News appeared online today that the streetcar body in the defunct Columbus, Ohio, Spaghetti Warehouse has been saved for preservation by a local historical organization. The car is shown above, in a photo from here taken today, after removal from the building where it had resided since 1978. Since the car is now owned by a museum, and since I have narrowed its likely origins down to a specific series of five cars, I figure I've got enough to add it to the PNAERC list. So, here it is.
I'm reasonably sure that this is one of five cars built by American in 1922 for the Texas Interurban Railway in their 100-104 series. TIRy was an unusual system; among the last new electric interurban lines built in the country, it had lines from Dallas to Denton and Terrell that opened in 1923. The system closed in 1932, after which its lightweight cars were sold to Dallas Railway & Terminal for city service. This quintet ran as DR&T 111-115 until sometime in the mid-1950s. This car, the only ex-TIRy car preserved, was rebuilt by Spaghetti Warehouse around 1977 and has been a centerpiece on the Columbus restaurant since then.
Its new owner, the Rickenbacker Woods Foundation, is a new addition to PNAERC and a bit of an anomaly. It seems to be part museum, part community group, with a significant educational component. It's based around the boyhood home of World War I ace Eddie Rickenbacker and also focuses on Granville T. Woods, an inventor who lived in Columbus during the late 1800s and, among other things, invented early devices for third-rail electric railway use. It appears that RWF is hoping to construct a park adjacent to their site and make this streetcar body a feature of the park.
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