The Red Car has a very distinct type of whistle that I don't think any other streetcar had. This is a beautiful recording. All you have to do is close your eyes and imagine one of these beautiful vehicles clickety-clacking down old Los Angeles streets.
Taxes and municipal liabilities were more at fault than the auto and oil industry. Have you seen the "This was Pacific Electric"? Skycity productions.. Wonderful presentation and enlightening too. I too have this record and it is also available on CD as well. The Northshore side is still my fav as I rode it on the last day .
The Pacific Electric was not killed off by the oil/auto industry. It was killed off by its parent railroad, Southern Pacific, who no longer wanted to be in the passenger business. SP was losing a lot of money on the PE as well as their own passenger trains, so they sold the PE Red Cars to the Los Angeles MTA in the late '50s. The MTA continued operating PE cars at a loss until they finally stopped all operations in 1961.(SP had lost money on PE since they bought it from Huntington in 1911.)
I have this actual record, but no longer have a record player to play it on. It was a tragic crime that all of this was abandoned. We can thank General Motors et. al. for the dirty deed. But thankfully, it's all coming back today in a modern form. But the idea is still the same.....electric traction on rails. It worked well then and will work well again. We weren't so dependent on oil back in those days.
I have this actual record, but no longer have a record player to play it on. It was a tragic crime that all of this was abandoned. We can thank General Motors et. al. for the dirty deed. But thankfully, it's all coming back today in a modern form. But the idea is still the same.....electric traction on rails. It worked well then and will work well again. We weren't so dependent on oil back in those days.
I actually have this record. But I no longer have a record player to play it. I certainly remember those days and those great old sounds. Who would have ever thought that it would be coming back in so many cities today. Had you predicted it ten years ago, they would have called you crazy.
But the fact is that none of this died a natural death. It was killed off by the automobile and oil industry. It was a great form of public transit back then and will be again.
Great thing that someone had the foresight to record the sounds of the Pacific Electric in stereo toward the last days of this famous west coast electric interurban railroad. I will admit, however, the sound of that whistle at times is a bit annoying!
The Red Car has a very distinct type of whistle that I don't think any other streetcar had. This is a beautiful recording. All you have to do is close your eyes and imagine one of these beautiful vehicles clickety-clacking down old Los Angeles streets.
TheGentlemanCaller88 1 week ago
Taxes and municipal liabilities were more at fault than the auto and oil industry. Have you seen the "This was Pacific Electric"? Skycity productions.. Wonderful presentation and enlightening too. I too have this record and it is also available on CD as well. The Northshore side is still my fav as I rode it on the last day .
ka6mht 2 months ago
@ka6mht i gotta check that out..
TheHoodhistorian 1 month ago
The Pacific Electric was not killed off by the oil/auto industry. It was killed off by its parent railroad, Southern Pacific, who no longer wanted to be in the passenger business. SP was losing a lot of money on the PE as well as their own passenger trains, so they sold the PE Red Cars to the Los Angeles MTA in the late '50s. The MTA continued operating PE cars at a loss until they finally stopped all operations in 1961.(SP had lost money on PE since they bought it from Huntington in 1911.)
DaveWVideo 10 months ago
This is so cool! I'm glad that we can at least still have some form of this at the Orange Empire Railway Museum!
jennangel122397 1 year ago
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I have this actual record, but no longer have a record player to play it on. It was a tragic crime that all of this was abandoned. We can thank General Motors et. al. for the dirty deed. But thankfully, it's all coming back today in a modern form. But the idea is still the same.....electric traction on rails. It worked well then and will work well again. We weren't so dependent on oil back in those days.
Jeffbear1 1 year ago
I have this actual record, but no longer have a record player to play it on. It was a tragic crime that all of this was abandoned. We can thank General Motors et. al. for the dirty deed. But thankfully, it's all coming back today in a modern form. But the idea is still the same.....electric traction on rails. It worked well then and will work well again. We weren't so dependent on oil back in those days.
Jeffbear1 1 year ago
I actually have this record. But I no longer have a record player to play it. I certainly remember those days and those great old sounds. Who would have ever thought that it would be coming back in so many cities today. Had you predicted it ten years ago, they would have called you crazy.
But the fact is that none of this died a natural death. It was killed off by the automobile and oil industry. It was a great form of public transit back then and will be again.
Jeffbear1 1 year ago
Nice Sound!!
frecce500 1 year ago
Great thing that someone had the foresight to record the sounds of the Pacific Electric in stereo toward the last days of this famous west coast electric interurban railroad. I will admit, however, the sound of that whistle at times is a bit annoying!
hudson501 1 year ago
釣り掛けモーターの音が心地良い。
子守唄に出来そうな位だ。
zerofig 2 years ago
我々鉄道ファンにとってはまさに子守唄ですよね。
524koki 1 year ago
Fantastic audio recording!
railfan101 2 years ago
That's a cool audio track.
Thanks for posting it.
Butchuk2007 3 years ago 4