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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
December 29, 2009
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Opening of the Extension of the Pelham Manor Trolley Line in 1910 -- The
Toonerville Trolley Line
The Pelham Manor trolley line inspired Fontaine Fox to create the
Toonerville Trolley portrayed in his long-running Toonverville Folks comic
strip. Until Labor Day, 1910, that trolley line ended on Pelhamdale
Avenue near today's Grant Avenue, only a few hundred feet from where the
Pelham Manor Depot then stood on the Branch Line. On Labor Day that year
(September 5, 1910), the extension of the line to the end of Pelhamdale
Avenue at the intersection with Shore Road near the New York Athletic
Club's Travers Island facility opened. The article transcribed below
describes plans for the opening.
"TROLLEYS TO SHORE MONDAY
-----
According to an announcement made Thursday morning by Superintendent
Wheeler of the Westchester Electric Railway, the extension of the Pelham
Manor trolley line from the old terminus at the foot of the hill on
Pelhamdale avenue to the Shore Road, will be in operation on Labor Day.
Superintendent Wheeler expects to start the cars running on that day.
It is not known how many cars will be operated, but Superintendent Wheeler
said that it all depended upon the amount of traffic.
The construction is now practically completed. There is about 100 feet of
rock on the Shore Road that will have to be blasted out, and as soon as
this work is done, 200 feet more of rails will be laid, and then the
extension will be ready for operation. The poles are all up and the wires
have been strung.
It is believed that this extension will be a money maker, as many people
will use the trolleys from Westchester County and various parts of New
York in order to reach the Sound and the grounds of the New York Athletic
Club."
Source: Trolleys to Shore Monday, New Rochelle Pioneer, Sep. 3, 1910, p.
?, col. 3 (Newspaper page is undated and contains no page number, but
references in text strongly indicate the date is Saturday, Sep. 3, 1910).
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:44 AM
Comment
Click Here to View the Blog Posting for December 30, 2009.
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