Northern Virginia trolleys


The earliest electric railway, or streetcar line, in Northern Virginia opened in 1892. At their peak, when merged into a single interurban system, the successors of this and several other lines ran between downtown Washington, D.C., Rosslyn and Arlington Junction - in present-day Crystal City - and out to Mount Vernon, Fairfax City and Nauck.
Electric trolleys also went west from Georgetown and Rosslyn on the Washington and Old Dominion Railway's Bluemont Division, traveling through Herndon and Leesburg to reach the town of Bluemont at the base of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Those on the W&OD's Great Falls Division traveled from Georgetown and Rosslyn via Cherrydale and McLean to Great Falls.
Despite early success, the trolleys were unable to compete with the automobile and with each other. Plagued with management and financial problems, the last ended their operations in the 1930s and early 1940s during the Great Depression.
Northern Virginia's trolleys were originally operated by three different companies that all planned to operate within the District of Columbia and were never integrated into the Washington streetcar network. Their tracks were laid when most of Northern Virginia was undeveloped and had few streets and roads.
As a result, the trolleys mostly operated on private right-of-ways that their companies leased or owned. After they began operating, a number of communities developed along their routes.
The major lines of the Washington-Virginia Railway converged at Arlington Junction, which was located in the northwest corner of the present-day Crystal City south of The Pentagon. The Railway's trolleys then crossed the Potomac River near the site of the present 14th Street bridges over the Long Bridge and, beginning in 1906, the Highway Bridge.
The trolleys then traveled to a terminal in downtown Washington located along Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, and D Street, NW, between 12th and 13 1/2 Streets, NW, on a site that is now near the Federal Triangle Metro station and the Old Post Office building within the Federal Triangle. The W&OD Railway terminated in Georgetown at a station on the west side of the Georgetown Car Barn after crossing the Potomac River from Rosslyn over the Aqueduct Bridge.
The Washington-Virginia Railway and the W&OD Railway had adjacent stations in Rosslyn near the present location of the Key Bridge Marriott Hotel, permitting travelers to transfer between the two trolley systems. After the Francis Scott Key Bridge replaced the Aqueduct Bridge in 1923, none of the Virginia lines terminated in Georgetown. Instead, Washington streetcars crossed the river on the new bridge and entered a turnaround loop within Rosslyn. There, passengers could transfer between trolleys whose lines separately served Washington and Northern Virginia.

Washington-Virginia Railway

Washington, Alexandria, and Mount Vernon Electric Railway

Washington-Mount Vernon line

The Washington, Alexandria, and Mount Vernon Electric Railway began operating between Alexandria and Mount Vernon in 1892. On August 23, 1894, it was given permission to enter the District of Columbia using a boat or barge. However, the railroad never actually used any such watercraft.
The railroad completed its tracks in 1896 and began serving a waiting station at 14th Street NW and B Street NW in downtown Washington, D.C. From the waiting station it used the Belt Line Street Railway Company's tracks on 14th Street NW to reach the Long Bridge, a combined road and rail crossing of the Potomac River.
In 1902, the railroad moved its station, as the Belt Line's tracks were circling the block containing the site of a planned new District Building. The new station extended along Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, and D Street, NW, from 12th Street, NW, to 13 1/2 Street, NW, near the site of the present Federal Triangle Metro station and on the opposite side of 12th Street from the Old Post Office building.
In 1906, the Long Bridge's streetcar tracks and road were relocated to a new truss bridge, immediately west of the older bridge. This span was removed in 1967.
After crossing the Potomac River, the trolleys entered Arlington County to run southward near and along the present route of Interstate 395. They then reached Arlington Junction, whose site is now in the northwest corner of Crystal City west of Richmond Highway and south of The Pentagon and I-395. At the Junction, the line's route diverged from that of a line that traveled west to Fairfax City and which connected to others that served Arlington National Cemetery, Rosslyn and Nauck.
After leaving Arlington Junction, trolleys on the Washington-Mount Vernon line continued south along the present route of S. Eads Street while travelling largely on the grade of a towpath on the west side of the defunct Alexandria Canal. Near Arlington's present southern border at Four Mile Run, the railroad and its affiliates constructed an amusement park and a rail yard containing a car barn and a power plant.
After crossing Four Mile Run into present-day Alexandria, the trolleys continued to travel south along the present route of Commonwealth Avenue. The Mount Vernon line then passed under a bridge at St. Elmo that carried the Bluemont branch of the Southern Railway and later the branch's successor, the Bluemont Division of the W&OD Railway. The lines' St. Elmo stations, located in Alexandria's present Del Ray neighborhood, gave travelers an opportunity to transfer between the railroads.
The Mount Vernon line's trolleys then continued southward along Commonwealth Avenue until reaching King Street near Alexandria's Union Station. The line's trolleys then turned to travel east on King Street until they reached a station at Royal Street, in the center of Old Town Alexandria next to Market Square. They then turned again, traveled south on S. Royal Street and crossed Hunting Creek to enter Fairfax County on a -long bridge containing a concrete and steel center span and trestle.
After traveling through New Alexandria, where the line had originated, the trolleys continued south through Fairfax County at speeds of up to per hour while traveling partially along the present routes of the George Washington Memorial Parkway, East Boulevard Drive and Wittington Boulevard. After crossing Little Hunting Creek, they reached a turnaround loop on which they traveled to a terminal constructed near the entrance to the grounds of George Washington's home in Mount Vernon.
At Mount Vernon, when the electric railway began service, the estate's proprietors insisted that only a modest terminal be constructed next to the trolley turnaround. They were afraid that the dignity of the site would be marred by unrestricted commercial development and persuaded financier Jay Gould to purchase and donate thirty-three acres outside the main gate for protection.
By 1906, the railway had transported 1,743,734 passengers along its routes with 92 daily runs. Passengers and others could read a 122-page Hand-book for the Tourist Over the Washington, Alexandria and Mount Vernon Electric Railway that described in detail the railway's routes and stations as well as the landmarks, history and geography of the area through which the railway traveled.
In 1913, the Washington, Alexandria, and Mount Vernon Electric Railway merged with the Washington, Arlington & Falls Church Railway to form the Washington-Virginia Railway. During World War I, the railroad company extended the Washington-Mount Vernon line to Camp Humphreys. As the company received only partial compensation for constructing the extension, the action placed a financial burden on the company. The company went into receivership in 1923 when buses became the dominant form of local public transportation.
In 1927, the two railways were separated and sold at auction, the Washington-Mount Vernon line becoming the Washington, Alexandria and Mount Vernon Railway. The last trolleys of the line ran on January 18, 1932. Later that year the tracks were removed when some of the right-of-way was used for the George Washington Memorial Parkway. The path of the trolley turnaround at Mount Vernon remains as a traffic circle at the south end of the Parkway, while the former rail yard in southern Arlington now serves as a Metrobus yard.
Stations
The stations on the Washington-Mount Vernon Line of the Washington, Alexandria, and Mount Vernon Electric Railway were :
StationLocationJurisdictionMiles from
Washington Terminal
NotesCoordinatesImage
Camp HumphreysFort BelvoirFairfax County
Mount VernonSouth side of traffic circle at Mount Vernon EstateFairfax County15.8
OakwoodGeorge Washington Memorial ParkwayFairfax County
MillerNear west bank of Little Hunting CreekFairfax County
RiversideWittington Boulevard and Bluedale StreetFairfax County14.7
HunterWittington Boulevard and Elkin StreetFairfax County14.2
North Mount VernonFort Hunt Road, south of Old Stage RoadFairfax County
GrassymeadEast of Fort Hunt Road, north of Waynewood BoulevardFairfax County13.1
SnowdenWest Boulevard Drive and Collingwood Road Fairfax County13.1Named for Isaac, William and Stacey Snowden
Herbert SpringsEast Boulevard Drive and Herbert Springs RoadFairfax County12.9
ArcturusEast Boulevard Drive and Arcturus LaneFairfax County12.8
WellingtonEast Boulevard Drive, southwest of Wellington House at River FarmFairfax County12.5
Bellmont
George Washington Memorial Parkway and Alexandria AvenueFairfax County12.1
Happy HomeFairfax County
WarwickGeorge Washington Memorial Parkway and Morningside LaneFairfax County
DykeGeorge Washington Memorial ParkwayFairfax County11.3
OaksGeorge Washington Memorial ParkwayFairfax County
New AlexandriaPotomac Avenue and Belle Haven RoadFairfax County9.6
UnnamedNear S. Royal Street and Hunting CreekCity of Alexandria
AlexandriaKing and Royal StreetsCity of Alexandria7.7
Spring Park King Street and Commonwealth AvenueCity of Alexandria6.7
RosemontRosemont Avenue and Commonwealth AvenueCity of Alexandria
North RosemontWalnut Street and Commonwealth AvenueCity of Alexandria
BraddockBraddock Road and Commonwealth AvenueCity of Alexandria6.0
North BraddockCommonwealth AvenueCity of Alexandria
LloydWindsor Avenue and Commonwealth AvenueCity of Alexandria5.7
Del RayDel Ray Avenue and Commonwealth AvenueCity of Alexandria5.6
Mount IdaMount Ida Avenue and Commonwealth AvenueCity of AlexandriaHistorical marker near site of station: The Electric Railway
St. AsaphCommonwealth Avenue, between Forrest Street and Ancell StreetCity of Alexandria5.6Served St. Asaph Racetrack.
Historical marker near site of station: St. Asaph Racetrack

HumeIntersection of Hume Avenue, Mount Vernon Avenue and Commonwealth AvenueCity of AlexandriaHistorical marker near site of station: Mount Vernon Avenue
St. ElmoCommonwealth Avenue near Ashby StreetCity of Alexandria4.8Crossing of W&OD Railway's Bluemont Division
Historical marker near site of station: The Bluemont Line
Four Mile RunNear present intersection of S. Glebe Road and S. Eads StreetArlington County4.1Historical marker near site of station: Transportation
Car BarnIn bus yard east of S. Eads StreetArlington CountyFormerly in rail yard
Luna ParkWest side of S. Eads StreetArlington CountyAdjacent to amusement park in present site of sewage treatment plant
Aurora Hills26th Street S. and S. Eads StreetArlington County
Virginia Highlands23rd Street S. and S. Eads StreetArlington County
Addison18th Street S. and S. Eads StreetArlington County3.2
Arlington JunctionBetween Army-Navy Drive and 12th Street S and between S. Eads Street and Richmond Highway Arlington County2.7Junction with the East Arlington branch of the Washington, Alexandria, and Mount Vernon Railway and later with the South Arlington branch of the Washington—Virginia Railway
South WashingtonNear I-395Arlington County
Alexander IslandNear I-395 between Boundary Channel Drive and George Washington Memorial ParkwayArlington County2.1
Washington Terminal1204 N. Pennsylvania Avenue
West side of 12th Street, NW, between Federal Triangle Metro Station and Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
District of Columbia0At corner of 13 & 1/2 Street, NW, and Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, in 1902.
Remnants of the Washington-Mount Vernon line
The Washington, Alexandria, and Mount Vernon Electric Railway constructed the East Arlington branch, which traveled from Arlington Junction to the Virginia end of the Aqueduct Bridge in Rosslyn. After leaving Arlington Junction, the East Arlington branch traveled northwest along a route that was south of the future site of The Pentagon, crossed Columbia Pike and entered Mt. Vernon Junction. At that Junction, the East Arlington branch met the South Arlington branch, which the Washington, Arlington & Falls Church Railroad constructed.
After leaving Mt. Vernon Junction, the East Arlington branch crossed the southern boundary of the federally-owned "Arlington Reservation". The site of the crossing was at that time near the southeast corner of Arlington National Cemetery, which was within the Reservation. After entering the Reservation, the branch turned to travel north along the eastern side of Arlington Ridge Road, which was outside of the Cemetery near the Cemetery's eastern wall.
While traveling next to Arlington Ridge Road, the branch passed the Cemetery's McClellan and Sheridan Gates. An expansion of the Cemetery later encompassed this portion of the Road, whose route no longer exists within the Cemetery.
Construction of the branch permitted visitors from Washington, D.C., to reach the Cemetery by rail for the first time. However, after leaving the trolleys outside of the Sheridan Gate at the branch's Arlington station, visitors needed to ascend a steep hill to reach most of the Cemetery's well-known features and burial sites.
After passing its Arlington station, the branch crossed the north boundary of the Reservation and turned to travel northwest until it met Rosslyn's Chadwick Avenue, on which it traveled north. The branch ended near the Aqueduct Bridge at the railway's Rosslyn terminal.
East Arlington branch stations
The stations of the East Arlington branch were :
StationLocationJurisdictionNotesCoordinates
RosslynN. Lynn Street near Key Bridge Marriott HotelArlington CountyEast of W&OD Railway station. 1925 photo
ArlingtonArlington National CemeteryArlington CountyOutside of the now-demolished Sheridan Gate of Arlington National Cemetery
Queen CityNear present crossing of Columbia Pike and South Joyce StreetArlington CountyOutside of the south boundary of Arlington National Cemetery
Mount Vernon JunctionNear present east crossing of Columbia Pike and Washington Boulevard Arlington CountyJunction with South Arlington branch of Washington, Arlington & Falls Church Railway
ReleeI-395 between S. Fern Street and S. Eads Street, south of The PentagonArlington CountyNamed for Robert E. Lee
Arlington JunctionBetween Army-Navy Drive and 12th Street S and between S. Eads Street and Richmond Highway Arlington CountyJunction with Washington-Mount Vernon line

Washington, Arlington & Falls Church Railway

During its forty years of life, this interurban trolley company operated under a variety of names, as it repeatedly expanded, reorganized or contracted.
Washington & Arlington — 1892–1896
On February 28, 1891, the United States Congress enacted a statute that incorporated the Washington and Arlington Railway Company in the District of Columbia, with authorization to reach Fort Myer and the northwest entrance of Arlington National Cemetery by crossing the Potomac River on a new bridge that the company would construct at or near the "Three Sisters" islets. The system started in 1892, as a horsecar line with tracks from Rosslyn up the hill to the Cemetery's Fort Myer Gate - this would later become the Nauck Line. In late 1895, the system was electrified. The company never constructed its planned "Three Sisters" bridge.
Washington, Arlington & Falls Church — 1896–1913
In 1896, track was laid from Rosslyn through Clarendon and Ballston to Falls Church, constituting the North Arlington Branch and part of the Fairfax Line, and the name was changed to the Washington, Arlington & Falls Church. The track though Fort Myer was extended past the northwest entrance to Arlington National Cemetery to reach Penrose in 1900 and Nauck, just north of Four Mile Run, in 1901. That same year saw the opening of about a mile of additional track, extending from East Falls Church to West Falls Church. Work on a far more ambitious extension began at West Falls Church in 1903, bringing the line through Dunn Loring and Vienna in 1904 to reach the Fairfax County Courthouse in Fairfax City. Between 1900 and 1904, the W.A & F.C. built the South Arlington branch from Clarendon to Mount Vernon Junction, where it met the Washington, Alexandria and Mt. Vernon Railway's East Arlington branch, which traveled between Rosslyn and Arlington Junction.
Washington - Virginia — 1913–1927
In 1913, the WA&FC and Washington, Alexandria & Mt. Vernon were merged to form the Washington - Virginia Railway, whereupon the WA&FC became the W-V's Falls Church Division. The company fell upon hard times and in 1924 declared bankruptcy. In 1927, the two companies were split and sold at auction.
Arlington & Fairfax — 1927–1936
The Arlington & Fairfax was organized by local governments to take control of the WA&FC line after the W-V went bankrupt. The South Arlington Branch was shut down, the tracks pulled up in 1931 and the right of way used to build part of Washington Boulevard. In 1932, the company lost the right to travel into D.C., and, on January 17, 1932, the last Arlington & Fairfax streetcar departed from 12th & D Streets, NW, abandoning all service in Washington, D.C.
Arlington & Fairfax Auto Railroad — 1936–1939
In 1936, the company was sold to Detroit's Evans Products Company, an innovative railway and automotive industry supplier that had developed the first version of the present hy-rail system called auto-railers, small buses that can run on rails on flanged wheels or on roads with rubber. In 1937, Evans replaced the trolleys with auto-railers. On rail, they went to Rosslyn where they were intended to switch to tires and cross the Key Bridge into Georgetown, eliminating the change in Rosslyn, but Capital Transit prevented that service by objecting that its franchise gave it exclusive service across the bridge. The auto-railers last ran in September 1939.

Nauck line (Fort Myer line)

Originally constructed by the Washington, Arlington and Falls Church Railroad, the Nauck line of the Washington—Virginia Railway ran south from Rosslyn through Fort Myer to an initially lightly developed area in South Arlington near Four Mile Run. After leaving the railroad's Rosslyn terminal near the Aqueduct Bridge, the line travelled south through Fort Myer Junction along the present routes of N. Lynn Street and N. Meade Street.
The line then turned to the southwest and crossed the northern boundary of the Arlington Reservation and Fort Myer near today’s Wright Gate. Within the Fort, trolleys on the line climbed a hill along the present route of McNair Road near the western wall of Arlington National Cemetery to reach a station located within the Fort at the present intersection of McNair Road and Lee Avenue, near the Cemetery's Fort Myer Gate.
After disembarking at the Arlington Fort Myer station, visitors could enter the Cemetery near its highest elevation. This permitted visitors to avoid the ascent required when entering the Cemetery through the Sheridan Gate after traveling on the East Arlington branch to that branch's Arlington station. After the East Arlington branch closed in 1921, the Nauck line provided the only rail service that visitors could use to reach the Cemetery.
After leaving the Arlington Fort Myer station, the line traveled south through Fort Myer before turning southwest to cross the South Arlington branch of the railroad's Fairfax line at Hatfield Junction. Passengers could transfer between the two lines at the railroad's adjacent Hatfield station.
Soon after leaving Hatfield Junction and continuing to travel southwest, the Nauck line crossed the west boundary of the Reservation and the Fort, a short distance north of the Fort's Hatfield Gate. The line then crossed the present path of Washington Boulevard, south of the Boulevard's crossing of Arlington Boulevard
The Nauck line then traveled southwest and south while partially following the present routes of S. Uhle Street and Walter Reed Drive. After crossing S. Glebe Road, the line traveled downhill near the west side of S. Kenmore Street to end at a railway turntable near the intersection of 24th Road S. and S. Kenmore Street. The line terminated a short distance north of the Cowdon station of the Southern Railway, and later, of the W&OD Railway's Bluemont Division.
Nauck line stations
The stations of the Nauck line were :
StationLocationJurisdictionNotesCoordinatesImage
RosslynN. Lynn Street near Key Bridge Marriott HotelArlington CountyEast of W&OD Railway station
Fort Myer JunctionEast of intersection of Fairfax Drive and N. Lynn StreetArlington CountyJunction with North Arlington branch of the Fairfax line
GrinderArlington County
Mount WashingtonArlington County
Radnor HeightsN. Meade Street and 14th Street N. Arlington County
Signal CorpsN. Meade Street immediately west of the Netherlands CarillonArlington County
Fort Myer StepsMarshall Drive and Stewart Road, Fort MyerArlington County
Arlington Fort Myer McNair Road and Lee Avenue, Fort MyerArlington CountyNear Fort Myer Gate of Arlington National Cemetery
Hatfield In Fort Myer, southwest of the intersection of Pershing Drive and Sheridan Avenue; east of Washington Boulevard and southeast of Arlington Boulevard Arlington CountyCrossing of South Arlington branch of the Fairfax line
HunterS. Uhle Street and S. Walter Reed Drive, near S. Courthouse RoadArlington County
PenroseS. Barton Street, between 2nd Street S. and 5th Street S.Arlington County
FulcherNear S. Barton Street and 3rd Street S.Arlington County
Munson Near S. Cleveland Street and 5th Street S.Arlington CountyNamed for Miles C. Munson
BradburyNear S. Walter Reed Drive and 6th Street S.Arlington CountyNamed for Bertha E. Bradbury
Arlington ColumbiaS. Walter Reed Drive and Columbia PikeArlington County
PettyS. Walter Reed Drive and 12th Street S.Arlington CountyNamed for Henry S. Petty
FoxS. Walter Reed Dr. and 16th Road S. Arlington County
Fort Berry19th Street S., west of S. Kenmore StreetArlington County
Corbett Between 19th Street S. and 22nd Street S., west of S. Kenmore StreetArlington CountyNamed for S.B. Corbett
Historical marker near site of station: Nauck: A Neighborhood History
Peyton22 Street S., west of S. Kenmore StreetArlington County
Nauck24th Street S., west of S. Kenmore StreetArlington County
Green Valley24th Road S., west of S. Kenmore StreetArlington County
Remnants of the Nauck line
The Washington, Arlington and Falls Church Railroad constructed the Fairfax line of the Washington—Virginia Railway. When completed, the line traveled from a terminus in front of the Fairfax County Courthouse in Fairfax City through Oakton, Vienna, Dunn Loring, Falls Church and Ballston to downtown Washington, D.C., and Rosslyn by way of Clarendon.
Trolleys of the Fairfax line began their trips at the old Courthouse, located at the southwest corner of Chain Bridge Road and Main Street. The cars first ran westward along Main Street and then turned north at the site of the Fairfax Electric Depot onto the present route of Railroad Avenue.
After crossing the present route of Fairfax Boulevard, the line crossed a branch of Accotink Creek and Chain Bridge Road. The line then traveled northeast through Fairfax County a short distance east of Chain Bridge Road, crossed another branch of Accotink Creek, passed through Oakton, and reached the town of Vienna.
The line continued northeast in Vienna about a block southeast of Maple Avenue W.. After crossing Center Avenue S, the line's trolleys turned to the northwest on one of three legs of a triangular wye and crossed Maple Avenue E. After leaving the wye, the trolleys stopped at the line's Vienna station.
The Fairfax line's Vienna station was located in the center of town on the southeast side of Church Street NE, a short distance southeast of the tracks of the Southern Railway's Bluemont Branch, which became the W&OD Railway's Bluemont Division in 1912. The Southern's Vienna station was a block northwest of the Fairfax line's station.
As the Fairfax line's tracks ended near Church Street, trolleys left their station by reversing direction. They then recrossed Maple Avenue E and traveled southeast on a second leg of the wye that paralleled the Southern's tracks, with which there was an interchange. Freight and work cars usually bypassed the station and avoided reversing by turning from the northeast direction to the southeast on the third leg of the wye.
After leaving the wye, the line continued east in Vienna on Ninovan Road, paralleling the Southern's route. The line then crossed the Southern's tracks on a bridge built near Franklin in 1904. After the crossing, the line traveled east in Fairfax County along the present routes of Electric Avenue and Railroad Street and within a railroad cut that is now in South Railway Street Park. The line then crossed the present route of the Capital Beltway, travelled along the present route of Helena Drive, crossed the present route of Interstate 66 and continued to travel within Fairfax County until it reached the City of Falls Church.
The line continued eastward through Falls Church until it crossed W. Broad Street. The line then travelled near the north side of the Southern Railway's tracks, following the present route of Lincoln Avenue until it reached Arlington County. After crossing Four Mile Run and Lee Highway, the line continued to travel eastward north of the Run and the Southern Railway while traveling near and along the present route of Fairfax Drive, which Interstate 66 and the Washington Metro's Orange and Silver lines have partially replaced.
The Fairfax line then left the Southern's route, which continued southwest to Alexandria. Further along, the line left that of the present route of I-66, which travels northeast to Rosslyn.
The Fairfax line then traveled along the present paths of Fairfax Drive and the underground tracks of the Washington Metro. Between 1912 and its closing, the line traveled under a plate girder bridge at Waycroft that the W&OD Railway had constructed near the west end of Ballston for its Thrifton-Bluemont Junction connecting line, which I-66 later replaced north and northeast of Ballston.
After entering Ballston, the line passed a complex containing a car barn, rail yard, workshops, electrical substation and general office that the Washington, Arlington and Falls Church Railway had built in 1910 at Lacey near the present intersection of North Glebe Road and Fairfax Drive. Continuing eastward through Ballston on the present route of Fairfax Drive, the line reached Clarendon, where it branched.
The North Arlington branch continued to follow the route of Fairfax Drive through and past Clarendon. The branch then traveled downhill on the present route of Fairfax Drive along the north side of Rocky Run, which U.S. Route 50 now covers.
Approaching Rosslyn, the North Arlington branch turned to the north at Fort Myer Junction and joined the Nauck line. The combined lines then continued north along the present route of N. Lynn Street, joined the East Arlington branch, and ended near the Aqueduct Bridge at the railroad's Rosslyn terminal.
Beginning in 1906, travelers on the North and East Arlington branches and the Nauck line could transfer at the Rosslyn terminal to the Great Falls and Old Dominion Railroad, which crossed the Potomac River into Georgetown on the Aqueduct Bridge. After the East Arlington branch closed in 1921 and the Aqueduct Bridge closed in 1923, travelers on the North Arlington Branch and the Nauck line could transfer in Rosslyn to the electric streetcars of the Capital Traction and Capital Transit Companies, which crossed the Potomac on the Francis Scott Key Bridge.
After leaving Clarendon, trolleys on the South Arlington branch largely followed the future routes of Washington Boulevard and Southgate Drive. The branch crossed the Nauck line at Hatfield Junction and joined the East Arlington branch at Mount Vernon Junction. After leaving Mount Vernon Junction, the branch's trolleys traveled on the East Arlington branch's tracks until they reached Arlington Junction, where they joined the Washington-Mount Vernon line.
After entering the tracks of the Washington-Mount Vernon line, the South Arlington branch's trolleys crossed the Potomac River on the Long Bridge and, later, on the Highway Bridge. Their trips ended at the downtown Washington station.
I-66 and the Custis Trail now travel from Lee Highway in East Falls Church to Ballston on or near the Fairfax line's right of way along the former route of Fairfax Drive. Washington Metro's Orange and Silver Lines now follow the route of the Fairfax line and its North Arlington branch from Lee Highway in East Falls Church to N. Lynn Street in Rosslyn.
Fairfax line stations
The stations of the Fairfax line were :
StationLocationJurisdictionNotesCoordinatesImages-
Fairfax CourthouseMain Street and Chain Bridge Road City of FairfaxAfter 1907-
Fairfax Electric DepotMain Street and Railroad AvenueCity of Fairfax1904–1907
Replaced by freight depot.
Historical marker at site: Arlington-Fairfax Electric Railway
-
Cedar AvenueCedar AvenueCity of Fairfax-
Wiley-
Martinique--
BlakeBlake LaneFairfax County-
SangerFairfax County-
Oakton2923 Gray Street Fairfax CountyContained a post office and general store. Built in 1905. Preserved by Northern Virginia Conservation Trust. Station listed on National Register of Historic Places in 1995.
-
EdgeleaEdgelea Road and Courthouse RoadFairfax County-
ShockeyHidden RoadFairfax County-
Five OaksSutton RoadFairfax County-
BothwellFairfax County-
Lewis StreetWade Hampton Drive SW and Millwood Court SWTown of Vienna-
LibraryLibrary Lane SWTown of Vienna-
Courthouse RoadCourthouse Road SWTown of Vienna-
ViennaNear Dominion Road NE and Church Street NETown of Vienna

-
Park StreetPark Street SE and Ninovan Road SETown of Vienna-
Tydidi Name uncertain--
FranklinIntersection of Electric Avenue and Follin Lane SETown of ViennaNortheast of crossing of the W&OD Railway's Bluemont Division-
WoodfordElectric Avenue and Woodford RoadFairfax County-
East WoodfordElectric AvenueFairfax County-
Wedderburn HeightsElectric AvenueFairfax County-
EnolaElectric Avenue and Cedar LaneFairfax County-
Dunn LoringRailroad Street and Gallows RoadFairfax County-
RobeyFairfax County-
IdlewoodIdlewood Road and Helena DriveFairfax County-
BurrFairfax County-
Antrum-
West Falls Church 1101 West Broad Street near Falls AvenueCity of Falls ChurchStation at stationmaster's residence.
-
East Falls ChurchLee Highway and Fairfax Drive Arlington CountyTicket depot and post office in grocery store.
.
-
Ashdale I-66 near N. Roosevelt StreetArlington County-
HysonI-66 near N. Quesada StreetArlington CountyNamed for I.S. Hyson-
HeightsI-66 between N. Quantico and N. Potomac StreetArlington County-
Highland ParkI-66 near N. Powhattan StreetArlington County-
UptonN. Ohio Street and I-66Arlington CountyNear Fostoria Station of W&OD Railway's Bluemont Division-
KearneyN. Kennesaw Street and I-66Arlington CountyNamed for Blanche Kearney-
TorreysonI-66, east of Patrick Henry DriveArlington CountyNamed for A. Duke Torryson-
Veitch SummitN. Jefferson Street and Fairfax DriveArlington CountyNamed for George A. Veitch-
MulhallN. Harrison Street and Fairfax DriveArlington CountyNamed for Bertha A. MulhallFairfax Drive, east of N. George Mason Drive
SunnysideN. Edison Street and Fairfax DriveArlington County-
BurchFairfax Drive, east of N. George Mason DriveArlington CountyNamed for Mary S. Burch-
WaycroftN. Buchanan Street and I-66Arlington CountyWest of crossing of the Thrifton-Bluemont Junction connecting line of the W&OD Railway’s Bluemont Division.-
Lacey Car Barn907 N. Glebe Road Arlington CountyIn rail yard east of crossing of the Thrifton-Bluemont Junction connecting line of the W&OD Railway’s Bluemont Division.
Historical marker at site: Lacey Car Barn
Present site of Marymount University Ballston Center
-
LaceyN. Glebe Road and Fairfax Drive Arlington CountyNamed for Robert S. Lacey-
BallstonN. Stuart Street and Fairfax Drive Arlington CountyOpposite side of Fairfax Drive from Ballston-MU Metrorail station entrance.
Historical marker near site: Ballston
-
Bolivar N. Pollard Street and Fairfax Drive Arlington County-
FarleeN. Nelson Street and Fairfax Drive Arlington CountyNear Virginia Square-GMU Metrorail station-
BelaireFairfax Drive Arlington County-
ClarendonN. Washington Boulevard and Clarendon BoulevardArlington CountyJunction with North Arlington branch and South Arlington branch
Near Clarendon Metrorail station
-
Remnants of the Fairfax line
Constructed by the Washington, Arlington and Falls Church Railroad as part of the Fairfax line, the North Arlington branch of the Washington—Virginia Railway connected Clarendon and Rosslyn. The branch traveled northeast from Clarendon along the present routes of Clarendon Boulevard, Fairfax Drive and N. Lynn Streets, approximating the present underground routes of Washington Metro's Orange and Silver lines. The branch turned to the north when joining the Nauck line at Fort Myer Junction, joined the East Arlington Branch while traveling north along the present route of N. Lynn Street and ended near the Aqueduct Bridge at the railroad's Rosslyn terminal.
North Arlington branch stations
The stations of the North Arlington branch were :
StationLocationJurisdictionNotesCoordinates-
ClarendonN. Washington Boulevard and Clarendon BoulevardArlington CountyJunction with North Arlington branch and South Arlington branch


Near Clarendon Metrorail station
-
Spruce StreetClarendon Boulevard and N. Fillmore Street Arlington County-
Oak StreetClarendon Boulevard and N. Edgewood Street Arlington County-
Walnut StreetFairfax Drive and N. Cleveland StreetArlington County-
Chestnut StreetFairfax Drive an N. Barton Street Arlington County-
CourtlandsArlington County-
Court HouseFairfax Drive and N. Courthouse Road Arlington County-
MurphyFairfax Drive between N. Rhodes Street and N. Rolfe Street, ArlingtonArlington County-
McCombsFairfax Drive Arlington County-
Baltimore StreetFairfax Drive and N. Quinn StreetArlington County-
Wolz Fairfax Drive and N. Queen StreetArlington County-
Military RoadFairfax Drive, between the north end of N. Ode Street and the south end of Fort Myer DriveArlington County-
HeightsFairfax Drive, north of the north end of N. Nash StreetArlington CountyNamed for Radnor Heights-
Fort Myer JunctionEast of intersection of Fairfax Drive and N. Lynn StreetArlington CountyJunction with Nauck line
RosslynN. Lynn Street near Key Bridge Marriott HotelArlington CountyEast of W&OD Railway station-
Remnants of North Arlington branch
Constructed by the Washington, Arlington and Falls Church Railroad, the South Arlington branch of the Washington—Virginia Railway connected the railway's North Arlington and East Arlington branches when traveling between Clarendon and Mt. Vernon Junction. After most of the East Arlington branch closed in 1921, the South Arlington branch continued along the remaining route of that branch until it reached Arlington Junction, where it connected with the railway's Washington-Mount Vernon line.
Eastbound trolleys using the branch while traveling to downtown Washington began their trips on the Fairfax line and entered the branch at Clarendon. The branch traveled from Clarendon southeast along the present route of Washington Boulevard and crossed the western boundary of the Arlington Reservation and Fort Myer.
After entering the Fort, the South Arlington branch crossed the Fort Myer-Nauck line at Hatfield Junction. The branch then traveled south until leaving the Fort and other federal property within the Reservation when crossing the Reservation's southern boundary near the Fort's present South Gate.
The branch then traveled east along the present route of Southgate Road, now immediately south of Henderson Hall, Fort Myer and Arlington National Cemetery. After passing the Cemetery's southeast corner, the branch reached Mt. Vernon Junction, where it joined the East Arlington branch, which was originally a branch of the Washington, Alexandria and Mt. Vernon Electric Railroad.
South Arlington branch stations
The stations of the South Arlington branch of the Washington—Virginia Railway with locations of sites in 2008) were:
StationLocationJurisdictionNotesCoordinates
ClarendonWashington Boulevard and Clarendon BoulevardArlington CountyJunction with Fairfax line and North Arlington branch


Near Clarendon Metrorail station
South Spruce StreetWashington Boulevard and 10th Street N.Arlington County
Vinson Washington Boulevard and N. Pershing DriveArlington County
Hatfield In Fort Myer, southwest of the intersection of Pershing Drive and Sheridan Avenue; east of Washington Boulevard and southeast of Arlington Boulevard Arlington CountyCrossing of Fort Myer-Nauck line
St. JohnIn Fort Myer, near the Hatfield Gate; west of the intersection of Sheridan Avenue and Carpenter DriveArlington County
RadioIn Fort Myer; near Hobson Drive, MacArthur Circle and Carpenter DriveArlington CountyIn Fort Myer, northeast of the NAA
SyphaxSouthgate Road and S. Oak StreetArlington CountyNamed for the estate of Maria Syphax
ClarkBetween Southgate Road and the United States Air Force MemorialArlington CountyNamed for John W. Clark
Mount Vernon JunctionNear present east crossing of Columbia Pike and Washington Boulevard Arlington CountyJunction with East Arlington branch of the Washington, Alexandria, and Mount Vernon Railway
ReleeI-395 between S. Fern Street and S. Eads Street, south of The PentagonArlington CountyNamed for Robert E. Lee
Arlington JunctionBetween Army-Navy Drive and 12th Street S. and between S. Eads Street and Richmond Highway Arlington CountyJunction with Washington-Mount Vernon line of Washington, Alexandria, and Mount Vernon Railway
Remnant of South Arlington branch
On October 19, 1994, the Virginia Department of Historic Resources added the Oakton trolley station to the Virginia Landmarks Register. The National Park Service subsequently added the trolley station to the National Register of Historic Places on February 8, 1995.
VDHR staff have determined that several other properties associated with the Washington and Virginia Railway Company/Washington, Arlington and Falls Church Electric Railway are not eligible for listing on the NHRP. As of February 6, 2018, the staff had not found any other such properties to be eligible for this listing.

Washington and Old Dominion Railway

Maps

and Great Falls.