by ELLIOT CARTER

The image above was part of an intriguing but strange article published in the Washington Post in 1909. The 1,500 word piece laid out the vision for a subway very different from today's WMATA system. Instead of connecting the city center with suburban communities like the spokes on a wheel, this proposed subway was just a small loop that ran from Capitol Hill to the White House.

Our modern WMATA system is designed for commuters, with stations located near residential and employment centers. This Washington Post proposal mainly served to connect the big government buildings downtown. It would have been useless if you were trying to get to work, but could have whisked you from Union Station to the Patent Office in luxury.

In one aside, the Post offers that:

"[T]he common people might well be permitted to derive some of the advantages and benefits of its use, when those wearing togas and solemn visages do not tax the system to its utmost capacity."

It later clarifies that this public access will probably be limited to the summer months when Congress is in recess.

The proposed subway did have an interesting public-private partnership aspect. "If private corporations were to cooperate in the extension of the system one of the first steps naturally would be to install subway stations conveniently located for patrons of all the leading hotels of the city." The suggested list of stations included the Shoreham, Arlington, Willard, and Raleigh hotels.



Inspiration for the subway came from the recently constructed tunnel system that connected the Capitol Building with the Russell Senate Office Building and the Cannon House Office Building. A primitive people-mover was installed in the Russell tunnel that ran on a rail set into the floor.