Streetcars in North America: Difference between revisions
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* [[Xochimilco Light Rail]] an old streetcar line started in 1908 south of [[Mexico City]] that upgraded to [[light-rail]] in the 1980s but still ran [[PCC streetcar]]s into the 1990s. |
* [[Xochimilco Light Rail]] an old streetcar line started in 1908 south of [[Mexico City]] that upgraded to [[light-rail]] in the 1980s but still ran [[PCC streetcar]]s into the 1990s. |
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* [[SEPTA Subway-Surface Trolley Lines]], [[SEPTA Route 15]], [[SEPTA Routes 101 and 102]] (Philadelphia) |
* [[SEPTA Subway-Surface Trolley Lines]], [[SEPTA Route 15]], [[SEPTA Routes 101 and 102]] (Philadelphia) |
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====Not operating==== |
====Not operating==== |
Revision as of 15:54, 7 February 2011
Electric streetcars—trams outside North America—once were the chief mode of public transit in scores of North American cities. Most municipal systems were dismantled in the mid-20th century.
Today, only Toronto and New Orleans still operate streetcar networks that are essentially unchanged in their layout and mode of operation.
Boston, Cleveland, Mexico City, Newark, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, and San Francisco have rebuilt their streetcar systems as light rail systems. Buffalo, Calgary, Dallas, Edmonton, Houston, Los Angeles, Minneapolis, San Diego, Charlotte, St. Louis and other cities have installed new light rail systems, parts of which run along historic streetcar corridors and in a few cases feature mixed-traffic operation like a streetcar. Portland, Oregon and Seattle have built both modern light rail and modern streetcar systems.
Edmonton, Memphis, Seattle, Vancouver, Whitehorse, and other cities have restored a small number of streetcars to run as heritage lines for tourists.
History
Omnibuses and horsecars
From the 1820s to the 1880s urban transit in North America began when horse-drawn omnibus lines started to operate along city streets. Examples included Gilbert Vanderwerken's 1826 omnibus service in Newark, New Jersey. Before long Omnibus companies sought to boost profitability of their wagons by increasing ridership along their lines. Horsecar lines simply ran wagons along rails set in a city street instead of on the unpaved street surface as the omnibus lines used. When a wagon was drawn upon rails the rolling resistance of the vehicle was lowered and the average speed was increased.
A horse or team that rode along rails could carry more fare paying passengers per day of operation than those that did not have rails. North America's first streetcar lines opened in 1832 from downtown New York City to Harlem by the New York and Harlem Railroad, in 1834 in New Orleans, and in 1849 in Toronto along the Williams Omnibus Bus Line.
These streetcars used horses and sometimes mules. Mules were thought to give more hours per day of useful transit service than horses and were especially popular in the south in cities such as New Orleans, Louisiana and Celaya, Guanajuato, Mexico.[1] In many cities single animal drawn streetcars were known as "bobtail streetcars" whether mule or horse drawn.[2] [3] By the mid 1880s, there were 415 street railway companies in the USA operating over 6000 miles of track and carrying 188 million passengers per year using animal drawn cars.[citation needed] In the nineteenth century Mexico had streetcars in around 1,000 towns and many were animal powered. The 1907 Anuario Estadístico lists 35 animal-powered streetcar lines in Veracruz state, 80 in Guanajuato and 300 lines in Yucatán.[4]
Although most animal drawn lines were shut down in the 19th century a few lines lasted into the twentieth century. Toronto's horse drawn streetcar operations ended in 1891. New York City saw regular horsecar service last until 1917 (see photo at left). Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania's Sarah Street line lasted until 1923. The last regular mule-drawn cars in the United States ran in Sulphur Rock, Arkansas until 1926 and were commemorated by a U.S. Postage Stamp issued in 1983.[5] The last mule tram service in Mexico City ended in 1932, and a mule-powered line in Celaya, survived until May 1954.[6]
Early power
During the nineteenth century, particularly from the 1860s to the 1890s, many streetcar operators switched from animals to other types of motive power. Before the use of electricity the use of steam dummies, tram engines, or cable cars was tried in several North American cities. A notable transition took place in Washington, D.C. in the U.S. where horsecars were used on street railways from 1862 to the early 1890s. From about 1890 to 1893 cable drives provided motive power to Washington trolleys, and after 1893 electricity powered the cars.[7] The advantages of eliminating animal drive power included dispensing with the need to feed the animals and clean up their waste. A North American city that did not eliminate its cable car lines was San Francisco and much of its San Francisco cable car system continues to operate to this day.
In this transition period some early streetcar lines in large cities opted to rebuild their railways above or below grade to help further speed transit. Such system would become known as rapid transit or later as heavy rail lines.
Electrification
The World Cotton Centennial was held in New Orleans, Louisiana from December 16, 1884 to June 2, 1885. It featured displays with a great deal of electric light illumination, an observation tower with electric elevators, and several prototype designs of electric streetcars.[8] On April 15, 1886 Montgomery, Alabama established its electric streetcar system nicknamed the Lightning Route.[9] Another early electrified streetcar system in the United States was established in Scranton, Pennsylvania by November 30, 1886, giving Scranton the nickname "The Electric City".[10] In 1887 an electric streetcar line opened between Omaha and South Omaha, Nebraska.[11] The Omaha Motor Railway Company began operation in 1888.[11]
Along the east coast a large-scale electric street railway system known as the Richmond Union Passenger Railway was built by Frank J. Sprague in Richmond, Virginia, and was operating by February 2, 1888. The Richmond system had a large impact upon the burgeoning electric trolley industry. Sprague's use of a trolley pole for D.C. current pick up from a single line (with ground return via the street rails) set the pattern that was to be adopted in many other cities. The North American English use of the term "trolley" instead of "tram" for a street railway vehicle derives from the work that Sprague did in Richmond and quickly spread elsewhere.
Growth
By 1889 110 electric railways incorporating Sprague's equipment had been started or were planned on several continents. By 1895 almost 900 electric street railways and nearly 11,000 miles (18,000 km) of track had been built in the United States.
The rapid growth of streetcar systems led to the widespread ability of people to live outside of a city and commute into it for work on a daily basis. Several of the communities that grew as a result of this new mobility were known as streetcar suburbs. [12][13] Another outgrowth of the popularity of urban streetcar systems was the rise of interurban lines, which were basically streetcars that operated between cities and served remote, even rural, areas. Interurban lines competed with regular passenger service on mainline railroads.
The Hagerstown and Frederick Railway that started in 1896 in northern Maryland was built to provide transit service to resorts and the streetcar company built and operated two amusement parks to entice more people to ride their streetcars. The Lake Shore Electric Railway interurban in northern Ohio carried passengers to Cedar Point and several other Ohio amusement parks. The Lake Compounce amusement park, which started in 1846, had by 1895 established trolley service to its rural Connecticut location. Although outside trolley service to Lake Compounce stopped in the 1930s, the park resurrected its trolley past with the opening of the "Lakeside Trolley" ride in 1997 which is still operating today as a short heritage line. In the days before widespread radio listening was popular and in towns or neighborhoods too small to support a viable amusement park streetcar lines might help to fund an appearance of a touring musical act at the local bandstand to boost weekend afternoon ridership.
Many of Mexico's streetcars were fitted with gasoline motors in the 1920s and some were pulled by steam locomotives. Only 15 Mexican streetcar systems in Mexico were electrified in the 1920s.[4]
Decline
The Great Depression of the 1930s led to the closure of many streetcar lines in North America. The onset of World War II held off the closure of some streetcar lines as civilians used them to commute to war related factory jobs during a time when rubber tires and gasoline were rationed. After the war automobile use continued to rise and was assisted in the 1940s and 1950s by the passage of the Trans-Canada Highway Act of 1948 and growth of provincial highways in Canada as well as the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956 in the United States. Declining ridership and traffic jam crowding of city streets by streetcars were often cited as reasons to shut down remaining lines. By the 1960s most North American streetcar lines were closed, with only the exceptions noted above and discussed below remaining in service. The survival of the lines that made it past the 1960s was aided by the introduction of the successful PCC streetcar (President's Conference Committee car) in the 1940s and 1950s in all these cities except New Orleans.
City buses were seen as more economical and flexible: a bus could carry a number of people similar to that in a streetcar without tracks and associated infrastructure. Cambridge, Massachusetts and San Francisco, California removed some streetcar tracks but kept the electric infrastructure so as to run electrified trackless trolley buses (see also San Francisco Municipal Railway, Boston-area trackless trolleys, Greater Dayton Regional Transit Authority, List of trolleybus systems in Canada). In 2001 Boston started operation of its newly constructed Silver Line trackless trolley service.
Conspiracy
The abandonment of city streetcar systems in the mid-twentieth century, led to accusations of conspiracy which held that a union of automobile, oil, and tire manufacturers shut down the streetcar systems in order to further the use of buses and automobiles. [14] The struggling depression-era streetcar companies were bought up by this union of companies who, over the following decades, dismantled many of the North American streetcar systems.
While it is true that General Motors, Firestone Tire, Standard Oil of California, Phillips Petroleum, and some other companies formed holding companies that purchased several dozen of the hundreds of transit systems across North America, their real goal was to sell their products — buses, tires, and fuel — to those transit systems as they converted from streetcars to buses. During the time the holding companies owned an interest in American transit systems, more than 300 cities converted to buses. The holding companies only owned an interest in the transit systems of less than fifty of those cities. [15][16][17][18] Nevertheless, in 1949, General Motors, Standard Oil of California, Firestone and others were convicted of conspiring to monopolize the sale of buses and related products to local transit companies controlled by NCL and other companies; they were acquitted of conspiring to monopolize the ownership of these companies. The verdicts were upheld on appeal in 1951.[19]
Renaissance
The term light rail was devised in 1972 by the U.S. Urban Mass Transportation Administration to describe new streetcar transformations which were taking place in Europe and being planned in North America.[20] The Edmonton Light Rail Transit became the first urban light rail system in North America. Construction of the Edmonton line started in 1974 and it became operational on April 22, 1978.[21]
Some notable distinctions between light rail systems and their streetcar predecessors were that light rail lines may run at least partially along exclusive rights of way instead of only along streets, a light rail line is more likely to run multiple unit trains instead of single cars, and a light rail line may use high level stations instead of in street stops. These design differences mean that light rail systems tend to have more passenger capacity and higher speeds than their streetcar predecessors.
Surviving systems
Not all streetcars systems were removed; the San Francisco cable car system and New Orleans' streetcars are the most famous examples in the United States. San Francisco's conventional electric streetcar system also avoided abandonment, as did portions of the streetcar systems in Boston, Newark, Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, together with those of Toronto in Canada and Mexico City in Mexico. The Newark, Philadelphia, and Boston systems ran into subways downtown, while the Pittsburgh and San Francisco systems had tunnels under large hills that had no acceptable road alternatives for bus replacements. The St. Charles Avenue line in New Orleans runs down the park-like "neutral ground" in the centre of St. Charles Avenue. The only system without these alternatives to street-running to survive was Toronto's. All of these systems have received new equipment. Some of these cities have also rehabilitated lines, and Newark, New Orleans, and San Francisco have added trackage in recent years. In Philadelphia, a former trolley line that was "bustituted" recently resumed trolley service using rebuilt historic cars. Two other former trolley lines are planned to resume trolley service in the 2010s.
In Canada, most cities once had a streetcar system, but today the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) is the only traditional operator of streetcars, and maintains the Western Hemisphere's most extensive system in terms of track length, number of cars, and ridership. The city added two lines in recent years, and is upgrading its other lines. Expansion is planned in combination with the city's plans for the rejuvenation of its waterfront.
New systems
Several North American cities have built light rail systems, some of which operate partially in the right-of-way of city streets. Other new systems are genuine tramways, with smaller vehicles and mixed-traffic street running (no separation from other vehicles), similar to those in New Orleans and San Francisco, although the term streetcar—rather than the European term, tramway—is the name used by the residents there. The pioneering light rail system in Edmonton, which used mostly European technology, does not use street running, and tunneling in the central area accounted for much of the high expense of building that system. It was soon followed by installations in San Diego and Calgary that used similar vehicles but which avoided the expense of tunnels by using surface alignments and, on a few sections, even partial street running, in reserved lanes (restricted to transit vehicles only).
Prior to 2001, the new streetcar systems opened in North America were heritage lines, alternatively known as vintage trolley or ‘historic’ trolley lines. Several cities built new heritage streetcar lines in the 1980s and 1990s, some served only on weekends while others operate daily, year-round and all day, providing true public transit service as opposed to being a tourist- or history-oriented excursion service. New streetcar systems providing daily, year-round service included ones opened in Seattle (the Waterfront Streetcar) (1982), Galveston (1988), Dallas (McKinney Avenue Transit Authority) (1989), Memphis (1993) and Kenosha, Wisconsin (2000). All of these were newly constructed systems, but all are served by historic streetcars or replicas of historic streetcars (although the Seattle Waterfront line has since closed). Others have since opened in Tampa and Little Rock; see Heritage streetcar systems, below.
In 2001, Portland, Oregon, which already boasted a successful light rail system (MAX), became the first city in North America in more than 50 years to open a new streetcar system served by modern vehicles,[22][23] with the opening of the Portland Streetcar. It uses low-floor cars built in the Czech Republic, but the system's first US-built streetcar was delivered in 2009.[24] The line serves as a downtown circulator between the central city core, the Pearl District and Northwest Portland, Portland State University, and in 2005 was extended to the South Waterfront district, a new mixed-use development along the Willamette River shoreline. Running almost entirely on streets and without any separation from other traffic on most sections, it complements the MAX light rail system, which covers much longer distances and serves as a regional, higher-capacity rail system for the metropolitan area. The MAX system also runs along streets in central Portland, but is separated from traffic (other than buses) even in those areas, via reserved light-rail-only lanes. Construction of a second streetcar line, to the city's east side, began in August 2009.[25]
The new Portland system and several of the new heritage streetcar systems have been intended, in part, as a way of influencing property development in the corridors served, in such a way as to increase density while attracting residents interested in relatively car-free living.[26] The Portland Streetcar is considered to have been very successful in this regard.[27]
North America's second modern streetcar system opened in 2007 in Seattle,[28] where the city's transportation department led the project to construct the South Lake Union Streetcar, but has contracted with local transit authority King County Metro to operate the service. Connecting the neighborhood south of Lake Union with the transit core of downtown Seattle, it operates every 15 minutes and is served by three low-floor streetcars of the same type as some of those in Portland. Residents of the area began referring to the system as the "South Lake Union Trolley" giving it the amusing but unfortunate acronym of "SLUT".[29] Subsequently (in 2009), Seattle has also opened a light rail system (Central Link). Expansion of the streetcar system is planned, with a line serving First Hill.[30]
A new rail line which opened in Tacoma, Washington in 2003, Tacoma Link, is sometimes referred to as a streetcar line because of its short length and use of single vehicles (rather than trains) of the same type as the low-floor streetcars used in Portland. However, the line is separated from other traffic over nearly its entire length, making it less a streetcar than light rail, which is what its operator (Sound Transit) considers it to be.[31]
New tram systems have now opened in many other cities, starting with the ground-breaking system in Edmonton in 1978, and now including Baltimore, Buffalo, Calgary, Charlotte, Dallas (DART), Denver, Edmonton, Houston, Greater Jersey City (HBLR), Los Angeles, Minneapolis, Ottawa, Phoenix, Portland, Sacramento, St Louis, Salt Lake City, San Diego and San Jose.
Additionally, all of the surviving PCC operators have replaced their PCC cars with light rail vehicles, although restored vintage PCC cars are still in regular operation on Boston's MBTA Red line Ashmont-Mattapan High Speed Line, and on San Francisco's F Market line, a line popular among tourists. This line was extended to the Fisherman's Wharf area in 2000, and a second line along the Embarcadero to the east is in the planning stages.
In development
Some 70 US cities have studied the idea of bringing back streetcars as transit,[26] although to date the number that have come to fruition has been small. In the 2000s, one factor in this was opposition from the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) under the Bush Administration.[32][33] However, under the Obama Administration the FTA has indicated it supports cities interested in building new streetcar systems.[33][34][35]
Construction of a new streetcar line in Washington, D.C., the DC Streetcar, got under way in 2009 following several delays.[36]
In Tucson, Arizona, where the Old Pueblo Trolley heritage streetcar line has been in operation since 1993, the city government is planning construction of a modern streetcar line.[37][38] In September 2009, the FTA gave its approval for the City of Tucson to proceed with the final design phase of the project,[39] and the city signed a contract with United Streetcar for the provision of seven low-floor streetcars in June 2010.[40] Project design work was 90% complete as of January 2011,[41] and construction of the 5.8-kilometre (3.6 mi) line is expected to begin in 2011, for opening in mid-2013.[40]
A new system is proposed for Vancouver, B.C., and for a period of two months centred around the 2010 Winter Olympics a temporary streetcar service was operated, along a modified section of an existing heritage streetcar line (the Vancouver Downtown Historic Railway), connecting the Granville Island district to the Olympic Village Station on the SkyTrain rapid-transit system.[42] Named the Olympic Line, the 1.8-kilometre (1.1 mi) route was served by two Bombardier Flexity Outlook low-floor trams on loan from Brussels, Belgium, and was operated for a period of two months, starting on January 21, 2010.[43]
The First Hill Streetcar is a proposal to build a new streetcar line in Seattle, Washington.[30]
The Atlanta Streetcar organization in Atlanta, Georgia, is involved in developing plans for a modern streetcar to connect the downtown tourist attractions with the King Center area just east of Downtown (see also the Martin Luther King, Jr. National Historic Site).
The Delmar Loop Trolley is a proposal to restore a heritage style service to St. Louis, Missouri with replica streetcars.[44]
Recently closed systems
A heritage trolley in Detroit, Michigan operated from 1976 until 2003. The Detroit trolley faced a steep decline in ridership after the Detroit People Mover system was installed and the tracks and carbarn for the former narrow gauge trolley have been removed.
The Waterfront Streetcar in Seattle, Washington operated from 1982 until 2005 when the line's carbarn was demolished to make room for the Olympic Sculpture Park.
Heritage streetcar systems
Heritage streetcar systems are used in public transit service, combining light rail efficiency with tourist's nostalgia interests. Proponents claim that using a simple, reliable form of transit from 50 or 100 years ago can bring history to life for 21st century visitors. Systems are operating successfully in over 30 U.S. cities, and are in planning or construction stages in 40 more. Heritage systems currently operate in Charlotte, North Carolina; Little Rock, Arkansas; Memphis, Tennessee; Dallas, Texas; Tampa, Florida; Kenosha, Wisconsin; and New Orleans, Louisiana are among the larger.
In the province of British Columbia, Vancouver has the Vancouver Downtown Historic Railway system that will be expanded to cover the south downtown area. In Nelson, British Columbia, a small town to the north of Spokane, Washington, the Nelson Electric Tramway Society has rebuilt and runs a restored Streetcar 23 along the lakeside and Baker Street.[45] In Whitehorse, Yukon the Miles Canyon Historic Railway Society has operated the Whitehorse trolley along the Yukon River since 2000.[46]
The new streetcar system which opened in 2000 in Kenosha is a downtown circulator also serving government offices; the upscale HarborPark recreational, cultural, and residential district; and public bus and Metra rail service. It is served exclusively by restored 1940s-vintage PCC streetcars acquired secondhand from Toronto.
Over 50 years after the Tennessee Williams play A Streetcar Named Desire opened on Broadway, the revival of streetcar operations in New Orleans is credited by many to the worldwide fame gained by the streetcars made by the Perley A. Thomas Car Works. These cars were operating on the system's Desire route in the 1947 play and later movie of the same name. Some of the original cars have been carefully restored locally and continue to operate in the 21st century.
Examples in North America include San Pedro, Little Rock, Dallas, Denver, Memphis, Tampa, Seattle, Charlotte, the new Canal Street line in New Orleans, and the reintroduction of the historic Girard Street line in Philadelphia.
Other individual heritage streetcar lines include:
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Museums
Unlike a heritage system a streetcar museum may offer little or no transport service. If there are working streetcars in a museum's collection any service provided may be seasonal, not follow a schedule, offer limited stops, service only remote areas, or otherwise differ from a regularly scheduled heritage line. Some North American streetcar museums include:
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See also
General articles
System lists
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- List of rail transit systems in the United States (current systems only; list is not limited to streetcar/tram systems)
Specific systems
Operating
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Not operating
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Car builders and types
Structures
Standing
Not standing
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Notes
- ^ Branley, Edward. "Canal Streetcar (dot com)". Retrieved 2008-12-28.
- ^ "A Bob-tail car run into". New York Times. 1898-11-19.
- ^ "Letter to editor". New York Times. 1881-10-12.
- ^ a b Allen Morrison. "THE TRAMWAYS OF MEXICO". Retrieved 2008-12-22.
- ^ "Sulphur Rock Street Car; Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture". Retrieved 2008-12-23.
- ^ Allen Morrison. "The Indomitable Tramways of Celaya". Retrieved 2008-12-22.
- ^ Tindall, Dr. William (1918). Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C.: Beginning of Street Railways in the National Capital. Charlottesville, VA: Columbia Historical Society. pp. 24–118.
- ^ John Kendall (1922). "History of New Orleans; Chapter XX1X: The World's Cotton Centennial Exposition".
- ^ "Charles J. Van Depoele". Retrieved 14 December 2008.
- ^ "Electric City Trolley Museum". Retrieved 14 December 2008.
- ^ a b Liz Rea. "History at a Glance: A Guide to Businesses, Institutions, Organizations, People and Events that Shaped the History of Omaha and the Douglas County Area, 1671-2005" (PDF). Retrieved 2008-12-27.
- ^ "America on the Move - Growth of the Capital's Suburbs". National Museum of American History. Retrieved 2008-12-30.
- ^ H.B. Craig, II. "DETROIT TRANSIT HISTORY: The Pingree Years (1890--1900)". Retrieved 2008-12-30.
- ^ Black, Edwin (2007). "Chapter Ten: 'The GM Conspiracy'". Internal Combustion: How Corporations and Governments Addicted the World to Oil and Derailed the Alternatives. Macmillan. pp. 193–260.
- ^ Bottles, Scott, "Los Angeles and the Automobile: The Making of the Modern City" (Berkeley, CA: UC Press, 1987)
- ^ Cosgrove, Christine (Winter 2004-Spring 2005). "Roger Rabbit Unframed: Revising the GM Conspiracy Theory". ITS Review Online. 3 (1). Retrieved 2009-06-19.
{{cite journal}}
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(help) - ^ Martha J. Bianco, Kennedy, "60 Minutes, and Roger Rabbit: Understanding Conspiracy-Theory Explanations of the Decline of Urban Mass Transit", Portland State University Center for Urban Studies Discussion Paper 98-11, November, 1998
- ^ Slater, Cliff (Summer 1997). "General Motors and the Demise of Streetcars" (pdf). Transportation Quarterly. 51 (3): pages 45–66. Retrieved 2009-06-19.
{{cite journal}}
:|pages=
has extra text (help) - ^ Walter C. Lindley (January 3, 1951). "UNITED STATES v. NATIONAL CITY LINES, Inc., et al". United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. Archived from the original on 2008-06-08. Retrieved 2010-12-01.
- ^ Gregory L. Thompson (2003). "Defining an Alternative Future: Birth of the Light Rail Movement in North America" (PDF). Transportation Research Board.
- ^ "ETS Photo Express - ETS - 1977 Siemens / DüWag U2". Retrieved 2009-01-01.
- ^ Taplin, M. R. (October 2001). "Return of the (modern) streetcar: Portland leads the way". Tramways & Urban Transit. Hersham, Surrey, UK: Ian Allan Publishing Ltd. ISSN 1460-8324. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
- ^ "Portland streetcars--something old, something new". Portland Business Journal. July 19, 2001. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
- ^ Brugger, Joe (July 1, 2009). "Transportation secretary watches as 'Made in USA' streetcar makes debut". The Oregonian. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
- ^ Foden-Vencil, Kristian (August 10, 2009). "Portland Streetcar Begins Work on Next Extension". Oregon Public Broadcasting. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
- ^ a b Schneider, Keith (October 24, 2007). "A streetcar named development". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
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(help) - ^ "Portland Streetcar Development-Oriented Transit" (PDF). Portland Streetcar, Inc. January 2006. Retrieved 2009-12-07. [dead link]
- ^ Seattle Times Staff (December 12, 2007). "Streetcar starts service". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
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(help) - ^ Murakami, Kery (September 18, 2007). "SLUT -- Streetcar's unfortunate acronym seems here to stay". The Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved 2008-01-26.
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(help) - ^ a b Mulady, Kathy (December 9, 2008). "Council OKs streetcar network". The Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
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(help) - ^ "Link Light Rail (Tacoma Link) Schedule & Map". Sound Transit. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
- ^ Rivera, Dylan (December 27, 2007). "Federal rules prefer buses over streetcar expansion". The Oregonian. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
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(help) - ^ a b Rivera, Dylan (October 22, 2009). "U.S. inks deal for millions for Portland Streetcar, pledges more nationwide". The Oregonian. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
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(help) - ^ "U.S. Transportation Secretary Announces $280 Million for Streetcars" (Press release). United States Department of Transportation. December 1, 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
- ^ "Transportation Secretary Rides Portland Streetcar". Oregon Public Broadcasting. July 1, 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
- ^ O'Connell, Jonathan (October 15, 2009). "Streetcars still desired in D.C." Washington Business Journal. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
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(help) - ^ "Ore. firm picked to build RTA streetcars". Arizona Daily Star. 2009-05-30. Retrieved 2009-08-28.
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(help) - ^ "Oregon Iron Works unit snares $26M contract". Portland Business Journal. 2009-05-27. Retrieved 2009-08-28.
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(help) - ^ "Federal Transit Administration Gives Approval to the Tucson Modern Streetcar Project" (Press release). Tucson Department of Transportation. October 1, 2009. Retrieved 2009-12-07.
- ^ a b Tramways & Urban Transit, February 2011, p. 72. ISSN 1460-8324.
- ^ "Modern Streetcar Project: City of Tucson Web". Retrieved 2011-01-28.
- ^ "Olympic Line". The City of Vancouver. Retrieved 2010-04-18.
- ^ "Vancouver's free streetcar makes first run to Granville Island". CBC News. January 21, 2010. Retrieved 2010-04-18.
- ^ "The Loop Trolley - Home". Retrieved 2010-11-06.
- ^ "Nelson Electric Tramway Society". Retrieved 2008-12-19.
- ^ "Whitehorse Waterfront Trolley". Retrieved 2008-12-19. [dead link]
- ^ "El Reno Heritage Express Trolley". Retrieved 2008-12-19.
- ^ "Tour - Attractions ... El Reno Oklahoma". Retrieved 2009-06-24.
- ^ "River Street Streetcar". Retrieved 2008-12-21. [dead link]
- ^ "River Street streetcar arrives - News - City Notebook - Connect Savannah - Savannah". Retrieved 2008-12-21.
- ^ "Free Streetcar Rides a Success on River St". WSAV. Retrieved 2008-12-21.
- ^ "Lowell Overview". Retrieved 2008-12-19.
- ^ The Museo opened in November 2006. See "Proyectos.- Servicio de Transportes Eléctricos del D.F." Retrieved 2010-04-21.
- ^ "Melbourne Tramways of Australia built the electric W-5 class streetcars in the 1920s and 30s". Retrieved 2009-06-23. [dead link]
- ^ Morekis, James (November 19, 2008). "River Street streetcar arrives". Retrieved 2009-06-20.