The second car, shown here and in the photos below, is London & Port Stanley 10. Built by Jewett in 1915, it is one of four L&PS steel interurban cars preserved, and it joins two of the others - car 4, which was a restaurant for decades, and car 8, which is fully restored and operational - at Halton County. Though it may not be ready to "put the pan up and go," car 10 is complete and in far better condition than car 4. It looks like an excellent candidate for restoration, meaning Halton County likely has the opportunity to get a pair of two-car interurban trains out on their railroad in the coming years.
As shown below, both cars were loaded in the snow at Exporail during the past couple of days and made the trek to Rockwood. One point of trivia is that for both of these cars, Halton County is only their third owner. Both ran their entire service lives, well into the 1950s, for the same interurban line that ordered them, and both were owned by CRM since retirement.
Big 1910s interurban cars stand out from the crowd a bit at the gas station!
Gord mentioned that at least some of the other electric cars deaccessioned by Exporail have indeed found takers, so more information on that should be forthcoming. For now, it's great to see that cars 10 and 104 have found a good home at Halton County. The CRM collection is now down to 39 pieces on PNAERC, while the HCRR electric collection grows to 60.











No comments:
Post a Comment