[PRCo] Re: Forbes Ave exposed track
John Swindler
j_swindler at hotmail.com
Fri Jul 30 09:08:28 EDT 2004
This 1923 map shows track on Woodlawn, but no track connection at Forbes.
pity
http://digital.library.pitt.edu/cgi-bin/maps/showmap.pl?client=maps&image=23v0213b
This 1904 map shows an outbound connection at Forbes/Woodlawn, but does not
give track detail.
http://digital.library.pitt.edu/cgi-bin/maps/showmap.pl?client=maps&image=04v01p31
On this 1886 map, look at Fralich (later Woodlawn, then Morrison) and
Joncaire which drops down to cross B&O and continues into Boquet to Forbes.
Wasn't this the original streetcar route prior to Forbes St. bridge at
Neville St.?
This map also indicates that a low-grade route to Squirrel Hill would follow
stream through Murdoch property to reach Murray Ave., rather then follow
Forbes. And somewhere I saw a map that indicated that the first trolley
route to East End did this. Or at least was planned to do this.
http://digital.library.pitt.edu/cgi-bin/maps/showmap.pl?client=maps&image=86v01p32
This is where I need help from Ed
John
>From: Joshua Dunfield <Joshua_Dunfield at mlist-0.sp.cs.cmu.edu>
>Reply-To: pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org
>To: pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org
>Subject: [PRCo] Re: Forbes Ave exposed track Date: Thu, 29 Jul 2004
>23:59:31 -0400
>
> > Forbes at Margaret Morrison. Wasn't Margaret Morrison formerly called
> > "Woodbine" or "Wood-something-or-other?" Those of you who have the
> > PRMA map handy from 1959 can confirm.
>
>Woodlawn. There's a CMU dorm that's still called "Woodlawn Apartments".
>
> > And so, that is area where the
> > former tracks of what once ran through Schenley Park from Bouquet &
> > Forbes to Boundary to Joncaire to what is now called Margaret Morrison
> > ran. I believe that the Margaret Morrison tracks alone were kept open
> > for a short time after the abandonment of the rest of the Schenley Park
> > route. Can't recall for sure, but I doubt if the track connections from
> > Forbes to Margaret Morrison were even slightly evident in 1967 when the
> > East End abandonments occured.
>
>As I recall, the Pitt digital library maps (and Carnegie Tech bulletin
>campus maps from the 1920s) show a number of different street/track
>configurations...they liked renaming streets.
>
>I have photocopies of some of the bulletin maps -- and excerpts
>discussing the on-campus facilities, which included a "mine with
>trolley wire" under what is now Doherty Hall. (No details about the
>trolley wire, I'm afraid.) I'll try to remember to scan them in when
>I get back to Pittsburgh.
>
>-j.
>
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