Rio de Janeiro Tramways
Car #1758

1758 in storage in Florida in 2006, as Car No.1 (OSCAR) Sister car 1774 being unloaded from a railroad flatcar at Mt. Union, PA in 1965
(Louis Buehler photo, Miller Library collection)

 

Car Number 1758 Car Builder Rio de Janeiro Tramways
Year Built 1911 Year Acquired 2006
Type DE DT Open City Car Seats XX
Length XX'X" Width X'XX"
Height XX'X" Weight XX,XXX lbs (XX tons)
Max Speed XX mph Status Stored inoperative, under restoration

No trolley car attracted the riding public's attention quite like the open car did.  A hundred years ago, summer trolley rides were advertised as the perfect way to cool off, and the companies did a brisk business taking passengers to parks or for a ride in the country.  Many trolley companies built those parks that became the destinations - it was simply good business!

As safety became more of an issue, due to autos sharing the streets, open trolleys in most American cities disappeared in the late 1920s.  But in Brazil, use of the cars continued into the 1960s, when a dozen cars of Brazilian manufacture were brought to the United States by a group of trolley museums.  Car 1758 is one of these.  It is similar to cars operated by West Penn Railways in Westmoreland and Fayette Counties (though one bench shorter), and by many other street railway companies throughout Pennsylvania.

Car 1758 was originally purchased and restored by the Magee Transportation Museum in Bloomsburg, PA.  It operated there as Magee Museum #3, until that museum's untimely closure as a result of extensive damage from Hurricane Agnes in 1972.  The car was purchased in 1973 by the Lionel Train and Seashell Museum in Sarasota, Florida, where it was used indoors as a display and as a seating area to watch videos.  In 1990, the car was purchased by the City of Orlando, Florida.  It was to be used as the first streetcar (and as a device to generate public interest and Federal funding) for a proposed Heritage Streetcar line in Orlando.  The car was refurbished, re-numbered 1 and given the nickname of "Oscar" (for Orlando Streetcar).  Unfortunately, Orlando never created the proposed Heritage Streetcar line, and the streetcar sat unused in indoor storage for many years until being sold at auction in 2006.

Click on the thumbnails below for larger photos (will open in new window):

 

 

 
  Postcard of a West Penn open car at Oakford Park
(Edward H. Lybarger collection)
   

 

Last updated May 25, 2006
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