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North Yonge Railways

North Yonge Railways
F1266 it21145 Radial reopening, cutting tape - 19300718.jpg
Tape cutting ceremony at the opening of the North Yonge Railways
Locale Toronto
Dates of operation 1930–1948
Predecessor Metropolitan Railway Company and later Toronto and York Radial Railway (Metropolitan Division)
Successor TTC - 59 North Yonge (until 1977) and 97 Yonge
GO Transit 62 Newmarket B and 63 Yonge C (1975-2003)
York Region Transit - 98 Yonge North and 99 Yonge South (2003-present)
Viva Blue BRT (2006-present)
Track gauge 4 ft 10 78 in (1,495 mm) Toronto gauge
Length 13.55 miles (21.81 km) - Toronto to Richmond Hill
Headquarters Toronto

The North Yonge Railways was a radial line operated by the Toronto Transportation Commission's from 1930 to 1948 between Glen Echo (Toronto) and Richmond Hill.

On July 17, 1930, the TTC's Lake Simcoe line (previously known as the Metropolitan line) running from Glen Echo (Toronto) to Sutton was closed being replaced by bus service. However, three months later on October 9, 1930, the portion from Glen Echo to Richmond Hill reopened as the North Yonge Railways. To restart service, the Townships of Markham, Vaughan, Richmond Hill and North York had acquired their portion of the line and contracted with the Toronto Transportation Commission to run it. The TTC assigned cars 409-416 to service the line operating out of the Eglinton Division carhouse. Service was hourly from Glen Echo to Richmond Hill, every 30 minutes to Steeles Avenue with more frequent service during rush hours.

Service on the North Yonge Railways ended 18 years later on October 9, 1948. The TTC had insufficient funds to replace the worn-out infrastructure such as rails and cars, or to double-track the line which was being considered. An electrical power shortage provided an excuse to temporarily replace the radial cars by buses for six months. At the end of the six months, North York Township advised residents that buses would be less expensive than rail vehicles to service Yonge Street. A plebiscite in September 1949 voted to make the bus replacement permanent.

The service was replaced by the Toronto Transportation Commission's North Yonge bus route in 1948. North Yonge bus was renumbered as 59 North Yonge route (after 1956) which ran from Eglinton Avenue and (later from Sheppard Avenue when 97 Yonge route extended northwards and the Yonge Subway was extended north to Finch) to Richmond Hill. 59 North Yonge route ended in 1977 and take over by 97 Yonge, but with bus service to Steeles Avenue (looping east on Yonge and Steeles Avenue East).

Service north of Steeles Avenue was provided by a number of other operators. In 1975 GO Transit began bus service (initially contracted to Gray Coach) from the TTC 59 North Yonge route with the Newmarket B/Route 62 and Yonge C/Route 63 from York Mills subway station (later from Finch Station) to Richmond Hill GO Station and terminating at Newmarket. In 2003 GO Transit transferred Yonge C bus service to York Regional Transit's bus which runs two local routes 98 Yonge North (Richmond Hill to Newmarket) and 99 Yonge South (Richmond Hill to Finch Station). In 2005 VIVA Blue was added to provide express service from Finch Station to Newmarket. All three York Region routes terminate at the Newmarket Bus Terminal at Eagle Street West and Davis Drive.


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Wikipedia

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