This was excellent....so nostalgic...i was a 23 trolley rider as a kid....way too many weirdos now. My 94 yr old nana was one of the first black women to cashier for ptc!
Miss my hometown. Germantown Ave was around the corner from my house. That's the route my dad drove. I love riding the 23 trolley and the bus when they stopped using the trolley. It's was amazing growing up in the 80s and having a dad that worked in Septa.
I am so glad this footage exists of the PTC Trolley system, It really is a major way for Philadelphians to get to work and school. When the Northeast was developed they went to the "trackless" trolleys and buses. The Subway Surface cars still exist as part of Septa.system. it is a very unique transportation system, Thank you.
Thank you for the upload. The 50 and 47 trolley were my favorite, Unfortunately the 47 was short lived service ended in 1969 but, the 50 lasted into late 1980 and I rode it to school and later work.
AMAZING FOOTAGE!!! It’s so good to see this footage wasn’t lost so all generations can share seeing some history and the pride people held in their communities and transit systems!!! Times have definitely changed…
Also plowed Main Street in Darby for PennDOT in the two thousand s what a bumpy ride it was The trolley line was great on island road the 37 bus line goes past my house all day and night along the industrial highway route 291
Superb video! I lived in North Philadelphia and the Routes 23 and 60 were my lifelines, although I rode all of the lines mentioned in the video often. Great nostalgia. I recall during one major snowstorm in the 1950's, a back up of 23s on Germantown Avenue which stretched from Huntington Street to near Alleghany Avenue. Quite a sight.
I'm not sure how true it is, but as a kid I heard that NCL even wanted to bustify the subway-surface routes but couldn't figure out how to run diesels underground. NCL's anti-rail mindset has infected SEPTA ever since, although it looks like the new CEO is much more in favor of streetcars.
@@Poisson4147 SEPTA is getting 135 new Trolleys, they should start arriving by 2027, route 15 is having it's PCC cars refurbished, it should reopen within a year, there are actually talks about expanding the system.
@@mrjsanchez1 Great points! I'm a member of a couple of transit-advocacy groups and have been following the plans for a while. The new cars will be longer, articulated, and with low floors to simplify entry and exit. There are already plans to extend the 10 about a half-mile to an intermodal station at the Overbrook RRD stop, also talk (but nothing specific) about extending Route 36 to the airport. Also the new cars will be double-ended - I wonder if there's enough compatibility of signals, etc. to allow full connectivity with the ex-Red Arrow lines ... ?!
03:00 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 someone did drive into the trolley portal at 40th & Woodland recently and made it all the way to 33rd. I'm still impressed. That's at least two sharp turns.
Remember riding the old PTC 10 trolley with the bared windows,you could actually smell the tunnel as you travel to and back from Center City…with 13th st being the eastbound terminus…
This was awesome to see the Godfrey Loop back then. It is around the corner where I live....thanks for posting this, it was a late night treat. THANKS YOU👍
Well, tbh not quite exactly. They were cut back at their outer ends after the 1950s takeover by NCL. That said there's been some semi-serious discussion about extending the 10 to Overbrook and the 36 to the airport.
@@yvonneplant9434 Yes - and that said, there's been some movement (not sure how much, given it's SEPTA) towards building a short extension to serve a new combined trolley / RRD station at Overbrook.
Phila always plays second fiddle to NY and Chi in the modeling genre. Love to see some SEPTA EL & subway models come to the market. And on trolleys, the Norristown HSL is pretty cool too.
When I was a kid, my grandparents would take us to the zoo either by driving down and parking at the Richmond/Westmoreland loop or we would take the 73 from Bridesburg down to the loop. Even through my years attending high school at Central, I would take any chance to jump on one of the trolleys whether at Broad St & Girard Ave (for the 15) or Broad/Erie (for the 56). Its a shame how pretty much every neighborhood shown in this video (except Chestnut Hill) has gone downhill over the decades. Such beautiful areas of the city left to rot away out of lack of pride for their communities.
Orb and raised in Philadelphia. Rode many of these lines over the years. Sad that most are long gone. People and things seemed more pleasant and peaceful then, I miss those days. I also traveled frank ford elevated, broad street subway, and red arrow lines as well as Pennsylvania, Reading and B&O railroads. Still miss all of these.
SEPTA's had essentially zero interest in preserving historic equipment. From what I've heard they trashed almost everything. About 20-30 years ago they took a bunch of serviceable PCCs that could have been rehabbed or sold to San Francisco / a museum / etc., but instead stuck them under a section of I-95 where they rotted.
I used the 47 from Indiana Ave to Girard and with a transfer took the 15 to 17th st. St. Joe's Prep was at 17th & Stiles. Did this from Sept 1951 to June 1955. Did not realize it was soon to end!
I own this video, love it and play it often, along with part one, "Philadelphia Streetcars". I have one correction since I lived for 15 years near the Darby Loop. It is located at 9th & Main Sts., not at 11th & Main, as was stated by Jeff Marinoff in the video.
Gary, everybody is entitled to make a mistake now and then. I misspoke on the 11th & Main. But at least I pronounced names correctly......lol..... I've seen outrageous mistakes on videos, old VHS tapes and in books.
Nowadays people don't understand the love of the trolley car until you explain it made you mobile free to rome around the city on your own to meet girls! Then they start to understand the infatuation with the trolley line and what it meant especially to young people. And with the trollies you didn't need a car to get around they took you everywhere that you could want to go work ,home, school, movies, on a date. It was your personal chauffer around town.
Wow! This is, indeed, a work-of-art! Soooo many memories! I once attempted (when I was about 5-yrs old), to board the 50-Olney trolley, as we lived on Tasker, between 4th and 5th Streets in S. Philly. My Mom caught me before I was able to board. When I was 13, I then rode the 23-Germantown from 11th and Tasker to the Bethlehem Loop every weekend, as a relative moved to Fort Washington. I seriously MISS the (what was) amazing Trolley Network that once was! What hurts and INFURIATES me is, as the WORLD is investing in rail infrastructure, SEPTA spares NO expense to DESTROY something that survived so much over a century! SHAMEFUL!!! Literally I have cried a number of times when I think of the stupidity of a Transit Agency such as SEPTA!
I never got to ride the 47 but I did ride the 23 end to end quite a few times. At one time it ran all the way to the Navy Yard. This was cut back to 10 Bigler in 1964. In its later years it was known as the African Queen because it traversed the North Philadelphia badlands.
I never rode the PCCs. I'm more of a Kawasaki person. I especially love the K-cars seen at 5:04-6:07 & 9:06-10:07 and man, I miss that paint scheme with the rollsigns.
The Marshall road loop still there I think it was a very well travelled line for people who needed transportation back then and still today with gas prices over five dollars a gallon Septa does a great job all day long and night for the city residents scenic it was but dangerous.
They were great times for the luxe Rene st my mom graduated from little flower in 1950 and was married in 1952 I was born in1954 great times for Philadelphia I knew many my name is John Stier the green paint scheme was the best
My dad worked at fourth and arch I had a grandfather work the 23 line till he died and his brother also worked the 23 till the sixties and I worked at fair mount ave in the eighties
Chestnut hill always reminded me of rich people of Philadelphia what a time for the 23 gongs clacking gorgas lane always reminded me of noblest Great times for pic and septa
The PTC was starting to have trouble after WWII due to wear and tear during the war, competition from (subsidized) highways, and other factors. In the mid-1950s National City Lines took over their management and of course almost immediately started to rip out trolley services all over the city. Reportedly they wanted to "bustify" the subway-surface lines too but couldn't figure out how to make the tunnels compatible with buses. NCL wasn't the only reason streetcar systems failed but they took major advantage of existing weaknesses to destroy a lot of lines that might have survived otherwise. When SEPTA was formed in the mid-1960s they inherited a lot of NCL's anti-rail mindset. Even 50+ years later it still colors a lot of their decisions, although it seems that the new CEO is trying to change things.
I will never understand why NCL purchased PTC. Unlike the other properties NCL acquired, PTC has rapid transit subway lines (Broad Street and Market-Frankford). How would NCL bustitute subway lines? one-53-passenger bus vs. 6X67-passenger subway train. Also, the cities that kept their trolleys has trolley subway tunnels (Boston, Philly, San Francisco, and Toronto, with Washinton, D.C. being the exception), so NCL didn't think that one through. So I guess after that, NCL didn't want to acquire properties that has subways.
@@josephheston9238 A friend wrote his master's thesis on NCL and used Philly as one of his case studies. To the extent that I remember his conclusions NCL was willing to weaken any system they couldn't destroy because it still meant more buses. When they took over PTC Philly had one of the largest trolley fleets in the country, after LA and a couple of other cities. Within three years of the takeover they'd converted 24 lines to bus operation and discontinued service on 3 others. In addition PTC had little or no GM equipment in its fleet prior to NCL's takeover; after that almost all buses were ordered from GM. They also put in place pro-bus, anti-rail management that lasted into the SEPTA days a decade later and beyond. SEPTA was abandoning trolley lines as late as the early 1990s (!) While as you note it was far from total destruction; even so they turned Philadelphia from a rails-first operation into a heavily bus-dependent city, which I'm guessing was enough for their appetite. I don't have a source to back it up, but reportedly there WERE rumors that NCL looked into replacing the subway-surface streetcars with buses but couldn't solve the issues of clearances and ventilation. If true, that could account for why they didn't seriously attack other cities with underground rails.
Every so often there's talk of restoring trolleys on part of Germantown Ave. Knowing Philly it will almost certainly never get beyond the talk stage but it may be enough to prevent permanent destruction of the rails.
The electric switches worked by the power off (to go straight) or on (to turn) position of the car's controller at the time the car rolled over the sensor. The overhead line had a switch that worked the same way.
The crazy part is that a non-zero amount of the cars shown in this video are still in use in 2022. And not just the 15 trolleys, which are constantly on bus substitution.
? The 15 is the only route that uses PCCs in revenue service. Everything else is K-cars. The Route 15s are technically called PCC-II cars because they're complete rebuilds. The shells are original but nearly everything else is either a rehab or replacement.
I don't understand why SEPTA didn't save the surface streetcar routes. I Wish that they purchased 😪 former Torontos TTC Bombardier cars to run the surface routes.
About the 4:30 mark this is totally wrong on the method of operation on Route 34. Route 34 was one man, not two, and was pay leave eastbound to subway and pay enter westbound.
I love the scene (50:30) where it looks like a little girl is with her Mother or Grandmother and the way she holds her because she has no seatbelt!!! People paid attention back in those days!!! Back then I remember when we never wore seatbelts, and always did dangerous things but never saw anyone during my life (over 45 years so far) injured!!! Kids did always get scraped knees but they got right back up and was actually part of the fun and lessons Learned throughout life!!! Nowadays you would probably have multiple deaths immediately shutting it down INDEFINITELY because of no safety belts or something???
@@ogtripplog215iiiifffff I would think there are many bus routes to Chester, but since this was a trolly video, I was commenting on trolleys going to Chester, not amazed about buses going there..
Dear precious one, please repeat after me with your whole heart, "Father God, I know I'm a sinner and I ask for Your forgiveness. I believe Jesus Christ is Your Son. I believe in the Good News that Jesus died on the cross for my sins and that You resurrected Him from the dead in order to restore my relationship with You. Through my belief and faith in Jesus death, burial and resurrection, I am saved. I want to trust Jesus as my Savior and follow Him as my Lord from this day forward. Please guide my life and help me do Your will, Your way through the Holy Spirit. This I pray in the powerful, loving and glorious name of Your Son, Jesus Christ my Lord and Savior. Amen!" ♥️ Dear friend, may Father God our Creator, through Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior bless you, lead you, guide you and keep you in His abundantly loving care now and for all eternity! Amen! 🙏♥️
This was excellent....so nostalgic...i was a 23 trolley rider as a kid....way too many weirdos now. My 94 yr old nana was one of the first black women to cashier for ptc!
Miss my hometown. Germantown Ave was around the corner from my house. That's the route my dad drove. I love riding the 23 trolley and the bus when they stopped using the trolley. It's was amazing growing up in the 80s and having a dad that worked in Septa.
23 and 15
I am so glad this footage exists of the PTC Trolley system, It really is a major way for Philadelphians to get to work and school. When the Northeast was developed they went to the "trackless" trolleys and buses. The Subway Surface cars still exist as part of Septa.system. it is a very unique transportation system, Thank you.
Thank you for the upload. The 50 and 47 trolley were my favorite, Unfortunately the 47 was short lived service ended in 1969 but, the 50 lasted into late 1980 and I rode it to school and later work.
Amazing to see a PCC going through essentially a field in Eastwick.
AMAZING FOOTAGE!!!
It’s so good to see this footage wasn’t lost so all generations can share seeing some history and the pride people held in their communities and transit systems!!!
Times have definitely changed…
I worked for Septa in the eighties Fixing the track on third shift a very cold night in the winter months.
Also plowed Main Street in Darby for PennDOT in the two thousand s what a bumpy ride it was The trolley line was great on island road the 37 bus line goes past my house all day and night along the industrial highway route 291
I rode the trolleys, miss them. I live in nc. Loved the video, got to see old neighborhoods.
Superb video! I lived in North Philadelphia and the Routes 23 and 60 were my lifelines, although I rode all of the lines mentioned in the video often. Great nostalgia. I recall during one major snowstorm in the 1950's, a back up of 23s on Germantown Avenue which stretched from Huntington Street to near Alleghany Avenue. Quite a sight.
I have many memories from the 1970s riding the Trolley down Girard Avenue with my Grandmom. I miss those days. A simple way of life.
Amazing how these lines survived into the present!!
I'm not sure how true it is, but as a kid I heard that NCL even wanted to bustify the subway-surface routes but couldn't figure out how to run diesels underground.
NCL's anti-rail mindset has infected SEPTA ever since, although it looks like the new CEO is much more in favor of streetcars.
@@Poisson4147 SEPTA is getting 135 new Trolleys, they should start arriving by 2027, route 15 is having it's PCC cars refurbished, it should reopen within a year, there are actually talks about expanding the system.
@@mrjsanchez1 Great points! I'm a member of a couple of transit-advocacy groups and have been following the plans for a while. The new cars will be longer, articulated, and with low floors to simplify entry and exit.
There are already plans to extend the 10 about a half-mile to an intermodal station at the Overbrook RRD stop, also talk (but nothing specific) about extending Route 36 to the airport. Also the new cars will be double-ended - I wonder if there's enough compatibility of signals, etc. to allow full connectivity with the ex-Red Arrow lines ... ?!
Thanks for sharing. I rode the 47, 50, 60 and 56 mostly. This sure brings back memories. I also learned where the saying "Brick Shithouse " came from.
Choo choo! I'm a train and I approve this excellent video!
03:00 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 someone did drive into the trolley portal at 40th & Woodland recently and made it all the way to 33rd. I'm still impressed. That's at least two sharp turns.
You know it
I remember that
Those lines clanging and the electric clicks used to put me to sleep at night. Especially the bells.
Would love to see footage of the old subway surface trolleys operating in the tunnel during those days...I was a wee little kid when they did!
Many great memories of the trolley boat cars and trolley routes. A time totally opposite of today.
Remember riding the old PTC 10 trolley with the bared windows,you could actually smell the tunnel as you travel to and back from Center City…with 13th st being the eastbound terminus…
I have this video on dvd since last year
My Uncle used to be the operator of the trolley that went on Germantown Ave.
Wow!!! It's amazing to see what my neighborhood looked like back in the 50s and 60s. Lo g before I was even a twinkle in my mother's eyes
This was awesome to see the Godfrey Loop back then. It is around the corner where I live....thanks for posting this, it was a late night treat. THANKS YOU👍
It’s a shame that there are no videos that capture the sound of the trolleys and bells. One of my favorite sounds as a child
Very well done!
The 10, 11, 13, 34 and 36 still run exactly like this video describes.
Well, tbh not quite exactly. They were cut back at their outer ends after the 1950s takeover by NCL.
That said there's been some semi-serious discussion about extending the 10 to Overbrook and the 36 to the airport.
@@Poisson4147Where the 10 ends now is Overbrook. It's two blocks west of Overbrook HS..
@@yvonneplant9434 Yes - and that said, there's been some movement (not sure how much, given it's SEPTA) towards building a short extension to serve a new combined trolley / RRD station at Overbrook.
Phila always plays second fiddle to NY and Chi in the modeling genre. Love to see some SEPTA EL & subway models come to the market. And on trolleys, the Norristown HSL is pretty cool too.
That was a particularly fast trolley!
Being only 90 miles from NY is a blessing and course.
When I was a kid, my grandparents would take us to the zoo either by driving down and parking at the Richmond/Westmoreland loop or we would take the 73 from Bridesburg down to the loop. Even through my years attending high school at Central, I would take any chance to jump on one of the trolleys whether at Broad St & Girard Ave (for the 15) or Broad/Erie (for the 56). Its a shame how pretty much every neighborhood shown in this video (except Chestnut Hill) has gone downhill over the decades. Such beautiful areas of the city left to rot away out of lack of pride for their communities.
So true....but now chestnut hill is having robberies and shootings...that woulda never happened when i was coming up.
@@dr.b1346 Such a shame that so many part of the city have become a shining example of urban blight
Hey I went to Central High School too.
I was in 271. 🎉
Orb and raised in Philadelphia. Rode many of these lines over the years. Sad that most are long gone. People and things seemed more pleasant and peaceful then, I miss those days. I also traveled frank ford elevated, broad street subway, and red arrow lines as well as Pennsylvania, Reading and B&O railroads. Still miss all of these.
i would love to see old time ELs in service from this time period or earlier
SEPTA's had essentially zero interest in preserving historic equipment. From what I've heard they trashed almost everything. About 20-30 years ago they took a bunch of serviceable PCCs that could have been rehabbed or sold to San Francisco / a museum / etc., but instead stuck them under a section of I-95 where they rotted.
Rode 47 from 5th and Rockland to 8th and market many times with mom shopping at dept. Stores. Thanks for the memories
Great video
How does one get a list of the music used in this video? I love listening to this vintage jazzy music :) Would love to know the names and artists.
I used the 47 from Indiana Ave to Girard and with a transfer took the 15 to 17th st. St. Joe's Prep was at 17th & Stiles. Did this from Sept 1951 to June 1955. Did not realize it was soon to end!
I own this video, love it and play it often, along with part one, "Philadelphia Streetcars". I have one correction since I lived for 15 years near the Darby Loop. It is located at 9th & Main Sts., not at 11th & Main, as was stated by Jeff Marinoff in the video.
Gary, everybody is entitled to make a mistake now and then. I misspoke on the 11th & Main. But at least I pronounced names correctly......lol..... I've seen outrageous mistakes on videos, old VHS tapes and in books.
My grandad was a conductor on the Frankford line this is cool to see how the city was back in the day
Nowadays people don't understand the love of the trolley car until you explain it made you mobile free to rome around the city on your own to meet girls! Then they start to understand the infatuation with the trolley line and what it meant especially to young people. And with the trollies you didn't need a car to get around they took you everywhere that you could want to go work ,home, school, movies, on a date. It was your personal chauffer around town.
Wow! This is, indeed, a work-of-art! Soooo many memories! I once attempted (when I was about 5-yrs old), to board the 50-Olney trolley, as we lived on Tasker, between 4th and 5th Streets in S. Philly. My Mom caught me before I was able to board. When I was 13, I then rode the 23-Germantown from 11th and Tasker to the Bethlehem Loop every weekend, as a relative moved to Fort Washington. I seriously MISS the (what was) amazing Trolley Network that once was! What hurts and INFURIATES me is, as the WORLD is investing in rail infrastructure, SEPTA spares NO expense to DESTROY something that survived so much over a century! SHAMEFUL!!! Literally I have cried a number of times when I think of the stupidity of a Transit Agency such as SEPTA!
I took the trolley below the subway in center City philly.good times,a bit scary with the brick walls and rickety rails
I never got to ride the 47 but I did ride the 23 end to end quite a few times. At one time it ran all the way to the Navy Yard. This was cut back to 10 Bigler in 1964. In its later years it was known as the African Queen because it traversed the North Philadelphia badlands.
FINE AS A PORCUPINE!!!!!!!!!!!!!
One set of my grandparents lived in a city where PCC's ran and I rode on some of them.
I never rode the PCCs. I'm more of a Kawasaki person. I especially love the K-cars seen at 5:04-6:07 & 9:06-10:07 and man, I miss that paint scheme with the rollsigns.
you want nostalgic have one of Melbourne's W class tram run these street, it sure may look out of place but dam good to see
Wow Love That Video
By any chance is there a part one of this video.
Very nice
I like the video
I lived around the corner from the car barn at 26th and Allegheny ave
where is part 1?
whoa! These were classic
Love the trolleys love the 60s they were great times
The Marshall road loop still there I think it was a very well travelled line for people who needed transportation back then and still today with gas prices over five dollars a gallon Septa does a great job all day long and night for the city residents scenic it was but dangerous.
They were great times for the luxe Rene st my mom graduated from little flower in 1950 and was married in 1952 I was born in1954 great times for Philadelphia I knew many my name is John Stier the green paint scheme was the best
My dad worked at fourth and arch I had a grandfather work the 23 line till he died and his brother also worked the 23 till the sixties and I worked at fair mount ave in the eighties
The Godfrey loop was a sight for sore eyes in the bad weather nights cold and snowy
Chestnut hill always reminded me of rich people of Philadelphia what a time for the 23 gongs clacking gorgas lane always reminded me of noblest
Great times for pic and septa
What song is playing at the end?
Yeah, WHERE IS THE FIRST ONE¿?¿
Would Love to See!!!
The PTC was starting to have trouble after WWII due to wear and tear during the war, competition from (subsidized) highways, and other factors. In the mid-1950s National City Lines took over their management and of course almost immediately started to rip out trolley services all over the city. Reportedly they wanted to "bustify" the subway-surface lines too but couldn't figure out how to make the tunnels compatible with buses.
NCL wasn't the only reason streetcar systems failed but they took major advantage of existing weaknesses to destroy a lot of lines that might have survived otherwise. When SEPTA was formed in the mid-1960s they inherited a lot of NCL's anti-rail mindset. Even 50+ years later it still colors a lot of their decisions, although it seems that the new CEO is trying to change things.
I will never understand why NCL purchased PTC. Unlike the other properties NCL acquired, PTC has rapid transit subway lines (Broad Street and Market-Frankford). How would NCL bustitute subway lines? one-53-passenger bus vs. 6X67-passenger subway train. Also, the cities that kept their trolleys has trolley subway tunnels (Boston, Philly, San Francisco, and Toronto, with Washinton, D.C. being the exception), so NCL didn't think that one through. So I guess after that, NCL didn't want to acquire properties that has subways.
@@josephheston9238 A friend wrote his master's thesis on NCL and used Philly as one of his case studies. To the extent that I remember his conclusions NCL was willing to weaken any system they couldn't destroy because it still meant more buses.
When they took over PTC Philly had one of the largest trolley fleets in the country, after LA and a couple of other cities. Within three years of the takeover they'd converted 24 lines to bus operation and discontinued service on 3 others. In addition PTC had little or no GM equipment in its fleet prior to NCL's takeover; after that almost all buses were ordered from GM.
They also put in place pro-bus, anti-rail management that lasted into the SEPTA days a decade later and beyond. SEPTA was abandoning trolley lines as late as the early 1990s (!)
While as you note it was far from total destruction; even so they turned Philadelphia from a rails-first operation into a heavily bus-dependent city, which I'm guessing was enough for their appetite.
I don't have a source to back it up, but reportedly there WERE rumors that NCL looked into replacing the subway-surface streetcars with buses but couldn't solve the issues of clearances and ventilation. If true, that could account for why they didn't seriously attack other cities with underground rails.
Grew up in Frankford always took the 59 trolly down to the Kiddy City on Erie Ave to get hockey sticks and blade's it was 25 cents for the fare.
Where's part 1? Did it get taken down?
I miss that old livery on the Kawasakis
I remember the restaurant and old bridge the rt 76(bus) went over at the Darby terminal.
This older type tram looks like soviet РВЗ-6. Even those "wings" on the nose...
yup and that same rail now sits dormant and abandoned. I never understood why they never bothered to cover any of the tracks on Germantown Ave.
Every so often there's talk of restoring trolleys on part of Germantown Ave. Knowing Philly it will almost certainly never get beyond the talk stage but it may be enough to prevent permanent destruction of the rails.
You look at the past vs now and most of them are gone
How did the street track switches work..?
The electric switches worked by the power off (to go straight) or on (to turn) position of the car's controller at the time the car rolled over the sensor. The overhead line had a switch that worked the same way.
@@Telcom100 ty
Subway operation was so much better before CBTC was installed.
Does anyone remember L&C store at Orthodox and torresdale avenue they sold Pro Keds and Chuck Taylor and PF Flyer sneakers.
This is Part 2 where is part 1
The crazy part is that a non-zero amount of the cars shown in this video are still in use in 2022. And not just the 15 trolleys, which are constantly on bus substitution.
My grandma took the 50 or47 to work to good n plenty at Germantown and sascky
? The 15 is the only route that uses PCCs in revenue service. Everything else is K-cars. The Route 15s are technically called PCC-II cars because they're complete rebuilds. The shells are original but nearly everything else is either a rehab or replacement.
I don't understand why SEPTA didn't save the surface streetcar routes. I Wish that they purchased 😪 former Torontos TTC Bombardier cars to run the surface routes.
About the 4:30 mark this is totally wrong on the method of operation on Route 34. Route 34 was one man, not two, and was pay leave eastbound to subway and pay enter westbound.
17:10 music
I love the scene (50:30) where it looks like a little girl is with her Mother or Grandmother and the way she holds her because she has no seatbelt!!!
People paid attention back in those days!!!
Back then I remember when we never wore seatbelts, and always did dangerous things but never saw anyone during my life (over 45 years so far) injured!!!
Kids did always get scraped knees but they got right back up and was actually part of the fun and lessons Learned throughout life!!!
Nowadays you would probably have multiple deaths immediately shutting it down INDEFINITELY because of no safety belts or something???
37 went all the way to Chester! When did that end?
37 still go to Chester......as a bus route
@@ogtripplog215iiiifffff I would think there are many bus routes to Chester, but since this was a trolly video, I was commenting on trolleys going to Chester, not amazed about buses going there..
37 Route to Chester ended in 1946. It was cutback at route 420 until 1956
It still does that i know....its right at the corner of my block in s. Philly.
Again no 10 trolly,west phila did not exist.
Dear precious one, please repeat after me with your whole heart, "Father God, I know I'm a sinner and I ask for Your forgiveness. I believe Jesus Christ is Your Son. I believe in the Good News that Jesus died on the cross for my sins and that You resurrected Him from the dead in order to restore my relationship with You. Through my belief and faith in Jesus death, burial and resurrection, I am saved.
I want to trust Jesus as my Savior and follow Him as my Lord from this day forward. Please guide my life and help me do Your will, Your way through the Holy Spirit. This I pray in the powerful, loving and glorious name of Your Son, Jesus Christ my Lord and Savior. Amen!" ♥️
Dear friend, may Father God our Creator, through Jesus Christ our Lord and Savior bless you, lead you, guide you and keep you in His abundantly loving care now and for all eternity! Amen! 🙏♥️
Nobody here is interested.
Missing from the photos. The foul graffiti and trash everywhere.