Pittsburgh Railways
Pittsburgh Railways was one of the predecessors of the Port Authority of Allegheny County. It had 666 PCC cars, the third largest fleet in North America and Chicago ). It had 68 streetcar routes, of which only three are used by the Port Authority as light rail routes. With the Port Authority's Transit Development Plan, many route names will be changed to its original, such as the 41D Brookline becoming the 39 Brookline. Many of the streetcar routes have been remembered in the route names of many Port Authority buses.
History
1895 to 1905 was a time of consolidation for the numerous street railways serving Pittsburgh. On July 24, 1895 the Consolidated Traction Company was chartered and the following year acquired the Central Traction Company, Citizens Traction Company, Duquesne Traction Company and Pittsburgh Traction Company and converted them to electric operation. On July 27, 1896 the United Traction Company was chartered and absorbed the Second Avenue Traction Company, which had been running electric cars since 1890.The Southern Traction Company acquired the lease of the West End Traction Company on October 1, 1900. Pittsburgh Railway Company was formed on January 1, 1902, when STC acquired operating rights over CTC and UTC. The new company operated 1,100 trolleys on of track, with 178.7 million passengers and revenues of $6.7 million on the year. PRC had over 20 car barns in the city as well as power stations. 1918 was the company's peak year, operating 99 trolley routes over of track.
The lease and operate business model proved hard to support and the company declared bankruptcy twice, first in 1918 lasting for 6 years and then again in 1938, this time lasting until January 1, 1951. Company costs rose in the early twentieth century. PRC faced constant pressure from the city to improve equipment and services. Workers walked out when a pay raise was rejected.
On July 26, 1936, PRC took delivery of PCC streetcar No. 100 from the St. Louis Car Company. It was placed in revenue service in August 1936, the first revenue earning PCC in the world.
Large scale abandonments of lines began in the late 1950s, usually associated with highway or bridge work.
Duquesne-McKeesport
Highway improvements in the Duquesne-McKeesport area resulted in the replacement of trolley services with buses on September 21, 1958.West End lines
The replacement of the Point Bridge with the Fort Pitt Bridge precipitated the abandonment of many routes to the West End, all on June 21, 1959. PRC was engaged in ongoing litigation over the failure of the Pennsylvania Public Utilities Commission to provide streetcar tracks on the new bridge. In the end the company was allowed to abandon of street track in situ and was awarded $300,000 as compensation. The litigation marked the beginning of significant abandonments: 90 percent of the network was dismantled over the next decade.Interurban
PRC Interurban Division ran an interurban trolley system linking Pittsburgh with towns in Washington County such as Washington, Charleroi and Roscoe.Charleroi
The origins of the Charleroi interurban line began in 1895 in Monongahela City, with the construction of a small street railway by the Monongahela City Street Railway Company. In 1900 the line was extended north to Riverview and in 1901 extended south to Black Diamond Mine. Here it turned inland, south along Black Dam Hollow. It met the northern end of the newly constructed Charleroi & West Side Street Railway at the now-disused Lock number 4 in North Charleroi.The Charleroi interurban line was cut back to the Allegheny County border at Library in June 1953 It continued to operate until the 1980s as 35 Shannon-Library and became the southern portion of 47L Library via Overbrook when Light Rail Vehicles replaced trolleys. The trolley loop was removed in 2004. In 2010 this line became the Blue Line – Library.
Washington
The Washington line was cut back to the county boundary at Drake in August 1953 and eventually became the 36 Shannon-Drake.This in turn became the southern portion of 42 South Hills Village. The final portion of the interurban from Dorchester to Drake was renamed 47 Drake, finally closing in 1999 and bringing to an end PCC Streetcar operation in Pittsburgh.
Diversification
The company acquired G. Barr & Co., a manufacturer of aerosol cans, in 1962, and bought Alarm Device Manufacturing Company in 1963. It received $16.558 million for the sale of the streetcar system to the Port Authority in 1964. In 1967, it was renamed to Pittway Corporation. Later, Pittway became best known as a manufacturer and distributor of professional fire and burglar alarms and other security systems. On February 3, 2000, Pittway was acquired by Honeywell.Rolling stock
Early types
were used by PRC between 1913 and 1924, a rarity for such cars in the U.S. Conventional single-deck stock formed the majority of the fleet.PCC types
PRC operated 666 PCCs on 68 routes; the second-largest fleet of new cars, starting with number 100, the first PCC to enter revenue service. The company took delivery of car 1600 in 1945, which was the prototype for the over 1,800 post-War “all-electric” PCCs built in North America. Cars 1700–1724, which were delivered in 1948, were equipped with special features for use on the interurban lines to Washington and Charleroi. These included B-3 trucks and a roof-mounted sealed-beam headlight.Number | Order Date | Builder & Order Nº | Price | Notes |
100 | Apr 6, 1936 | St. Louis Car 1603 | first PCC to enter revenue service | |
1000–1099 | Jul 18, 1936 | St. Louis Car 1604 | $15,715 | |
1100–1199 | Apr 1, 1937 | St. Louis Car 1610 | $16,000 | |
1200–1299 | Oct 16, 1937 | St. Louis Car 1620 | $15,900 | 1230 & 1278 equipped with B-3 trucks |
1400–1499 | May 27, 1941 | St. Louis Car 1633 | $17,034 | |
1500–1564 | Jun 16, 1942 | St. Louis Car 1639 | $19,000 | 1547 St. Louis Car order no. 1646 |
1600–1699 | Jan 14, 1944 | St. Louis Car 1646 | $20,000 | 1600 was All-Electric prototype ; destroyed May 18 1955 1630 equipped with ceiling fans & monitor roof; some rebuilt and renumbered into the 1700-series |
1700–1799 | Sep 22, 1947 | St. Louis Car 1669 | $28,350 | 1700–1724 B-3 trucks; 1725-1799 B-2B trucks |
4000–4013 | Port Authority Transit | c. $100,000 |
In 1950 the 100 was converted to instruction car M-11. Because replacement parts were no longer available, cars 1784 and 1779 were rebuilt in 1976 and 1977 respectively, with LRV-style flat fronts. In 1981 PATransit constructed cars 4000–4013 on new frames that utilized a mix of new parts and components salvaged from retired 1700-series cars. The last four PCCs were finally retired on September 4, 1999, having been replaced by Siemens SD-400 Light Rail Vehicles.
New Nº | Original | New Nº | Original | New Nº | Original | ||
4000 | 1702 | 4005 | 1719 | 4010 | 1757 | ||
4001 | 1720 | 4006 | 1767 | 4011 | 1733 | ||
4002 | 1740 | 4007 | 1729 | 4012 | 4000 | ||
4003 | 1731 | 4008 | 1709 | 4013 | 1762 | ||
4004 | 1739 | 4009 | 1700 | - | - |
Preservation
A number of Pittsburgh streetcars have been preserved.Nº | Type | Built by | Year | Preserved at | Notes |
1138 | PCC | St. Louis Car Company | 1936 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | |
1440 | PCC | St. Louis Car Company | 1942 | Seashore Trolley Museum | |
1467 | PCC | St. Louis Car Company | 1941 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | |
1644 | PCC | St. Louis Car Company | 1945 | Northern Ohio Railway Museum | |
1705 | PCC | St. Louis Car Company | 1948 | Midwest Electric Railway, sold Feb 2018 to Donald Kirk | |
1711 | PCC | St. Louis Car Company | 1948 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | |
1724 | PCC | St. Louis Car Company | 1948 | Heinz History Center | |
1799 | PCC | St. Louis Car Company | 1945 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | Built as 1613. Renumbered 1799 when overhauled in 1979. |
3487 | Conventional | St. Louis Car Company | 1905 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | Converted to wreck car M132 in 1934. Converted back to passenger configuration in 1956. |
3756 | Conventional | Osgood Bradley Car Company | 1925 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | |
4001 | PCC | PATransit | 1981 | South Hills Village Rail Center | Static display. |
4002 | PCC | PATransit | 1981 | Colorado Springs | Undergoing restoration at the Pikes Peak Trolley Museum. |
4004 | PCC | PATransit | 1981 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | |
4006 | PCC | PATransit | 1981 | Cleveland, Ohio | Last seen in 2016 at the west end of the Detroit–Superior Bridge labeled "Buckeye Trolley". |
4007 | PCC | PATransit | 1981 | Bethel Park, Pennsylvania | Static exhibit with numbers removed. |
4008 | PCC | PATransit | 1981 | San Francisco Municipal Railway | Acquired for the F Market & Wharves line. |
4009 | PCC | PATransit | 1981 | San Francisco Municipal Railway | Acquired for the F Market & Wharves line. |
4011 | PCC | PATransit | 1981 | Buckeye Lake, Ohio | Privately owned. |
4012 | PCC | PATransit | 1981 | Buckeye Lake, Ohio | Privately owned ; originally numbered 4000. |
4140 | Conventional | Pressed Steel Car Company | 1911 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | Built in McKees Rocks. Converted to snow plow M200 in 1940, then tow car in 1955. |
4145 | Conventional | Pressed Steel Car Company | 1911 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | Built in McKees Rocks. |
4398 | Conventional | St. Louis Car Company | 1914 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | |
M1 | Pay car | Pullman Car Company | 1890 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | Originally built as an 8-wheel car for the Pittsburgh, Allegheny & Manchester Street railway, it was underpowered for Pittsburgh's hills and was converted to a 4-wheel pay car in the 1890s. Pittsburgh Railways assigned it the number M1. |
M37 | Snow sweeper | McGuire-Cummings Manufacturing Company | 1896 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | Built as Consolidated Traction Company number 9. Renumbered M37 by Pittsburgh Railways. |
M56 | Snow sweeper | 1918 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | Built for the Philadelphia Company and assigned to Beaver Valley traction line as number 1. Transferred to Pittsburgh Railways in 1935 and renumbered M56. | |
M210 | Line car | Pittsburgh Railways Company | 1940 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | Built in Homewood shops using components salvaged from two other cars. |
M283 | Crane car | Differential Car Company | 1929 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum | |
M551 | Side-Dump car | Differential Car Company | 1922 | Pennsylvania Trolley Museum |
Routes
Pittsburgh Railways operated 68 streetcar routes.A notable, unnumbered, tripper service was signed Stadium-Forbes Field, for Pitt Panthers and Pittsburgh Steelers football games and Pirates baseball games. Pitt Stadium and Forbes Field were convenient to the lines on Fifth Avenue and Forbes Avenue, both two-way streets during the trolley era. This service, which probably last ran in fall 1966, was no longer possible after the East End lines closed in January 1967.
The Interurban lines did not use route numbers. Outbound interurban cars were signed for their outbound destination, namely Charleroi, Roscoe or Washington; some PCC rollsigns instead prefixed Shannon- to the destination, e.g. Shannon-Washington. Inbound cars were signed simply Pittsburgh.