Showing posts with label streetcar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label streetcar. Show all posts

Friday, January 27, 2023

Last Streetcar Run in Gadsden in 1934

Once upon a time many cities of any size ran a form of transportation called street cars, also known as trolleys or as trams in Europe. You may have heard of them. Once ubiquitous, street cars have largely disappeared from North America. Toronto still operates its extensive line, and a few other cities operate smaller ones or lines meant largely for tourists. The only one I've ever ridden is the St. Charles Streetcar Line in New Orleans, which opened in 1835 and is the oldest continuously operating streetcar line in the world. 

I was roaming through Samford University's digital collections recently and came across the photograph below documenting the last streetcar run in Gadsden. A little more research turned up two newspaper articles giving some details here and here and written by local historians Danny Crownover and Mike Goodson. 

Crownover's piece notes that electric streetcars had begun in the Gadsden area in the 1890s; in an earlier article he traced the history of horse-drawn and steam locomotive lines. The photograph below was taken on the final run along the Cansler Avenue line from the Republic Steel plant, stopping at Fourth and Broad Streets. The date was January 23, 1934; the article includes the names of the last crew and passengers.

That same car had made the final streetcar runs earlier on lines in Tuscumbia, Florence and Sheffield. The next morning, Crescent Motors, Inc., began operating five buses in the Gadsden and Atalla area. 



Source: Samford University Library, Special Collection


Tuesday, October 30, 2018

Birmingham Photo of the Day (66): Lakeview Trolley

Today the Lakeview district is a concentration of restaurants and entertainment venues on Birmingham's Southside near UAB. But in the late nineteenth century Lakeview was one of the Magic City's "streetcar suburbs" and developed around Lakeview Park. The 43 acres were home to a large pavilion, a baseball stadium, hotel, a theater, a lake and other amenities. The first football game between Alabama and Auburn was played there in February 1893. 

The image below is a "black and white photograph of the Highland Avenue streetcar near the pavilion at Lakeview Park" according to the cited source below. In his book Yesteray's Birmngham [1975, page 44] Malcolm C. McMillan dates this picture of the electric trolley as 1895. He notes that seven years earlier, before the trolley, Richard Hawes had murdered his wife and two young daughters and dumped the bodies of the wife and one daughter in this lake and the other daughter in East Lake.

In 1903 the Birmingham Country Club was built on the Lakeview Park site. Today the course is known as the Highland Park Golf Course.





Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections



The Lake at Lakeview Park ca. late 1880's

Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections