The Watts Line was a local line of the Pacific Electric Railway that operated between the Pacific Electric Building in Downtown Los Angeles and the Watts Station at 103rd Street in Watts . It was the primary local service for the Southern District, which also included the Long Beach , San Pedro , Santa Ana and Whittier interurban lines. The route operated along the Southern Division's Four Tracks route, with the Watts Line using the outer tracks and the Long Beach line and other limited stop lines using the inner tracks.[ 1]
History
A Watts Line car at Slauson Junction , c. 1902
The local service operated between 1904[dubious – discuss ] [citation needed ] and November 2, 1959.[ 2] The line was quadruple-tracked in 1907.[ 3] [ 4] During the 1910s, its service was combined with the South Pasadena Line of the Northern District. From 1938 to 1950, the line was combined with the Sierra Vista Line ,[ 5] which was the main local line in the Northern District. Streetcars were removed and replaced with a parallel bus service on November 2, 1959.[ 4]
Tracks north of Washington Boulevard were removed or paved over (except a short spur track ) after PE service ended. In the late 1980s, the right of way was rehabilitated with one or two tracks used for freight rail (with electrification removed) and two tracks rebuilt to modern light rail specifications. Service along the line between Washington Boulevard and 103rd Street recommenced in 1990 as the Los Angeles Metro Blue Line (renamed the A Line in 2019), with stations at Washington Boulevard , Vernon Avenue , Slauson Avenue , Florence Avenue , Firestone Boulevard , and 103rd Street .
Stops and stations
The following were stops and stations along the Watts line:[ 6] [failed verification ]
Pacific Electric Building (6th & Main)
7th & Main
8th & Main
9th & Main
9th & Los Angeles
9th & Maple
STOP (9th between Wall & San Julian Street)
9th & San Pedro Street
STOP (9th between Crocker & Towne)
9th & Stanford
9th & Kohler
9th & Central Avenue
9th & Birch
9th & Hooper (begin Four Tracks)
14th Street
16th Street
Washington Blvd
20th Street
22nd Street
Amoco Junction – interchange with Air Line
Adams Boulevard
32nd Street
Jefferson Boulevard (now @ MLK Jr. Blvd)
38th Street
40th Street
Vernon Avenue
47th Street
48th Place
50th Place
52nd Street
55th Street
Slauson Avenue
Slauson Junction – interchange with Whittier
Fleming (62nd Street)
Spaulding (Gage Avenue)
Merrill Avenue (66th Street)
68th Street
Florencita Park (70th Street)
Florence Avenue
Ionia (76th Street)
Nadeau
Woodside (81st)
Edgewood Park (83rd Street)
Graham
Kent (88th)
Latin (92nd)
Elcoat (97th)
Watts (103rd)
References
External links
KML is not from Wikidata
Routes
Northern Division Western Division Southern Division
History Infrastructure
Predecessors Connecting services Successors Legacy