Lehigh Valley Transit
Encyclopedia
The Lehigh Valley Transit Company (LVT) was a Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania is a U.S. state that is located in the Northeastern and Mid-Atlantic regions of the United States. The state borders Delaware and Maryland to the south, West Virginia to the southwest, Ohio to the west, New York and Ontario, Canada, to the north, and New Jersey to...

 interurban
Interurban
An interurban, also called a radial railway in parts of Canada, is a type of electric passenger railroad; in short a hybrid between tram and train. Interurbans enjoyed widespread popularity in the first three decades of the twentieth century in North America. Until the early 1920s, most roads were...

 rail transport company that operated a network of city and interurban trolley lines. In poor financial condition, LVT abruptly abandoned operation of its Philadelphia Division in September 1951. LVT gave patrons no prior notice, and puzzled riders waited to be picked up the next day.

Among LVT's lines was the 45 miles (72.4 km) Liberty Bell High Speed trolley line from Allentown
Allentown, Pennsylvania
Allentown is a city located in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. It is Pennsylvania's third most populous city, after Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, and the 215th largest city in the United States. As of the 2010 census, the city had a total population of 118,032 and is currently...

 to Upper Darby. The Liberty Bell High Speed Line is considered the last of the eastern U.S. high speed, side of road, over hill and dale, town street to farm land interurbans in the United States, although the Media end of the present day 100-year-old Upper Darby to Media
Media, Pennsylvania
The borough of Media is the county seat of Delaware County, Pennsylvania and is located west of Philadelphia. Media was incorporated in 1850 at the same time that it was named the county seat. The population was 5,533 at the 2000 census. Its school district is the Rose Tree Media School District...

 former Red Arrow trolley line — now SEPTA Route 101 — has some of these same characteristics. As was customary for interurban trolleys, the LVT Philadelphia Division ran fast in open country, but once in a village or town it slowly progressed down streets, made frequent stops, and navigated sharp streetcar-like turns at intersections.

The Liberty Bell line had a terminal in each town with a waiting room and a ticket agent. In the larger towns LVT had facilities to handle trolley freight. Coming south from its downtown Allentown terminal, the LVT Philadelphia Division served the Pennsylvania villages of Coopersburg
Coopersburg, Pennsylvania
Coopersburg is a borough in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, United States. It is a suburb of Allentown in the Lehigh Valley region of the state.The population of Coopersburg was 2,386 at the 2010 census.-Geography:...

, Quakertown
Quakertown, Pennsylvania
Quakertown is a borough in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. As of the 2010 census, it had a population of 8,979. The borough is south of Bethlehem and north of Philadelphia, making Quakertown a border town of both the Delaware Valley and Lehigh Valley metropolitan areas...

, Perkasie
Perkasie, Pennsylvania
Perkasie is a borough in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, north of Philadelphia. Establishments in the borough early in the twentieth century included silk mills, baseballs, brickyards, lumber mills, tile works, a stone crusher, and manufacturies of cigars, tags and labels, wire novelties, etc. The...

, Sellersville
Sellersville, Pennsylvania
Sellersville is a borough in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 4,249 at the 2010 census. Sellersville is part of Pennridge School District.-Geography:Sellersville is located at ....

, Souderton
Souderton, Pennsylvania
Souderton is a borough in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. The population was 6,618 at the 2010 census.Souderton hosts the end of the annual Univest Grand Prix, a professional bicycle race.- Geography :Souderton is located at ....

, Hatfield
Hatfield, Pennsylvania
Hatfield is a borough in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 3,290 at the time of the 2010 census.-Geography:Hatfield is located at ....

, Lansdale
Lansdale, Pennsylvania
Lansdale is a borough in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, 28 miles northwest of Philadelphia. Early in the 20th century, its industries included agricultural implement works, a canning factory, foundries, brickyards, a silk mill, and manufacturers of cigars, stoves, shirts, rope, iron drain pipe,...

, and Norristown
Norristown, Pennsylvania
Norristown is a municipality in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, northwest of the city limits of Philadelphia, on the Schuylkill River. The population was 34,324 as of the 2010 census. It is the county seat of Montgomery County...

. In Norristown, its third-rail-equipped cars continued on the high-speed Philadelphia and Western to its 69th Street, Upper Darby terminus, which was the western terminus of the Philadelphia city subway-elevated. Philadelphia and Western Railroad
Philadelphia and Western Railroad
The Philadelphia and Western Railroad was a high-speed, third rail-operated, commuter-hauling interurban electric railroad operating in the western suburbs of the U.S. city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. One of its lines is now SEPTA's R100 Norristown High Speed Line; the other has been abandoned...

 crews operated the LVT cars from Norristown south. Much of the LVT's route was paralleled by the Reading Railroad's steam powered Bethlehem Branch, and had many of the same major stops. In Lansdale, the two stations faced each other. The Reading operated passenger service directly to its busy downtown Market Street Reading Terminal in Philadelphia, but the LVT was less expensive for frugal riders and made more village and local stops. Some patrons would ride the Reading, for example, from downtown Philadelphia to Lansdale, then walk across the street to the Lansdale LVT station to catch an interurban home.

In 1939, LVT purchased thirteen used lightweight high-speed Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad
Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad
The Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad was a short-lived electric interurban railway that operated in 1930-1939 Depression-era Ohio between Cincinnati, Springfield, Columbus, and Toledo...

 Red Devil
Red Devil (interurban)
The Red Devil was a high-speed interurban trolley . It was developed by the Cincinnati Car Company for the Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad , which bought 20 of them in 1929 for service between cities and towns in Ohio. At and long, they were among the first lightweight trolleys, with side...

cars from the abandoned Ohio interurban to augment its older, heavier, and slower 700 and 800 series interurban cars. The former Red Devils were reconditioned by the innovative LVT Allentown shops and were then operated from Allentown to Philadelphia as Liberty Bell Limiteds. The LVT advertised for and ran freight, but it was a small part of the business. Box motor
Box motor
A box motor, in railroad terminology, is a self-propelled boxcar, normally powered by electricity and running on an interurban railway or a streetcar line. Many box motors were converted from passenger cars on the systems that ran them, with the seats and most of the windows removed and large...

 freight trolleys usually operated at night, but LVT sometimes ran scheduled trips as a "mixed" train with a box motor coupled behind the older series of passenger coach. During the World War II
World War II
World War II, or the Second World War , was a global conflict lasting from 1939 to 1945, involving most of the world's nations—including all of the great powers—eventually forming two opposing military alliances: the Allies and the Axis...

 years, LVT carried full loads including standees on its overworked equipment. When the war ended, ridership rapidly declined, and LVT again faced bankruptcy and abandonment as it had during the Great Depression
Great Depression
The Great Depression was a severe worldwide economic depression in the decade preceding World War II. The timing of the Great Depression varied across nations, but in most countries it started in about 1929 and lasted until the late 1930s or early 1940s...

.

History

The Lehigh Valley Transit Company (LVT) began in 1905. It acquired the "Lehigh Valley Traction Company", which began operation in the early part of the 20th century as a meandering side of dirt road street car line from Quakertown south to Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia. In 1912–13, and again in 1925, LVT upgraded track and in places rerouted lines with private right of way constructed between some towns. At Wales Junction on the original Chestnut Hill line, a totally new route was constructed southward to reach Norristown to connect with the Philadelphia transportation system. Long stretches of eighty mile per hour high speed open country private right of way existed, particularly north of Quakertown. Another long stretch existed between Souderton and Lansdale and included a steel bridge north of Hatfield known as Gehman Trestle. LVT installed blade style block signals purchased the 800 class heavy wood arch windowed interurban cars from Jewett Car Company
Jewett Car Company
The Jewett Car Company was an early 20th century American industrial company that manufactured street cars.The company was founded in 1893 in Jewett, Ohio, where its first factory was located. In 1904, the company relocated from Jewett to a site along South Williams Street in Newark, Ohio, but...

, and set up railroad style dispatching. With these changes, local service using the older street cars and express service using the new Jewetts began between Allentown and Norristown-Philadelphia.

The extensive Pennsylvania construction of paved highways and the public's increased ownership of automobiles like the Ford Model T
Ford Model T
The Ford Model T is an automobile that was produced by Henry Ford's Ford Motor Company from September 1908 to May 1927...

 in the 1920s started the financial decline of most interurbans in the United States. Many were abandoned prior to and during the Great Depression. LVT struggled during this time but survived, primarily due to the purchase of high speed light weight interurbams from the abandoned Cincinnati and Lake Erie interurban in Ohio. This improved ridership which then jumped due to gas rationing and increased industrial activity during World War II, but after the war the number of riders dropped again. Service quality declined during the 1950s as LVT lost rider revenue, which led to further loss of riders. Through service on the P&W ended in 1949, and thereafter patrons had to change cars at Norristown. In 1951, the financially failing LVT received temporary approval to suspend its interurban operation from the Pennsylvania PUC
Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission
Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission is the public utility commission in Pennsylvania. It is composed of five commissioners, appointed by the Governor with the consent of the state Senate....

. Fearful that it might be ordered to resume operation, LVT had crews immediately remove signals, tear out trolley catenary, and rip up rails. Operation was converted to buses on back roads, which dissatisfied both employees and riders. The shutdown of the Lehigh Valley Transit caused considerable loss of employment at the shops at Allentown and Souderton. It was the end of a southeastern Pennsylvania transportation institution that had existed for over fifty years.

Equipment

A fleet of fifty suburban cars built by St. Louis Car Company
St. Louis Car Company
The St. Louis Car Company was a major United States manufacturer of railroad passenger cars, streetcars, trolleybuses and locomotives that existed from 1887–1973, based in St. Louis, Missouri.-History:...

 was placed into service in 1902. Later interurban cars purchased were the wood frame trussbar 800 series from Jewett Car Company
Jewett Car Company
The Jewett Car Company was an early 20th century American industrial company that manufactured street cars.The company was founded in 1893 in Jewett, Ohio, where its first factory was located. In 1904, the company relocated from Jewett to a site along South Williams Street in Newark, Ohio, but...

 in 1912, the all-steel and faster 700 series cars from Southern Car Company in 1916, thirteen 1939-purchased 1000 series former Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad
Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad
The Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad was a short-lived electric interurban railway that operated in 1930-1939 Depression-era Ohio between Cincinnati, Springfield, Columbus, and Toledo...

 Red Devil cars, and the round end 1030 from the former Indiana Railroad interurban. All except the 1000 series cars could be, and often were, run together in two or three car trains, including combinations of both the 800 and 700 series cars. Across the years, equipment modifications were made by the Fairview shops. The 700 series steel cars were converted from center-entrance two-man crew to one-man cars. A classic arch window interurban coach typical of 1910 construction was 812. It was rebuilt in the LVT shops as a private car and later converted to regular service. A classic interurban, it operated to the last day of rail operation in 1951. The LVT color scheme was an all red body with silver roof until the lightweight 1000 series cars arrived. Then much of the fleet was repainted white with red trim and silver roof.

Red Devil interurban cars

LVT's acquisition of the former Cincinnati and Lake Erie's unique Red Devil interurban cars in 1939 probably saved LVT from an earlier abandonment. These well designed interurbans dramatically improved passenger comfort. The cars had quick acceleration and high speed capability with poor track conditions, which improved schedules and service, and they used less power than their predecessors. LVT ridership increased, and then World War II
World War II
World War II, or the Second World War , was a global conflict lasting from 1939 to 1945, involving most of the world's nations—including all of the great powers—eventually forming two opposing military alliances: the Allies and the Axis...

 started. Gasoline and tire rationing required more non-automobile transportation in the Philadelphia region.

The Red Devils were the result of three financially distressed Ohio interurban lines being combined in 1930 to become the Cincinnati and Lake Erie Railroad. C&LE management knew that passenger and freight service had to be improved if the new line was to be profitable. For passenger service, C&LE engineers worked with the Cincinnati Car Company
Cincinnati Car Company
Cincinnati Car Company or Cincinnati Car Corporation was a subsidiary of Ohio Traction Company. It designed and constructed interurban cars, streetcars and buses. It was founded in 1902 in Cincinnati, Ohio. In 1928 it bought the Versare Car Company.The company was among the first to make...

 staff in 1929 to design and construct twenty interurban coaches with improved passenger comfort and appeal. Better performance in terms of ride, speed, and reduced power consumption was obtained through improved aerodynamics, reduced car weight, and improved truck design. Significant use of aluminum reduced weight, and the Red Devils provided passengers with comfortable leather bucket seats with headrests. One drawback was that Red Devils had a smaller passenger capacity than provided by the older Ohio interurbans, but C&LE planned to increase scheduled service. The Red Devils were 43'9" long, 11'4" high and weighed 24 short tons (22 metric tons
). A typical 1920s large steel interurban was around 56' long, 14' high, and weighed 60 tons.

A new truck design was a major part of the improved ride. The truck carried four new design compact 100 hp
Horsepower
Horsepower is the name of several units of measurement of power. The most common definitions equal between 735.5 and 750 watts.Horsepower was originally defined to compare the output of steam engines with the power of draft horses in continuous operation. The unit was widely adopted to measure the...

 motors. It had smaller wheels in diameter (28") and a smaller frame, which allowed the car to sit lower and have a lower center of gravity. The Red Devils were known for their excellent ride at high speed on rough interurban track. Unfortunately, when the Great Depression deepened, C&LE business revenue declined drastically in 1937. C&LE abandoned their train lines and sold the Red Devils to LVT.

Golden Calf interurban car

In adjacent Indiana, a similar combining of marginal and failing interurban lines occurred creating the new Indiana Railroad
Indiana Railroad
This article is for the electric interurban railroad of 1930-1941. For the currently operating freight railroad Indiana Rail Road see Indiana Rail Road....

. In 1931, the IRR purchased lightweight interurban cars from Pullman
Pullman Company
The Pullman Palace Car Company, founded by George Pullman, manufactured railroad cars in the mid-to-late 19th century through the early decades of the 20th century, during the boom of railroads in the United States. Pullman developed the sleeping car which carried his name into the 1980s...

 and American Car and Foundry
American Car and Foundry Company
American Car and Foundry is a manufacturer of railroad rolling stock. One of its subsidiaries was once a manufacturer of motor coaches and trolley coaches under the brand names of ACF and ACF-Brill. Today ACF is known as ACF Industries LLC and is based in St. Charles, Missouri...

 based upon the Red Devil design but with some improvements. More aluminum was used, and a heavier truck design was adopted to allow even greater speeds. The IRR operated three car trains from Indianapolis
Indianapolis
Indianapolis is the capital of the U.S. state of Indiana, and the county seat of Marion County, Indiana. As of the 2010 United States Census, the city's population is 839,489. It is by far Indiana's largest city and, as of the 2010 U.S...

 south to Louisville
Louisville, Kentucky
Louisville is the largest city in the U.S. state of Kentucky, and the county seat of Jefferson County. Since 2003, the city's borders have been coterminous with those of the county because of a city-county merger. The city's population at the 2010 census was 741,096...

, so the new IRR lightweights had couplers
Coupling (railway)
A coupling is a mechanism for connecting rolling stock in a train. The design of the coupler is standard, and is almost as important as the railway gauge, since flexibility and convenience are maximised if all rolling stock can be coupled together.The equipment that connects the couplings to the...

 and a rounded rear end unlike the Red Devil's square rear end. This round end allowed coupled car operation around tight curves in town streets. IR abandoned operations in 1941, and LVT purchased parlor car #55 from the IR to replace a car lost in a fire. It arrived on the LVT property in IRR's bright "traction orange." LVT's Fairview shopmen humorously labeled it the "Golden Calf." The shop crew refurbished and repainted it using LVT's white with red trim (called by the LVT "Picador Cream and Mountain Ash Scarlet") and renumbered it LVT 1030. It stood out from its Red Devil brothers by its more tapered front windows and the round rear end. LVT replaced the Commonwealth trucks with those removed from the burned out former Red Devil 1004. Although the frequent stops and the rolling hills of eastern Pennsylvania countryside were more demanding for traction motors than the open Ohio flatlands had been, the former Red Devils and the 1030 performed reliably and well until LVT abandonment in 1951. 1030 is now preserved at the Seashore Trolley Museum
Seashore Trolley Museum
The Seashore Trolley Museum, located in Kennebunkport, Maine, United States, is the world's oldest and largest museum of mass transit vehicles....

.

Streetcar maintenance

LVT needed to maintain interurban cars, streetcars, freight trolleys, and line maintenance equipment. LVT's primary car storage yard and major shop was the Fairview barn southwest of downtown Allentown
Allentown, Pennsylvania
Allentown is a city located in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. It is Pennsylvania's third most populous city, after Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, and the 215th largest city in the United States. As of the 2010 census, the city had a total population of 118,032 and is currently...

. Tracks to Fairview left the main line just south of the 8th Street bridge. In Allentown, LVT had the awkward situation of running interurban cars, sometimes backward, through residential areas from Fairview to reach downtown and begin the hourly service to Philadelphia.

A second maintenance facility and yard was in Souderton
Souderton, Pennsylvania
Souderton is a borough in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. The population was 6,618 at the 2010 census.Souderton hosts the end of the annual Univest Grand Prix, a professional bicycle race.- Geography :Souderton is located at ....

, which is now the location of the Souderton fire department building at 2nd and Central Streets. The Souderton maintenance facility was reached by a track branching from the main line on Summit Street running down 2nd Street for two blocks. The all wood arch windowed 801 was kept at Souderton as backup and was used frequently.

LVT had to maintain AC to DC power conversion substations
Electrical substation
A substation is a part of an electrical generation, transmission, and distribution system. Substations transform voltage from high to low, or the reverse, or perform any of several other important functions...

 to generate its needed 600 VDC trolley voltage from local AC power. In 1951 it had an aging car fleet and had to pay all costs to maintain roadbed and track, drainage systems, stations, other buildings, catenary, bridges, and snow removal.

Route and schedule

A Saturday-Sunday schedule for April 1938 shows Allentown to Philadelphia interurban "Expresses" leaving Allentown on the hour from 6 am to 10 pm. There were twenty five scheduled stops en route but many more stops occurred simply by a rider "buzzing" the motorman or by flagging the car down. Scheduled arrival at the P&W Norristown
Norristown, Pennsylvania
Norristown is a municipality in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, northwest of the city limits of Philadelphia, on the Schuylkill River. The population was 34,324 as of the 2010 census. It is the county seat of Montgomery County...

 station was 1 hr 38 minutes later. Typical running time between the scheduled stops was two to six minutes. Germantown Pike, the last stop before Norristown, to Norristown's LVT+P&W station took 14 minutes. This interval included a southbound-northbound car "meet" with an LVT-P&W operator swap at Marshall passing siding in the middle of Norristown's Markley Street between Marshall and Airy Streets. The two cars were positioned door to door so that the motorman exchange was made directly from car to car. A P&W crew took the southbound car down Markley to Airy where it turned east, then south on Swede and a jog from Swede onto a bridge over Norristown's Main Street and into the P&W's elevated station. The 1938 schedule had four "Expresses" operating on the line at the same time.

Hourly local service had many more stops and used typical streetcar equipment. Local service went between the Expresses and ran Allentown to Center Valley at the north end and Hatfield to Norristown at the south end. The two southbound-northbound limited meets were normally at Marshall siding in Norristown and at Nace Siding in open country just north of Souderton.

Present day remnants

Some signs of the LVT's single track Allentown to Philadelphia line still exist. The columned station on Perkasie's
Perkasie, Pennsylvania
Perkasie is a borough in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, north of Philadelphia. Establishments in the borough early in the twentieth century included silk mills, baseballs, brickyards, lumber mills, tile works, a stone crusher, and manufacturies of cigars, tags and labels, wire novelties, etc. The...

 Walnut Street is the most evident. It now houses the Perkasie Historical Society. North of the Perkasie Station is the LVT tunnel under the Reading Railroad. Further north are concrete bridge abutments where the line crossed 9th Street.

At Sellersville
Sellersville, Pennsylvania
Sellersville is a borough in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 4,249 at the 2010 census. Sellersville is part of Pennridge School District.-Geography:Sellersville is located at ....

 the small white station is now a dental office. It served as a police station in the late 1950s. The Quakertown
Quakertown, Pennsylvania
Quakertown is a borough in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, in the United States. As of the 2010 census, it had a population of 8,979. The borough is south of Bethlehem and north of Philadelphia, making Quakertown a border town of both the Delaware Valley and Lehigh Valley metropolitan areas...

 station at the northwest corner of Main and Broad has a mural on a back wall depicting one of the LVT's 1000 Series Liberty Bell Limited former Cincinnati and Lake Erie high speed interurbans. The house-like two story Hatfield
Hatfield, Pennsylvania
Hatfield is a borough in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, United States. The population was 3,290 at the time of the 2010 census.-Geography:Hatfield is located at ....

 station is now a cafe. Inside this cafe there are photographs of LVT cars, LVT locations, and a 1938 schedule of operations. South of this building, part of the former LVT right-of-way, including an original 1916 culvert, is a paved walking and biking trail called "The Liberty Bell Trail". Some of the former LVT right of way is visible from satellite as a faint scar across the countryside north of Quakertown. The DeLorme Company's "Pennsylvania Atlas and Gazetter Topographic Maps" book shows "old railroad grades" as a faint dashed red line on their maps. There is a dashed line shown running from Quakertown to Center Valley at present day Route 309
Pennsylvania Route 309
Pennsylvania Route 309 is a major highway which runs for 134 miles through Pennsylvania in the United States. It connects Philadelphia and its northern suburbs to Allentown, Hazleton, and Wilkes-Barre. A limited-access highway portion of PA 309 in the Wilkes-Barre area is known as the North...

; LVT ran alongside PA Route 309.

Wrecks

A bad wreck occurred in July 1942 near northern Norristown. The motorman of a northbound lightweight 1003 was waiting at Brush siding near Norristown and had dispatcher's orders to wait for both a southbound passenger car followed by a southbound freight motor, but he proceeded from the siding, violating the horizontal "stop" semaphore signal, and moved onto the main line after only the first passenger car had passed. He may have misinterpreted the "one-long and two-short" horn signal, indicating a following section, for the usual "two-toot" greeting that passing cars often signaled to each other. Alternatively, he may have been preoccupied in conversation with young females in the front vestibule. Alongside DeKalb Pike, the 1003 accelerated and rounded a hidden curve where it rammed head-on into a moving freight motor, C14. The heavier C14 "telescoped" into the lightweight and twelve people were killed, including the motorman of 1003. The motorman of C14 ran into the interior of the freight car, thus surviving, and had the presence of mind to first grab from the clipboard his train order authorizing his presence as the second southbound section. The wreck forced dispatching changes and a reduction in operating speeds.

Another 1942 wreck occurred north of Perkasie one evening when two northbound 1000 series cars were running a few minutes apart as a single dispatched "train." Climbing the grade in the wooded area of Old Bethlehem Pike near Rocky Ridge and Three Mile Run, the first car, 1030, disengaged from the trolley wire, lost its lights, and then drifted to a stop. The second car, 1001, rounded a curve and rear ended the stalled and dark 1030. The accident could have been prevented if the motorman, rather than attempting to recatch the wire in the dark, had gone down the track to flag the 1001.

Winter problems in Souderton

Souderton
Souderton, Pennsylvania
Souderton is a borough in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. The population was 6,618 at the 2010 census.Souderton hosts the end of the annual Univest Grand Prix, a professional bicycle race.- Geography :Souderton is located at ....

, unlike much of the rest of the track had sharp inclines and turns through the streets. On occasion during icy conditions, the interurbans would struggle to climb these grades, particularly northbound from Diamond to Summit. While crews struggled with sand to provide traction for wheels, the delays were logistically problematic for LVT. Even though cars would start well-spaced, the delays would force multiple cars to wait for the sand to be deployed. South of Souderton depot there were sharp turns, but track conditions were level. The track turned from Main onto Broad street, ran two blocks, then turned left onto residential Penn Avenue where, after four blocks, at Cherry Lane it entered open country for the fast run downgrade to Gehman trestle and on to the stop at Hatfield.

Eighth Street Bridge

In 1911, LVT wanted to reach the other side of Little Lehigh Creek
Little Lehigh Creek
The Little Lehigh Creek is approximately long, in eastern Pennsylvania, in the United States. It is also sometimes referred to as the Little Lehigh River. It is called the Little Lehigh because it is the largest tributary of the Lehigh River....

 in order to carry its interurban and trolley cars from center Allentown to the south side. It organized the Allentown Bridge Company and began construction. The resulting seventeen arch concrete span cost over of $500,000 and required 29,500 cubic yards (22,600 m3) of concrete and 1.1 million pounds of metal reinforcing rods. When opened for traffic on November 17, 1913, it was the longest and highest concrete bridge in the world. It operated as a toll bridge from its November 17, 1913 opening until the 1950s, at which time the toll was five cents for an automobile. The Liberty Bell Limiteds crossed the bridge to begin their run to Philadelphia and also to reach the Fairview car barn to the west of eighth street. Concrete poles that once supported the trolley wire are still standing on the bridge to this day. The bridge is now called the Albertus L. Meyers Bridge.

See also

  • Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Company
    Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Company
    The Terre Haute, Indianapolis and Eastern Traction Company, or THI&E, was the second largest interurban in the state of Indiana at the height of the "interurban era." This system included over 400 miles of track, with lines emanating from Indianapolis to the east, northwest, west and southwest as...

  • Red Devils- Interurban

Museums

  • Electric City Trolley Museum, Scranton, PA.
  • Ohio Railway Museum, Worthington, OH.
  • Pennsylvania Trolley Museum, E. Washington, PA.
  • Seashore Trolley Museum, Kennebunkport, Maine. Owner and operator of Lehigh Valley Transit Liberty Bell Limited interurban car #1030, the former Indiana Railroad lightweight interurban car #50.
  • Shade Gap Electric Railway Museum, Orbisonia, PA.

Societies

  • East Penn Traction Club, Cheltenham, PA Annual Streetcar/interurban calendar. Philadelphia area traction models show and swap meet.
  • National Railway and Historical Society, Lehigh Valley Chapter, Allentown, PA. Publisher of Lehigh Valley Transit books by author Randolph Kulp, references 3 and 4 above.
  • New England Electric Railway Historical Society, Kennebunkport, ME. Owner of Seashore Trolley Museum

External links

The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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