Pacific Electric’s Coldwater Canyon Line: From Rails to Hooves to Shrubs

Ralph Cantos Collection
Ralph Cantos Collection

By Ralph Cantos

This interesting photograph taken in January of 1923 shows Pacific Electric no. 175 (AKA “Submarine”) awaiting its departure time in front of the Beverly Hills Hotel.

The life of this line was about as short as the line itself. Sometimes referred to as the Rodeo Line, it was just over a mile in length, stretching from Santa Monica Boulevard on the south along Rodeo Drive to Sunset Boulevard on the north.

The line opened for business in 1907, five years before the famed Beverly Hills Hotel opened its doors in mid-1912. Someone at the Los Angeles Pacific Railroad must have had some “inside information” regarding the construction of the hotel, to have built this line five years in advance of the hotel’s grand opening.

Regardless of the circumstances, the line became more of a nuisance to the Pacific Electric than anything else. By 1915, the City Of Beverly Hills was fast becoming the home of the rich and famous. The Pacific Electric took over the line about 1911 and thereafter was “requested” to maintain the line and cars to a “much higher standard” than the PE was accustomed to. The cars were kept in spotless condition. The wooden line poles that ran the length of the single-track right-of-way in the center of Rodeo Drive were painted white, and the right-of-way itself, kept neat and clean.

All this for a line that never carried a standing load of passengers.

By January of 1923, the PE had enough of this nonsense and pulled the trolley pole down on the line on the 15th of the month.

After the rails and line poles were removed with all possible dispatch, the abandoned right-of-way became a bridle path for the elite of Beverly Hills. The life of the bridle path was almost as short as the life of the PE rail line. By the late 1930s, the elite of Beverly Hills were trading in “Dobbin” for Duesenbergs and the bridle path was abandoned.

The now twice-abandoned right-of-way was narrowed to about 6 feet in width and decorative shrubbery planted where Pacific Electric cars and horses once roamed. Rodeo Drive itself was repaved to accommodate the ever-increasing numbers of Duesenbergs, Packards and Pierce-Arrows now using the street.

Today, Rodeo Drive remains the only north-south street in Beverly Hills between Santa Monica and Sunset Boulevards with a center divider.

I doubt that ANYONE living on Rodeo Drive today would believe that a trolley line, much less a bridle path, ever passed in front of their multi-million dollar houses.

As a final note, a very nice waiting shelter was built out front of the Beverly Hills Hotel for the trolley line passengers that is still in use today by LAMTA buses.

Ralph Cantos Collection

Ralph Cantos Collection
PE’s curving right of way along Rodeo Drive looking south, with its white painted line poles in 1921. Ralph Cantos Collection
PE's right-of-way along Rodeo Drive in 1932, where horses now carry "passengers" that once rode the PE cars. Ralph Cantos Collection
PE’s right-of-way along Rodeo Drive in 1932, where horses now carry “passengers” that once rode the PE cars. Ralph Cantos Collection
Two hores riders in the center of Sunset Boulevard pull up to the former trolley waiting shelter in front of the Beverly Hills Hotel. It remains in service to this day for LAMTA bus riders. Ralph Cantos Collection
Two hores riders in the center of Sunset Boulevard pull up to the former trolley waiting shelter in front of the Beverly Hills Hotel. It remains in service to this day for LAMTA bus riders. Ralph Cantos Collection

LATL 1281 at Piedmont Avenue

Philipott and Baldridge Collection
Philipott and Baldridge Collection

Los Angeles Transit Lines car no. 1281 waits with traffic at the intersection of Piedmont Avenue and Figueroa in what appears to be U Line service. CORRECTION: It’s the W Line. Thanks, Ralph!

Philipott and Baldridge Collection

Here’s a contemporary view of this location:

LATL 1219 at the Grade Crossing

Philipott and Baldridge Collection
Philipott and Baldridge Collection

Los Angeles Transit Lines car no. 1219 on F Line service pauses before crossing perpendicular right-of-way (possibly Pacific Electric; note the overhead – confirmed by Ralph Cantos; it’s the Santa Monica Air Line).

Philipott and Baldridge Collection

LATL 1218 Up the Grade

Philipott and Baldridge Collection
Philipott and Baldridge Collection

Los Angeles Transit Lines car no. 1218 heads up the grade on W Line service in this undated photo.

Philipott and Baldridge Collection

LARy Construction Scene

Philipott and Baldridge Collection
Philipott and Baldridge Collection

We don’t know much about this image except that it’s identified with the following file name “Palm-Seville,” as presumably depicts Los Angeles Railway construction (note the open trench in the street to the right). Any help would be appreciated!

Philipott and Baldridge Collection

LA Railway Junction

Philipott and Baldridge Collection
Philipott and Baldridge Collection

Two unidentified Los Angeles Railway cars head in differing directions in this junction image of an unknown location. Note the stylish Plymouth car dealership in the background.

Philipott and Baldridge Collection

The Los Angeles Railway Motorman’s View

Philipott and Baldridge Collection
Philipott and Baldridge Collection

Here’s a rare glimpse of the view enjoyed by untold numbers of Los Angeles Railway motormen, including the car controllers and a full panorama of the front glass of an unidentified LARy streetcar. Remember – “Talking to Motorman Prohibited by Law.”

Philipott and Baldridge Collection

LARy 1545 on the W Line

 Philipott and Baldridge Collection

Philipott and Baldridge Collection

Los Angeles Railway car no. 1545 pauses for the photographer in this undated image from the W Line.

Philipott and Baldridge Collection