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Cleveland's Transit Vehicles: Equipment and Technology
Contributor(s): Toman, James A. (Author), Hays, Blaine S. (Author)
ISBN: 0873385489     ISBN-13: 9780873385480
Publisher: Kent State University Press
OUR PRICE:   $46.53  
Product Type: Hardcover
Published: January 1997
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: From the beginnings of the horse car era to the "sardine days" of World War II, Cleveland transit operators provided high quality service while introducing procedures and equipment that were widely copied elsewhere. From the start of street railway operations in 1859 until the end of the surface electric era in 1963, the city was crisscrossed with hundreds of miles of track and overhead wire, and with thousands of poles to keep the overhead wire in place. Thousands of streetcars, and then thousands of buses, carried millions of passengers. The old Cleveland Transit System alone carried over 493 million passengers in 1946, and that total does not reflect the ridership of various suburban carriers. In this volume are described and listed both the early vehicles and the modern ones. It is not so much a nostalgic look at earlier times as it is a description of how ongoing developments in the industry changed the way the public transportation system carried out its mission. In Cleveland this was accomplished with rare efficiency and with good speed.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Transportation | Automotive - General
- Biography & Autobiography
- History
Dewey: 625.660
LCCN: 96011223
Series: Ohio
Physical Information: 0.89" H x 8.81" W x 11.26" (2.83 lbs) 248 pages
Themes:
- Cultural Region - Midwest
- Geographic Orientation - Ohio
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

From the beginnings of the horse car era to the "sardine days" or World War II, Cleveland transit operators provided high quality service while introducing procedures and equipment that were widely copies elsewhere.

The social and political aspects of Cleveland's public transportation history are the subject of this companion volume to Horse Trails to Regional Rails. The focus here is on the technological aspects of the system.

From the start of street railway operations in 1859 until the end of the surface electric era in 1963, the city was crisscrossed with hundreds of miles of track and overhead wire, and with thousands of poles to keep the overhead wire in place. Thousands of streetcars, and then thousands of buses, carried millions of passengers. The old Cleveland Transit System alone carried over 493 million passengers in 1946, and that total does not reflect the ridership of various suburban carriers.

In this volume are described and listed both the early vehicles and the modern ones.

It is not so much a nostalgic look at earlier times as it is a description of how ongoing developments in the industry changed the way the public transportation system carried out its mission. In Cleveland this was accomplished with rare efficiency and with good speed.

The authors confess, whoever, to one nostalgic piece. In 1965, Jack Ainsley, a Cleveland rail fan, wrote his reminiscences about taking the streetcar through the Detroit-Superior Bridge subway. His narrative is in part 3. His recollections help from the technological focus of this volume and give it a more human face.