[PRCo] Regional population numbers
Edward H. Lybarger
trams2 at comcast.net
Wed Nov 20 08:27:26 EST 2013
Somewhere I read (and I wish I remember where) that the greater Pittsburgh
economy peaked in 1912. I tend to believe it.
-----Original Message-----
From: pittsburgh-railways-bounces at mailman.dementix.org
[mailto:pittsburgh-railways-bounces at mailman.dementix.org] On Behalf Of Fred
Schneider
Sent: Tuesday, November 19, 2013 6:18 PM
To: Western PA Trolley discussion
Subject: Re: [PRCo] Regional population numbers
More to follow, Ed.
I am massaging them into groups of boroughs and municipalities according to
the census in which the population peaked. Preliminary gut reaction is
that some of the mill towns where PRC hauled its heaviest loads began
collapsing in the 1920s. The city and most of the older towns began to
crash in the 1950s. Even the older suburbs were heading down in the 1970s.
It tells me that the PAT management may have had a guy at the help that St.
Louis was happy to get rid of but what he did in Pittsburgh had to be done.
This all started because of a certain picture an old friend provided showing
Turtle Creek in 1964 and we then discovered what it looked like today.
Turtle Creek was one of those towns that peaked in 1930. But the
population in adjacent East Pittsburgh on one side and Wilmerding and
Pitcairn on the other all peaked in the 1920 census. If we had not had a
World War in the early 1940s, I can only question if 87 Ardmore and 62
Trafford would have lasted after the mid 1940s.
On Nov 19, 2013, at 5:13 PM, Edward H. Lybarger wrote:
> This is a wonderful addition to the Reference Department. Gracias.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: pittsburgh-railways-bounces at mailman.dementix.org
> [mailto:pittsburgh-railways-bounces at mailman.dementix.org] On Behalf Of
> Fred Schneider
> Sent: Saturday, November 16, 2013 7:38 PM
> To: Western PA Trolley discussion
> Subject: [PRCo] Regional population numbers
>
> This pdf file . 30 some pages long might interest a couple of yins.
Shows
> what happened to populations in the various boroughs, cities, townships
and
> municipalities in southwestern Pennsylvania over the last 80 years.
>
> Sad thing is that most of the places the trolleys ran (or even run)
> have lost population . even Mount Lebanon, Dormont, Castle Shannon and
Bethel
> Park. Even Upper St. Clair Township. I guess a lot of the kids have
> moved to Dallas, Phoenix of Portland in search of work.
>
>
> http://www.spcregion.org/pdf/RegPop/Census%20munic%20pop%20decennial%2
> 01930-
> 2010,%20SPC%20region.pdf
>
>
>
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