Wednesday, December 10, 2025

More Cars Deaccessioned by Seashore

It's been a little while since there have been any updates to Seashore's re-homing plans, but news has arrived of a few updates. Specifically, three more cars have been marked for disposition.
The first car, shown above in a 2020 photo, is MBTA 0997. This is a 1928 Wason-built rapid transit car built for the Main Line Elevated in Boston. It's been at Seashore since 1981. It's identical to car 01000, which is restored and operational, but 0997 hasn't run in a number of years and looks to be in rough - albeit complete - condition. It's been made available for re-homing. (Seashore actually has four cars from this series, but the other two, 0986 and 0996, are in semi-derelict condition back in the woods and have never been considered part of the historic collection.)
The next recent addition to the re-homing list is SEPTA 1018, a Philadelphia-Delaware Bridge car built by Brill in 1936. The above photo, taken way back in 2008, is the most recent image of this car I can find, making it unusually elusive. Identical car 1023 is also at the museum; a decade or so ago that car was painted in original blue and silver colors and was even made operational for a time, but car 1018 has remained in its end-of-service Broad Street Subway "dip" red livery and has never, to my knowledge, operated at Seashore. Cars 1018 and 1023 are two of six cars of this class still in existence, with the others including a pair on PATCO in Lindenwold (albeit modified for work service), a car stored at Fern Rock Yard in Philadelphia, and a car preserved at the Rockhill Trolley Museum
The last car added to the deaccession list is Atlantic City 299, shown here in 2016. Of the three cars, this one is the most historically significant but is also in the worst condition by far. It's a double-truck lightweight streetcar built by St. Louis in 1925 for Fort Wayne, Indiana, making it the last extant car from that city and (I believe) one of only six streetcars in existence from any city in the Hoosier State. It ran as Fort Wayne Street Railway 552 until it was sold to Atlantic City in 1946, where it was modernized a bit and renumbered 299. It was retired in 1955 and its body was sold to someone in Cross Keys, NJ, where it remained until Seashore got it in 1988 as part of their "last roundup" carbody collecting campaign. For a time, the car was stored in the Fairview barn, but recently it seems to have been moved outside and it has now been slated for scrapping due to the condition of the body.

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