hamilton GO Centre, which serves as the terminus for four HSR routes. The station, located at 36 Hunter Street East, a few blocks south of King and James, is the terminus of the Lakeshore West railway line and express Highway 407 and Queen Elizabeth Way GO Buses. It is also the main Greyhound Lines bus stop in Hamilton. Canada Coach Lines, once owned by HSR, is now served by Coach Canada, formerly Trentway-Wagar, and operates routes between Kitchener-Waterloo, Guelph, and Niagara. It is also the former Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo Railway passenger station, and there is a small museum above the public concourse. HSR routes 2 and 4 also connect with GO at Barton Street & Nash Road in East Hamilton, where a GO bus travels between there and the Burlington GO Station.
At the Mountain Transit Centre transfer point and a contract with Blue Line Taxi, the HSR also connects with other areas in the northwest portion of the former Glanbrook.
In addition, the HSR is connected with Burlington Transit, as one route travels into Burlington via Burlington Beach, 18 Waterdown connects with BT at Aldershot GO Station, and BT Route 1 enters downtown Hamilton from Plains Road West. Also '9 Rock Gardens' travels into Burlington going into the Royal Botanical Gardens during the summer months.

Other terminals and loops

LocationRoutes
Bell Manor Loop2, 55A
Eastgate Transit Terminal1, 10, 44, 55/55A, 56, 58
Glancaster Loop34, 44, Redeemer University College Shuttle
Lime Ridge Transit Terminal25, 26, 41/41A, 43, Mohawk East Extra Shuttle
McMaster University1A, 5A/5C, 51 run through or terminate at the University
5B/5E, 10, 52 pass nearby on Main Street
GO Transit bus service to & from Burlington GO Station
MacNab Transit Terminal20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 33, 35
Meadowlands5A/5C, 16, 41, 43, Redeemer University College Shuttle
Mohawk College Transit Terminal20, 21, 33, 35
Upper Horning Loop34A
West Hamilton Loop5C, 51

Fares

and HSR have partnered to operate the Presto electronic fare card. The project aims to standardize fare collection systems across transit agencies in the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area. The system is currently operational.

Gallery

Staff

Most staff at HSR are members of the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 107. The local was formed in 1899 and also represents transit workers at Mississauga Transit. The local does not represent those working on city's paratransit service, Disabled and Aged Regional Transportation System.