Skip to main content

Some great old photographs.  I've always enjoyed viewing pictures like these since they often show downtown life as it once was before the malls and Internet changed things forever.  Trolley pictures taken in cities such as Cleveland, etc. often show the old movie theatre marquees most of which have disappeared from our streetscapes.  Thanks for posting. 

 

Since I am an old codger I remember downtown Pittsburgh like that. Hustle, bustle, traffic, people carrying packages squeezing in crowded street cars. The  cars starting and stopping jostling everyone then  booking along an open track with the car rocking and rolling. Especially after work it would rock you to sleep. At one time Pgh. had 4 or 5 dept. stores and many restaurants geared for workers and shoppers. Miss that.

jim pastorius posted:

Since I am an old codger I remember downtown Pittsburgh like that. Hustle, bustle, traffic, people carrying packages squeezing in crowded street cars. The  cars starting and stopping jostling everyone then  booking along an open track with the car rocking and rolling. Especially after work it would rock you to sleep. At one time Pgh. had 4 or 5 dept. stores and many restaurants geared for workers and shoppers. Miss that.

Philly used to be like that...

 

Mitch 

Trolley cars that once roamed Long Island, New York.cat4033lNew York & Long Island Traction Company

Cover of NY & North Shore Traction by Seyfreidhuntington-long-island-new-york-electric-street-car-trolley-c1906-ny-postcard-ee0c309bc2d7b2a00224241c7491baeaHuntington Railroad CarNY&LIT Car @ Mineola TerminalNew York & Long Island Traction Car @ MineolaNY&LIT No 37NY&NST No 10 @ Pt Washington [2)          New York & North Shore Traction Car in Port WashingtonNY&Queens Cars @164th St & Union Tpk 1937 [13)NY&Queens Car @164th St & Union Tpk 1937

NY&Queens Cars @164th St & Union Tpk 1937 [24)New York & Queens Car Stuck In Snowqq23aHuntington Railroad Car On Rt 110 @ Long Island Rail Road OverpassSteinway No 321Steinway Car Likely On Northern Blvd

Suffolk Traction Co. Battery Car 1 on Flatcar-Patchogue-6-1911Battery Car For Suffolk Traction That Ran In Patchogue

Attachments

Images (12)
  • Brill 11 Window Semi-Convertible Similar to NY&LIT Nos 39-61(1)
  • cat4033l
  • Cover of NY & North Shore Traction by Seyfreid
  • huntington-long-island-new-york-electric-street-car-trolley-c1906-ny-postcard-ee0c309bc2d7b2a00224241c7491baea
  • NY&LIT Car @ Mineola Terminal
  • NY&LIT No 37
  • NY&NST No 10 @ Pt Washington (2)
  • NY&Queens Cars @164th St & Union Tpk 1937 (13)
  • NY&Queens Cars @164th St & Union Tpk 1937 (24)
  • qq23a
  • Steinway No 321
  • Suffolk Traction Co. Battery  Car 1 on Flatcar-Patchogue-6-1911

A picture showing an Erie & Conneaut Transit Co. trolley heading eastbound off the old high level bridge in Conneaut, OH.  This car would have gone east toward Girard, PA ending its trip in Erie, PA.  An approx. date for the picture is 1905.   This high level bridge was replaced in 1922 by a concrete viaduct erected just south of this location. 

Attachments

Images (1)
  • Conneaut Trolley006
jim pastorius posted:

Since I am an old codger I remember downtown Pittsburgh like that. Hustle, bustle, traffic, people carrying packages squeezing in crowded street cars. The  cars starting and stopping jostling everyone then  booking along an open track with the car rocking and rolling. Especially after work it would rock you to sleep. At one time Pgh. had 4 or 5 dept. stores and many restaurants geared for workers and shoppers. Miss that.

Jim: 

Is that how you remember downtown Pittsburgh was like?

1170_Smithfield-5th-IB_19450000-1138

Note the early PCC, the Iron City Beer Sign and the Kaufmann's Department Store clock (the famous meeting place)!

And what could be more Pittsburgh-esque than this shot of a McKeesport-bound PCC streetcar passing under a Union Railroad Slag Dump Train? 

56-OB_ButtermilkHollow-UnionRRSlagCars_19600330_1200_016

 

Thanks to Jim Holland for the photos.

Bill (another old codger)

Attachments

Images (2)
  • 1170_Smithfield-5th-IB_19450000-1138
  • 56-OB_ButtermilkHollow-UnionRRSlagCars_19600330_1200_016: 56 McKeesport passing under Union RR Slag Dump Train
Last edited by WftTrains

Oh yes !! On a rainy day you could literally walk across town ducking from one building to the next. In the late 60s even I was selling industrial chemicals calling on the corporate purchasing depts in downtown. I spent one day a week there, could have spent 2-3 days. Nothing now. I have a video-off the internet  which shows downtown San Francisco in 1906 two days before the big quake !  Wagons, autos , street cars and people in the street looking like ants.  Unbelievable and it would all change within days.

AmFlyer posted:

If you look closely The name Frank & Seder is visible on the building to the left, across Smithfield Street from Kaufmann’s. Frank & Seder was one of Pittsburgh’s department stores back then. 

Tom:

Good catch!  When I used to go downtown shopping with Mom (we rode the #53 Carrick streetcar) she would have to drag me into Frank & Seder's because I wanted to go to Kaufmann's instead because Frank & Seder's didn't sell trains (or any toys, IIRC) while Kaufmann's did sell trains and toys.

Bill

Last edited by WftTrains

Actually for a while they sold Gilbert trains and toys. My dad bought one of my 1956 Christmas gifts there, a Gilbert HO train set. 

When Frank & Seder went out of business floors 4 through 7 were rented by an engineering firm that I joined on graduation from college. The building was known then as 441 Smithfield street. 

Sorry for the deviation from trolley’s, but I did ride the street car to work from the Castle Shannon municipal building stop. 

WftTrains posted:
jim pastorius posted:

Since I am an old codger I remember downtown Pittsburgh like that. Hustle, bustle, traffic, people carrying packages squeezing in crowded street cars. The  cars starting and stopping jostling everyone then  booking along an open track with the car rocking and rolling. Especially after work it would rock you to sleep. At one time Pgh. had 4 or 5 dept. stores and many restaurants geared for workers and shoppers. Miss that.

Jim: 

Is that how you remember downtown Pittsburgh was like?

1170_Smithfield-5th-IB_19450000-1138

Note the early PCC, the Iron City Beer Sign and the Kaufmann's Department Store clock (the famous meeting place)!

And what could be more Pittsburgh-esque than this shot of a McKeesport-bound PCC streetcar passing under a Union Railroad Slag Dump Train? 

56-OB_ButtermilkHollow-UnionRRSlagCars_19600330_1200_016

Thanks to Jim Holland for the photos.

Bill (another old codger)

Second image not found, but by the description I'd guess it was taken near Buttermilk Hollow Rd .

Add Reply

Post

OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×