Bazsites.com Trolleys
Directory Topics
On the Web
- Boyertown Trolleys - New and refurbished trolleys and electric trams. With timeless photos of trolley cars, vans, and delivery trucks of the past.
- The Shore Line Trolley Museum - Features one hundred vintage trolleys, a three-mile ride aboard an antique trolley car, and guided tours. Includes memberships, volunteer opportunities, a schedule, fares, and directions. In East Haven, Connecticut.
- Boyertown Trolleys - New and refurbished trolleys and electric trams. With timeless photos of trolley cars, vans, and delivery trucks of the past.
- California Trolleys - Picture gallery of historic trolley lines and equipment in California. Links to historical and current trolley related sites.
- Connecticut Trolley Museum - Owned and operated by the Connecticut Electric Railway Association, Inc., it is the nation's oldest incorporated organization dedicated to the preservation of streetcars and the Trolley Era.
- Cable Car Concepts - Manufactures trackless trolleys and trams for public transportation, private operators, bus, cab, and limousine companies.
- Great American Trolley - Offers a fleet of trackless trolleys for weddings, conventions, tours, golf tournaments, corporate, municipal and special events.
- Gomaco Trolley Company - Manufacturer of authentic village trolley cars.
- Yee Shiuann Enterprise Co., Ltd. - Manufacturer of folding, catering, and platform trolleys, casters, and shock absorbers. Includes company information, events, and products.
- Electric City Trolley Museum Association - Museum offers excursions, vintage trolley displays, and other exhibits. Includes information, photos, and event listings. Located in Scranton, Pennsylvania.
Wikipedia Articles
- Boston-area trackless trolleys - ... in the Boston, Massachusetts area, all run by the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) in the Harvard Square area, and all former streetcar lines (the last four not connected to the Tremont Street Subway to survive). The MBTA and its predecessors once ran a large system of trackless trolleys, but most have been replaced by buses; the four survived, in part, because of the necessity for left-hand doors in the Harvard Bus Tunnel.
- Brooklyn Bridge trolleys - From 1898 to 1950, various companies operated local trolley lines over the Brooklyn Bridge, taking passengers from many points in Brooklyn and Queens, New York City, United States to the Park Row terminal in Lower Manhattan. These lines entered the bridge roadway from Fulton Street or Sands Street in Downtown Brooklyn, some of them using elevated trackage at the Sands Street elevated railway station.
- Northern Virginia trolleys - The earliest electric railway, or streetcar line, in Northern Virginia opened in 1892. At their peak, when merged into a single system (the Washington-Virginia Railway), the successors of this and several other lines ran between downtown Washington, D.
- Brooklyn Historic Railway Association - The Brooklyn Historic Railway Association's (BHRA) shop, trolley barn and offices are located in Red Hook, Brooklyn, New York, on the historic Beard Street Piers (circa 1870). BHRA had a fleet of 16 trolleys (15 PCC trolleys and a leased 1897 trolley car from Oslo, Norway).
- Media-Orange Street (SEPTA station) - The Orange Street terminus of the Route 101 Trolley is located in downtown Media, Pennsylvania at Orange and State Streets in the middle of State Street since the line operates as a street car in the Media portion of the line. It is served by trolleys originating at 69th Street Terminal in Upper Darby.