Trolleybuses in Atlanta

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In Atlanta, Georgia, trolleybuses, generally called trackless trolleys there, were a major component of the public transportation system in the middle decades of the 20th century, carrying some 80 percent of all transit riders[1] during the period when the system was at its maximum size. At the end of 1949 Atlanta had a fleet of 453 trolleybuses, the largest in the United States,[1][2] and it retained this distinction until 1952, when it was surpassed by Chicago.[2]

History[]

Origins[]

As in many other cities, trolleybuses mostly took over streetcar routes.[3] Some Atlanta streetcar lines were converted to buses starting in 1925. Those early conversions were to "motor buses" (gasoline-powered buses), but starting in 1937 some streetcar lines were converted instead to trolleybuses. The first trolleybus route opened on June 28, 1937, and was a suburban route to East Point and with branches beyond to College Park and Hapeville.[2] A second route opened in 1940. Conversions continued until closure of the last streetcar line, in 1949.

In 1950, 453 trolleybuses served 31 routes. Trolleybuses made up 70% of the fleet, but carried 80% of the transit system's riders.[1]

Operation, continued growth[]

The transit system was owned and operated by the Georgia Power Company until June 1950, at which point it was sold to a group of local businessmen, who formed the Atlanta Transit Company (ATC). Trolleybus service continued, and the large network of electric routes remained largely intact for another decade.[2] One of the system's unusual features was express operation, uncommon on trolleybus systems.[3] Express service ultimately was implemented on eight routes, and these were equipped with 250-foot-long (76 m) "sidings" in the overhead trolley wires to enable vehicles on express trips to pass those on "local" trips.[2] Although the pace of expansion slowed after 1950, it did not cease. Extensions continued to be built under ATC, including the conversion of bus line 26-Perry Homes to trolleybuses in November 1956, and extensions of that route in 1960 and 1962.[4] There were 39 trolleybus routes at the end of 1962.[4]

Closure[]

In late 1962 Atlanta Transit decided to phase out all trolleybus service the next year, to avoid the expense of having to string new overhead wires when extending service to new areas.[4] Another reason cited was the anticipated high cost and difficulty of obtaining new trolleybuses to replace ATC's large fleet, which ranged in age from 14 to 17 years.[4] Since 1959, when Marmon-Herrington ceased production of trolleybuses, no manufacturer in North America was still making the electric vehicles (a situation which lasted until the late 1960s).[5] At the beginning of 1963 the active fleet included 273 trolleybuses. The entire electric system was converted to diesel buses over a period of less than one month in September 1963.[4] Atlanta's last trolleybus service operated on the night of September 27, 1963.[3][4][5]

Fleet[]

Over the years, Georgia Power (GP) purchased its trolleybuses from four different manufacturers: Twin Coach, the St. Louis Car Company, Pullman-Standard and Brill.[2] The first came in 1937, the last in 1949.[6] GP's successor, Atlanta Transit Company, never purchased a trolleybus.

Fleet list[]

Numbers Qty Builder Model Year Notes
1001-1027 27 Twin Coach 40RWFTT 1937
1028-1029 2 Twin Coach 40RTT 1939
1030-1040 11 Twin Coach 40GTT 1940
1041-1048 8 Twin Coach 40GTT 1943
1101-1131 31 St. Louis Job 1707 1940
1201-1210 10 Pullman 1941
1211-1228 18 Pullman 1944
1229-1234 6 Pullman 1945
1235-1334 100 Pullman 45CX 1946-47 1296 preserved at the Southeastern Railway Museum[7]
1335-1394 60 Pullman 1948 1386 is now a restaurant in Ball Ground, Georgia.[7]
1501-1540 40 Brill TC44 1946
1701-1820 20 St. Louis Job 1749 1949 1732 and 1756 preserved at the Southeastern Railway Museum[7]
1821-1840 20 St. Louis Job 1761 1949
Total 453

Routes[]

An early 1950s map of the trolleybus system detailed the following routes:[8]

  • 2 Lucile Ave.
    • 2PD Ponce de Leon Avenue, Clairmont Ave., Ponce to Decatur (Poplar)
    • 2G via Lucile to West End (Inman)
    • 2W "West View" via Lucile Ave. to West End, then via Gordon St. to Mozley Park
  • 3B, 3WH Hunter St.
  • 3I Irwin St.
  • 4C Edgewood Avenue, McLendon to Candler Park (Clifton)
  • 4L Edgewood Avenue, McLendon to Lake Claire
  • 4F Federal Prison
  • 4NM North Moreland
  • 6 Forrest Ave., Briarcliff Rd., Oxford Rd. to Emory, 6C continues to Decatur/Clairmont
    • 6A (Atlanta Ave.) via Capitol Ave. and Atlanta Ave./Ormond to Grant Park
    • 6AM (Amsterdam) Boulevard, Boulevard (now Monroe) almost to Piedmont
    • 6G (Georgia Ave.) via Capitol Ave. and Georgia Ave. to Grant Park
  • 10 Gordon St.
    • 10C Cascade Heights
    • 10G, 10S Stewart Ave., to Melrose & Sylvan
    • 10PA Peachtree Street to Ansley Park
    • 10PP to Piedmont Park
    • 10R Richland
  • 11 via Marietta Street to Chestnut St.
  • 13W West Fair
  • 15 "Virginia-McLynn": Memorial Drive, Moreland Avenue to Confederate
  • 16L, 16N Forrest, Highland to Lanier Place (L) and Noble Park in Morningside (N)
  • 16S Sylvan Hills
  • 17 Edgewood Avenue, DeKalb Avenue, West Howard to Decatur
  • 18S Memorial Drive, Boulevard Drive, 3rd, Hill, McDonough to Decatur
  • 18C Memorial Drive, Boulevard Drive to East Lake (Candler at Glenwood)
  • 19A Bankhead Ave. to Brook Ave.
  • 19 also marked as 19R ("River") Bankhead Ave., Hollywood Rd., and Bolton Rd. to Marietta Rd. and Chattahoochee River
  • 20 Lee St. to East Point and via Central to Hapeville

(20C to College Park, 20E to East Point only, 20H to Downtown Hapeville, 20F to Ford Plant)

  • 23 West Peachtree Street to Beverly (Midtown), then via Peachtree Street to Brookhaven Country Club (23B Buckhead, 23O Oglethorpe, 23W West Peachtree)
  • 27 Stewart Ave. to Hapeville

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c Carson, O.E. Gene (January–March 1997). "Atlanta [Part 1]". Motor Coach Age, pp. 3–29.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Sebree, Mac; and Ward, Paul (1974). The Trolley Coach in North America, pp. 14–19. Los Angeles: Interurbans. LCCN 74-20367.
  3. ^ a b c Sebree, Mac; and Ward, Paul (1973). Transit’s Stepchild: The Trolley Coach, p. 52, 68, 91. Los Angeles: Interurbans. LCCN 73-84356.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Carson, O.E. Gene (July–September 1998). "Atlanta, Part 2". Motor Coach Age, pp. 24–47.
  5. ^ a b Murray, Alan (2000). World Trolleybus Encyclopaedia. Yateley, Hampshire, UK: Trolleybooks. ISBN 0-904235-18-1.
  6. ^ "Atlanta GA Trolley Buses". Tom's North American Trolley Bus Pictures. August 2011. Retrieved 6 February 2012.
  7. ^ a b c Isgar, Carl F. (May–June 2016). "Preservation Update". Trolleybus Magazine. Vol. 53, no. 337. UK: National Trolleybus Association. pp. 82–83. ISSN 0266-7452.
  8. ^ "Trackless Trolley Map and Bus Lines circa 1950", Emory University Library

Bibliography[]

  • The Trolley Titans: A Mobile History of Atlanta (Interurbans Special 76, 1981). O.E. Carson. Glendale CA: Interurban Press. ISBN 978-0-916374-46-4.

External links[]

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