Wednesday, May 31, 2023

A Terrible Acquisition

Congratulations to the Pennsylvania Trolley Museum on their newest acquisition, shown above in a post from their Facebook page today. The new arrival is Port Authority Transit 1713, a typical 1700-series PCC built in 1949 by St. Louis. As evidenced by its rather modern paint job, this car ran very late: it was still in service into the late 1990s and wasn't sold into preservation until 1998. Since that time it's been in private hands in Ohio, part of a small collection of Pittsburgh PCCs known as Penn Ohio Electric Railway. It, and the other two PCCs in the collection, have been for sale for a while. So what makes this car special?
That's right - car 1713 is the famous, or perhaps infamous, "Terrible Trolley." Pittsburgh had a lot of PCC cars with one-off paint schemes, but this car got one of the better known ones. Sometime around 1980 it was painted up for the Steelers, with "Terrible Trolley" painted on the side among various other embellishments (above photo taken in 1986 by Peter Ehrlich). By 1987, the car's livery had changed again to original Pittsburgh Railway colors (shown here), but that didn't last too long either. It ended its days in modern LRV colors, painted up like the 4000-series rebuilds, though this car remained a relatively original 1949 PCC car until the end. From the sounds of it, PTM is indeed planning on restoring this as the "Terrible Trolley." It should be quite the attention getter!

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