Milwaukee streetcar system map, 1904
Milwaukee streetcar system map, 1904
Milwaukee streetcar system map, 1904
Fifty-Three Studio

Milwaukee streetcar system map, 1904

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Milwaukee's streetcar system was run by The Milwaukee Electric Railway and Light Co. (TMER&L), which established a monopoly over both electricity and transportation in the late 19th century.  For most of its existence, the company was an unpopular outsider in Milwaukee.  The company was originally organized by a New York businessman named Henry Villard and local Republican boss Henry Clay Payne, who bought out most of Milwaukee's horse-pulled streetcar lines in the 1890s. After the economy crashed in 1893, the company declared bankruptcy, leaving the company's creditors - mostly local businessmen - holding the bag. 

This was the start of a long, tumultuous relationship between the city of Milwaukee and TMER&L.  The company was notoriously cheap, unresponsive to local demands,  and anti-union, leading Milwaukee's notoriously left-wing government to attempt to buy it out multiple times.  (None of these attempts were successful.)  Auto and bus competition, plus the Great Depression, hit TMER&L hard.  From 1938 onward, the company gradually abandoned all of its rail lines and replaced them with buses.  The last streetcars would run in 1958.

This map is based on a Teddy Roosevelt-era tourist's guide.

- Printed on satin finish 80# cover stock - 220 GSM in Nashville, Tennessee.
- Image will be printed with a border for framing.
- Please allow five business days for production before it gets shipped out.
- Free standard shipping within the US!

All designs I sell here are made by me! If there's something you'd like custom-made, shoot me a message.


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