MissMittens
One Too Many
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- Philadelphia USA
I think we're doing a Christmas trip. Hopefully there'll be some snow for the pictrues
A Streetcar Named Desire, it doesn't get much better.I'm new here. Are trolleys allowed in the trains thread? I am a volunteer trolley operator at the Shore Line Trolley Museum in East Haven, Connecticut. I am on the right in the photo below. I try to dress the part, with a jacket, etc., but when it's hot, we're down to shirtsleeves and a vest if we can stand it. The trolley in the photo is car 850 from New Orleans, built in 1922 by the Perley-Thomas Company (now building Thomas school buses) and operated in New Orleans until 1964, at which time it came to the museum. It's not the fastest or fanciest of our cars, but is one of my favorites.
View attachment 187104
We have approximately 100 vehicles in the museum's collection. I can post more if there is interest.
Rails run in the family: my great-grandfather worked for the New Haven Railroad, beginning in 1900. He became a fireman in 1902 and an engineer in 1907, so he would have been on the line when the switchover from steam to electric occurred going into Grand Central. His father was an engineer for the New Haven as well.
Really, in the UK, what is known in the USA as a Street Car, it is known here as Tram/Tramcar, it runs on two rails, with a single electric power pick up, usually from an overhead cable, (Some of the very early trams, did used to pick up from a 3rd rail underneath.) The other electric passenger vehicle here was called a Trolley Bus as shown in the bottom photo, it did not need to run on rails and collected the power from Two overhead lines. Sometimes, when trying turn a tight corner or roundabout or overtaking, the power pole would come of the wire and the conductor and driver had to take a long stick from underneath the vehicle to put the pole back on the cable.A Streetcar Named Desire, it doesn't get much better.
In the UK, that street car would be known as a tram. Like this:
View attachment 342351
View attachment 342352
Whereas Britspeak for a trolley is an electric road bus taking it's power from overhead cables.
The tram/trolley has been making a return to our roads, but one community has never scrapped them, see here: Blackpool Trams.