TWIN CITIES TRACTION
The Street Railways of
Urbana and Champaign, Illinois
Chapter 14
Rolling Stock
H. George Friedman, Jr.
Copyright © 2001, 2003, 2007 H. George Friedman, Jr. All rights
reserved.
This chapter has four parts:
Part A. City Cars
Part B. Early ITS Cars
Part C. K&UT Cars
Part D. University
of Illinois Test Car
A. City Cars
URBANA-CHAMPAIGN ROSTER OF STREETCARS
Compiled by James J. Buckley and H. George Friedman, Jr. Research into
the J. G. Brill Co. records by Harold E. Cox is gratefully acknowledged.
| Car # |
Type |
Built |
Builder (Order No.) |
Truck (Order No.) |
Notes |
Pictures |
| Passenger cars: |
| 10-11 |
ST Closed Motor |
1890 |
Brownell |
Brill 7 (#3071) |
16', 7 window |
14A-1, 14A-2, 14A-3, 14A-33 |
| 12 |
ST Open Motor |
1891 |
Brownell |
Brill 7 (#3071) |
20', 8 bench |
14A-4, 14A-5 |
| 13-14 |
ST Closed Motor |
1891 |
Brownell |
Brill 7 (#3421) |
16', 8 window |
14A-6 |
| 15 |
ST Open Motor |
1891 |
Brownell |
Brill 7 (#3421) |
20', 8 bench |
|
| 16-17 |
ST Closed Motor |
1892 |
LaClede (#294) |
Brill 13 or McGuire |
20', 7 window |
14A-7, 14A-7.5 |
| 18-20 |
ST Closed Trailer |
1893 |
Brownell |
Brill 21E? |
16' |
|
| 21-23 |
ST Open Trailer |
1893 |
|
|
|
14A-33 |
| 24 |
ST Open Trailer |
1894 |
|
|
ex horsecar? |
14A-7.8, 14A-11, 14A-12 |
| 25 |
ST Closed Motor |
|
American? |
|
8 window |
14A-8 |
| 26 |
ST Closed Motor |
|
American? |
|
|
|
| 27 |
ST Closed Motor |
|
American? |
|
7 window |
14A-8.5 |
| 28-29 |
ST Open Motor |
|
|
|
8 bench |
14A-9, 14A-10, 14A-11, 14A-12 |
| 30 |
ST Closed Motor |
|
|
|
|
|
| 31-32 |
ST Closed Motor |
1900 |
Brill (#10153) |
Brill 21E |
7 window |
14A-13 |
| 33-38 |
ST Closed Motor |
|
American? |
Brill 21E |
8 window |
14A-14, 14A-34, 14A-35 |
| 39-41 |
ST Closed Motor |
1905 |
American (#575) |
Brill 21E |
32', 8 window |
14A-15, 14A-16, 14A-17 |
| 42-43 |
ST Closed Motor |
1905-06 |
American? |
Brill 21E |
31', 7 window |
14A-17.5, 14A-35 |
| 44 |
ST Closed Motor |
1906 |
American? |
Brill 21E |
32' |
|
| 45-47 |
ST Closed Motor |
1909 |
Danville (#521) |
Brill 21E |
33', 8 window |
14A-18 through 14A-21, 14A-34 |
| 48 |
ST Closed Motor |
|
|
Brill 21E |
32' |
|
| 49 |
This number may have been unused. |
| 50-51 |
ST Open Motor |
1902 |
Stephenson |
|
10 bench |
14A-22, 14A-23 |
| 52-59 |
These numbers were probably not used. |
| 60-62 |
DT Closed Motor |
1912 |
St. Louis (#953) |
St. L. 99B |
41', 10 window |
14A-24, 14A-25 |
| 101-106 |
ST Birney |
1920 |
American (#1238?) |
Brill 79E1 |
27'8" |
|
| 107-115 |
ST Birney |
1922 |
American (#1315?) |
Brill 79E1 |
28' |
14A-29 |
| 116-120 |
ST Birney |
1924 |
American (#1390?) |
Brill 79E1 |
27'8" |
14A-30, 14A-31 |
| 600s |
ST Open Motors |
1902 |
St. Louis (#244) |
DuPont 46 |
35', 12 bench |
14A-26 |
| 700s |
ST Closed Motors |
1908 |
Danville |
|
33' |
14A-27, 14A-28 |
| Work cars: |
| 1 |
ST Line car |
|
|
|
4 window |
14A-32, 14A-32.5, 14A-34 |
| 2 |
Horse drawn tower wagon |
|
|
|
|
14A-33 |
| 5 |
ST Sand/coal |
|
|
|
|
14A-6 |
| 100 |
ST Sweeper |
1917 |
McGuire-Cummings |
McGuire |
28' |
|
| 200 |
ST Work |
|
|
Brill 21E |
33' |
|
| 205-206 |
Side Dump Coal Trailers |
|
|
St. Louis |
32' |
|
| 207 |
DT Cab on Flat |
1902 |
Co. shops |
Peckham |
|
14A-35 |
Notes: Body lengths quoted for #10-38 are without platforms.
Beginning with #39, platforms are included in the length.
#2: Tower wagon #2 was authorized by the Champaign city council on May
28, 1901. But it is known in a photograph that seems to be from the
1890s.
#10-15: Westinghouse 3 SRG motors on Brill 7 trucks. Brill truck
order #3071 was for three trucks; truck order #3421 was for one more.
These four trucks appear to have been used on closed cars 10, 11, 13, and
14 in winter, with two trucks moved to open cars 12 and 15 in the summer.
#16-17: One report says McGuire trucks. But two Brill 13 trucks
were ordered April 12, 1892, and must have been for these two cars.
#25-27: 2nd hand from Cleveland, 1896. These cars were similar
to one another, but not identical.
#33-38: 2nd hand from Cleveland, 1/1900.
#41: Later had St. Louis 46 truck.
#42: Converted to line car (see photo in Trolley Sparks for November
1954, CERA Bulletin 98, page 68).
#60-62: Sold 1/1925 to Chicago Ottawa & Peoria #108-110 for LaSalle-Peru.
#101-120: The origin of the Champaign-Urbana Birney cars is unclear.
The order numbers shown are those given by Harold Cox in The Birney
Car. Those records indicate that order #1238 was originally for
Decatur, but was diverted to Champaign-Urbana, and that the order was completed
in May 1920. According to news stories in the Urbana Courier
of May 27, 1920 and the Champaign News-Gazette of May 29, 1920,
the first Birney cars were delivered to Champaign-Urbana the morning of
May 28, 1920, and were tested that afternoon. The newspapers report
that they went into service June 6, 1920 on the Church Street line and
the Short Line. However, Paul Stringham, in his book 76 Years
of Peoria Street Cars, states that the first 20 Birneys in Peoria,
their numbers 400-419 (American Car Co. order #1264, 1921), were in 1923
repainted and renumbered to 100-119 “for distribution to other I. P. &
L. properties, some kept in Champaign.” His book contains a 1923
photo of cars 113 and 114 in front of the North Adams Street car barn in
Peoria. Stringham lived in Peoria during this period, and his information
is probably accurate. ITS and IP&L often moved cars around among
the city properties, and it is more than possible that our records of these
moves are incomplete. This author is unable to reconcile the conflicting
data.
#101,102,104,106: To IP&L Cairo #107,105,106,108 12/1927.
#107,111: To IP&L Jacksonville #107,111 1927.
#103,105,108-110,112-114 supposedly became IP&L Peoria #500-507
in 1930 for use in owl service there. However, a 1936 last-day (November
10, 1936) photo in downtown Champaign depicts #110, and Charles Gammel
of Danville has stated that he rode #112 in Champaign on 9/19/1936.
Except for #113, for which there is evidence of transfer to Peoria, we
do not really know which Champaign-Urbana Birneys became Peoria #500-507.
600s: #613, 615, 616, 623, 641, 652, 666, 698 2nd hand from United Rys.
of St. Louis, 1905. Operated in Urbana-Champaign with St. Louis numbers.
Had St. Louis 38 trucks as built.
700s: Leased from ITS. According to local newspapers, the first
of this group arrived in Urbana-Champaign January 4, 1908. #701,
702, 704, 707 known in Urbana-Champaign. #707 eventually demotorized
and used as a trailer.
Abbreviations:
DT: Double truck
IP&L: Illinois Power & Light Co.
ITS: Illinois Traction System
ST: Single truck
St. L.: St. Louis Car Co.
UC: Urbana-Champaign
Car numbering:
In the beginning, the horsecars were simply numbered consecutively
from no. 1. It is not known how many horsecars were eventually on
the property, but almost certainly, there were fewer than 10. When
electric passenger cars began to arrive in 1890, they were numbered consecutively
beginning with 10, without regard for motor or trailer, closed or open.
Eventually, when two open cars arrived in 1902, someone seems to have decided
to number them in a separate series from the closed cars, and they were
assigned the numbers 50 and 51. Again in 1912, the three double truck
cars were numbered in the 60s, presumably to set them apart. The
600s, second-hand from St. Louis, were operated with their St. Louis numbers.
The 700s belonged to the ITS, and their numbers make sense in the early
ITS numbering. Finally, the Birney cars were numbered beginning with
no. 100 or 101.
Work cars were treated differently. In the early 1890s, they
were given single-digit numbers, no longer needed for horsecars.
Later, the sweeper was given no. 100 and other work cars were numbered
in the 200s.
|
In all the pictures in this article, click on the picture for an
enlargement.
|
| Pictures of Passenger Cars |
| Picture 14A-1. |
|
Car no. 10 was the first electric streetcar in Champaign-Urbana,
entering service in October 1890 when the electric route opened between
Hill and Neil Streets in downtown Champaign, and Wright and Green Streets
at the University. Cars 10 and 11 were 16 foot 7 window closed cars
built by the Brownell Car Co. in 1890. This picture, taken from the
background of a larger view, shows car 10 in its original configuration,
with open platforms and a Bombay roof. — Champaign County Historical
Society (detail from #240 lower) (This is the same picture as Picture 3-1.) |
| Picture 14A-2. |
|
Car no. 11 was the second electric streetcar in Champaign-Urbana.
Cars 10 and 11 were 16 foot closed cars built by Brownell in 1890.
No. 11 went into service on March 13, 1891, when the private right-of-way
in Urbana was electrified. In the 1890s, it was sometimes used as
a line car by fitting a platform over the roof. Note the unusual
position of the brake handle: on the platform, rather than over the dash.
This was probably made necessary when the add-on vestibule windows, seen
here, were installed. The car was overhauled in 1897, receiving a
more powerful motor, a new paint scheme, and vestibules. Compare
the two pictures of sister car no. 10: Picture 14A-1 above is older, and
Picture 14A-3 below is newer. Car 11 was probably retired after a
fogbound collision with ITS interurban car no. 300 on West John Street
the evening of March 5, 1908. The conductor is wearing his bell punch,
the fare counting device hanging from his neck. Look at those long
dresses! — Champaign County Historical Society (#235 lower) |
| Picture 14A-3. |
|
Car 10 is seen here after an extensive rebuild added permanent vestibules
to the original 16 foot body. Even the roof line has been changed,
with a full clerestory roof replacing the original Bombay roof. It
is seen here in downtown Champaign, in a blow-up from a larger picture.
— Champaign County Historical Society (detail from #77) |
| Pictures 14A-4 and 14A-5. |
|
Car no. 12 was the third electric streetcar, and the
first open car, to run in Champaign-Urbana, entering service April 9, 1891.
Built by Brownell, it had a 20 foot body and 5 foot
platforms, seating 40 passengers on its 8 full-width benches. There
was no aisle; the conductor rode the running boards to collect fares from
the passengers. The upper picture shows car 12 along Green Street
in the 1890s. In the lower picture, dated 1910, the car is beginning
to show its age, especially on the dash. — Melissa Chambers (Harris
family collection) (upper), Illinois Power Co. Archives (lower) (The upper
picture is the same as Picture 3-3.) |
|
| Picture 14A-6. |
|
Urbana and Champaign do not seem to have been superstitious about
the number 13, for here is car no. 13. Cars 13 and 14 were built
by Brownell in 1891, and no. 13 went into service in October, the fourth
car in the growing electric fleet. It was more luxurious than its
predecessors, featuring electric heating and upholstered seats for the
first time in the Twin Cities. The body was the same length as that
of numbers 10 and 11, but 13 and 14 each had one more window. This
1894 picture probably shows the car's original paint and equipment.
The car was marked for the University, but did not carry the company name
at all. At this time, it was assigned to shuttle service on the New
Street line. It carried a roof board advertising “U. of I. Band Concert
West End Park Saturday Night April 28,” which allows us to date the picture.
The building is the Tremont Street car barn, in its original condition.
Note the little work car no. 5 behind car 13. — Champaign County Historical
Museum |
| Picture 14A-7. |
|
No. 17 and its sister car, no. 16, were acquired in 1892.
They were the largest cars in Champaign-Urbana at that time. The
Champaign
County Gazette compared them favorably to the finest steam railroad
Pullman “Palace” cars. The interiors featured solid cherry panels,
brass trimmings, and upholstered seats. This picture, a detail taken
from a larger photo, shows no. 17 in front of the Tremont Street car barn
during the 1890s. — Melissa Chambers (Harris family collection) |
| Picture 14A-7.5. |
|
The art work for the sides of cars no. 16 and 17, from the LaClede
paint order books. According to notations on the sheet, the main
panel and belt rail were to be painted Paris green, and the “center work”
and concave section were to be white. Ornaments, the broad line,
and the lettering on the main panel were to be gold, there was to be no
shading or edging on the ornaments, and the letters were to be edged with
black. Numbers were to be “shaded two shades of purple & split
with carmine”. The small lettering to the left of the ornate C says,
“Ornament same as on superior”, i. e., same as the panel above. The
upper panel was to have the word Illinois on the right side. Similar
art work can be seen on car no. 13 in Picture 14A-6, above. — National
Museum of Transport collection, courtesy of A. Bradley Martin, Jr. |
| Picture 14A-7.8. |
|
Trailer number 24 appears to be a leftover horsecar,
still available to be pulled by electric horsepower when the crowds
to be transported exceeded the capacity of the little electric motor cars.
The car could easily seat about 45 or 50 people, not counting standees.
This picture is dated 1910. — Illinois Power Co. Archives,
courtesy of Dale Jenkins |
| Picture 14A-8. |
|
Neither the builder nor the date of building of car no. 25 is known,
but it appears to be a typical turn-of-the-century American Car Co. product.
Conductor Lem Bartley and his now-unknown motorman posed with their lady
passenger, perhaps somewhere along the private right-of-way in Urbana.
Route signs were still a thing of the future, but ornate scrollwork was
still painted on the side of each car. |
| Picture 14A-8.5. |
|
Car no. 27 is spotted outside the Hickory St. car barn. Cars 25-27
were second hand from Cleveland, Ohio, where they were presumably too small.
They were probably built by Brill or American Car Co.
Notice the similarity to car 31, seen in a 1910 photo below (Picture 14A-13).
The ad on the dash of the car is for an attraction at the Illinois Theater in Urbana
on Friday December 30. December 30 was a Friday in 1910 and next in 1921.
The picture was probably one of a series taken just before the cars were modifed
for Pay As You Enter (PAYE) operation in 1910. These changes included new
sliding doors at the right front, replacing the windowed solid panel seen here.
— Illinois Power Co. Archives, courtesy of Dale Jenkins |
| Pictures 14A-9 and 14A-10. |
|
Car no. 28 was an 8-bench, no-aisle open car, perhaps
dating from the late 1890s. Note how there are no passenger seats
on the motorman's platform. The company was reported to have begun
installing fare registers on the cars in September 1891, but these conductors
are wearing bell punches. The "MAIL" sign on the dash announces the
fact that, beginning August 5, 1891, sacks of mail were carried on the
regular cars between Champaign and Urbana. Although the company name
did not appear on the cars, the letterboard was marked “Urbana University
Champaign,” which was the standard for many years. — Champaign County
Historical Society, from Urbana Courier archives (Picture 14A-9
from #234 lower, Picture 14A-10 from #235 upper) |
|
| Pictures 14A-11 and 14A-12. |
|
In the upper picture, car no. 28 leaves the barn with
a trailer in tow, perhaps for service to West End Park or to the Fair Grounds.
The number of the trailer is not visible, but it might have been a former
horsecar and it was probably one of the 21 to 24 group. The scene
is at Tremont Street, in the yard outside the car barn, looking northwest.
Notice the lack of a frog in the overhead wire at this switch. It
was the conductor's job to make sure the trolley pole did not leave the
wire as the car passed over the switch. In the lower picture, open
car no. 29, sister to car 28, poses in front of the original Tremont Street
car barn. Trailer no. 24 sits in one door of the two-track “annex”
built onto the south side of the barn. — Champaign
County Historical Society, from Urbana Courier archives (upper),
Don T. Thrall photo, William C. Janssen collection (lower) |
|
| Picture 14A-13. |
|
Cars no. 31 and 32 were built by Brill in 1900 on order #10153,
and were delivered in August. Each car seated 40 passengers.
In this 1910 photo, note the completely enclosed vestibule with no right-front
door and the roof-mounted route sign. Compare to car no. 27 in
Picture 14A-8.5. — Illinois Power Co. Archives |
| Picture 14A-14. |
|
Cars no. 33-38 were acquired second hand from Cleveland, Ohio, probably
between 1902 and 1904. They appear to have been built by Brill or
American Car Co., possibly around 1902. The 6 cars comprised the
largest single car order for the system at that time. They were a
little longer than the 1900 cars, no. 31-32. Here, we see no. 33
somewhere in Urbana as Mrs. Jessie Freeman Campbell collected for a charity
fund drive, perhaps the annual “Trolley Day” held to benefit Burnham Hospital.
— Champaign County Historical Society (#239 lower) |
| Pictures 14A-15 and 14A-16. |
|
Cars no. 39-41 were built by American Car Co. in late
1904 on order #575. Car 41 is seen here in its builder's photos,
as publicized in Street Railway Journal. The three cars were
all in service in Champaign-Urbana by the end of February 1905. The
upper picture shows car no. 41 on its original Brill 21-E trucks.
The lower picture shows the off-center bulkhead door. This was the
patented Brownell Semi-Accelerator arrangement, designed to speed loading
and unloading of passengers in this pre-Pay As You Enter car. (That
means that after a passenger boarded the car, the conductor was responsible
for going to him or her and collecting the fare.) The interior was
finished in cherry, with a birch ceiling tinted light green. Note
the longitudinal seating, which was typical of streetcars until a few years
later. — Street Railway Journal, 1905, v. 25, p. 449. |
|
| Picture 14A-17. |
|
A 1910 view of car no. 41 in front of the Hickory Street car barn.
The car has a different truck: a St. Louis 46/Dupont 3 truck has replaced
the original Brill 21-E. Compare the truck in the builder's photos
in Picture 14A-15, above. Also, compare the vestibule window to that
of car no. 31 in Picture 14A-13, taken at the same time and place as this
picture. In 1910, after this picture had been taken, several cars,
including this one, were converted to Pay As You Enter by installing new
right-front doors so that passengers could exit at the front of the car.
— Illinois Power Co. Archives |
| Picture 14A-17.5. |
|
Cars 42 and 43 were probably built by American Car Co. in 1905 or 1906.
They were a little shorter than cars 39-41, having 7 windows instead of 8.
Car no. 42 is seen here in front of the Hickory St. car barn in another of the 1910
pictures taken just before modification for PAYE operation. Compare the
vestibule windows, here a pair, with the configurations of cars 31 and 41 in
previous pictures. — Illinois Power Co. Archives, courtesy of Dale Jenkins |
| Pictures 14A-18 through 14A-21. |
|
Cars no. 45-47 were the first PAYE cars designed as
such to run in Champaign-Urbana. They were built by the Danville
Car Co. on order #521 in 1909, and the first two were delivered November
8. They immediately went into service on the Oregon Street line,
whose route sign is displayed in the second picture here; it had been inaugurated
earlier the same year. The top picture is the builder's photo of
car no. 46. The markings near the back door of car 47 in the third
and fourth pictures read: “PAY AS YOU ENTER/HAVE EXACT FARE READY/47/U.
& C. RY”. The Champaign News described these cars as “battleship”
cars because of their steel-sheathed sides. These cars held several
other “firsts” as well: they were the first Champaign-Urbana cars to be
equipped with lever-operated front doors, and probably also the first to
have HB Lifeguard fenders. These fenders were adopted in 1910 as
standard equipment on all ITS city cars. Note the lighter paint scheme
in the first and third pictures, compared to the second and fourth.
— Danville Car Co. (top), Illinois Power Co. Archives (upper middle), Don
T. Thrall photo, William C. Janssen collection (lower middle), William
C. Janssen collection (bottom) |
|
|
|
| Pictures 14A-22 and 14A-23. |
|
Cars no. 50 and 51 are believed to have been built by
Stephenson in 1902, and delivered to Champaign-Urbana in 1903. These
ten-bench open cars had a center aisle, taking up one seat per bench.
So the cars seated 40 rather than 50, but gave the conductor much greater
safety than the older open cars, which required him to ride the running
boards. The upper view, showing no. 50, was taken in 1910.
The car is signed for the Church & John branches of the main line.
The lower picture, showing car 51, was taken in 1912 on W. Church Street
in Champaign. The car is signed for the New and John Street branches
of the main line. The original picture caption identifies the motorman
as Ed Hall and the conductor as Elmer Baker, but based on other photographs
of these men, this is believed to be reversed. Note the unusual roof-mounted
bell. — Illinois Power Co. Archives (Picture 14A-22), Champaign County
Historical Society, from Urbana Courier archives (#234 upper) (Picture
14A-23) |
|
| Pictures 14A-24 and 14A-25 |
|
Cars no. 60-62 were built by St. Louis Car Co. in 1912
on order #953. The first and only double-truck city cars in Champaign-Urbana,
they were 41 feet long and rode on St. Louis 99B trucks. Despite
their length, they each had only a single trolley pole. Note the
roof-mounted gongs. Car 60 is seen in the upper picture, and car
62 in the lower. Both are marked for Church St. on the off-center
side route sign. The logo in the center of the side panel is the
same shape as the parent ITS system logo, but has the words Champaign and
Urbana in its wings, with the intertwined letters C and U in the center.
— Don T. Thrall photos, William C. Janssen collection |
|
| Picture 14A-26. |
|
Open car no. 616, some time in the late 'teens or early 20s.
The system owned several second-hand 12-bench open cars numbered in the
600s, built by St. Louis Car Co. in 1902 on order #244 for St. Louis Transit
Co. (later United Rys. Co. of St. Louis). Known in Champaign-Urbana
are no. 616 and 652, but other members of the group probably rolled in
the Twin Cities. The route sign of this car, in shadow, says “New
&” something; it was assigned to the New Street branch of the main
line. The conductor, at left, is probably Roy Mount. — Roy Mount
collection |
| Pictures 14A-27 and 14A-28. |
|
In 1908, the Danville Car Co. built a group of closed
cars numbered in the 700s for the ITS, which assigned them as needed to
the various city systems it owned. No. 701 was assigned to Champaign-Urbana,
and was the first steel-sided city car in the Twin Cities. It was
probably also the first car in the community to have air brakes, and the
first to have roll signs in a vestibule window rather than on the car roof.
These cars were also the last non-Pay As You Enter cars in the Urbana-Champaign
fleet. The upper picture shows the car in its original configuration;
note the lack of a right front door. It is shown in the lower picture
in 1921 in front of the Neil Street car barn after having been rebuilt
for Pay As You Enter service, with the addition of a right front door and
a dash sign saying “Have Exact Fare Ready/Pay As You Enter.” Note
the home made black-on-white “Owl Car” destination sign. — Illinois
Power Co. Archives (lower) (detail from a larger picture) |
|
| Picture 14A-29. |
|
Cars no. 107-115 were the second group of Birney cars in Champaign-Urbana.
They were built in 1922 by American Car Co. on order #1315, and delivered
in November. No. 110 is seen here on Main Street in Champaign, about
to turn south onto Neil Street to begin the return trip to Urbana on the
Short Line. This picture was probably taken on the last day of streetcar
service in Champaign-Urbana, November 10, 1936. About to be retired,
no. 110 is showing its age; note the deterioration of the roof over the
front vestibule. — Champaign County Historical Society (#238 lower),
from
Champaign News-Gazette archives |
| Picture 14A-30. |
|
The third group of Birney cars in Champaign-Urbana, no. 116-120,
was built by American Car Co. on order #1390 in 1924. These were
the last new streetcars ever in Champaign-Urbana. The group is represented
here by no. 116 on the Short Line as it crosses Burrill Avenue on the University
of Illinois campus on the private right-of-way, eastbound for downtown
Urbana. The Men's Old Gym (now Kenny Gym) and the Old Armory (now
Kenny Gym Annex) are in the background. This picture was taken April
18, 1936, just a few months before the end of streetcar service. —
R. V. Mehlenbeck photo. |
| Picture 14A-31. |
|
Birney car no. 119 passes the company offices and the Illinois Terminal
interurban depot on East University Avenue in downtown Champaign.
The car is eastbound on the Short Line, having just begun its run toward
Urbana, in this 1935 photo. — R. V. Mehlenbeck photo. |
| Pictures of Work Cars |
| Pictures 14A-32 and 14A-32.5. |
|
Line car no. 1 was apparently created from an early electric car,
or perhaps a horsecar. Note the vestibule windows, obviously not
original equipment; the old-fashioned roof-mounted headlight; and the boarded-up
side windows. — Champaign County Historical Society, W. T. Burnett
archive (upper); Illinois Power Co. Archives, courtesy of Dale Jenkins (lower) |
|
| Picture 14A-33. |
|
Tower wagon no. 2 is seen at the Tremont Street car barn in this
eastward-looking view, probably in the 1890s. The wagon is adorned
with the company name, “U. & C. Electric St. Ry. Co.” Note the
bravado of the lineman on top of the tower, leaning on the live 600 volt
trolley wire! He knows it's safe because he's not grounded, but how
many of his friends and relatives understand that? The original barn
has been extended to the south. Car no. 21, one of the open trailers
(possibly a former horsecar), is in the door of the extension. Car
no. 10 is standing in the yard to the right, probably in its original configuration.
Tremont Street, in the foreground, was theoretically a public street, but
was obviously used by few vehicles other than those of the street railway.
— Champaign County Historical Society, from Urbana Courier archives |
| Picture 14A-34. |
|
Cars of three generations pose with some of the men who worked on
them. Car no. 47, at the left, dates from 1909; no. 33, center, dates
from about 1902; and tower car no. 1, right, from the 1890s. No.
1 sports archaic add-on vestibule windows and a roof-mounted headlight.
No. 33 has a roof-mounted route sign, while no. 47 has its route sign in
a vestibule window. Notice also how no. 47 has a larger, wider body
and clerestory roof. The men marked X are, left to right: John Key,
Ora Patterson, Walter Hall, and Charley Bartley. |
| Picture 14A-35. |
|
Track no. 4 to this car barn is being installed or replaced.
Car no. 33, at the left, and no. 42, in the center, are both American or
Brill Car Co. products, built just a few years apart (about 1902 and about
1906, respectively). No. 33 is signed for the Neil Street line, which
provided local service on the ITS interurban tracks from the city limits
on W. John Street to the Wabash tracks on N. Neil. No. 42 is signed
for the New & John branches of the main line, meaning that its western
terminus was at Green and Prospect on the New Street route, and that it
used E. John to get to the University campus before going to downtown Urbana.
The cab-on-flat work motor at the far right was probably no. 207, which
was built in the company shops about 1902. — Don T. Thrall photo, William
C. Janssen collection |
C. K&UT Cars
Only fragmentary information is available about the rolling stock of the
Kankakee and Urbana Traction Co. The company's records have not been
uncovered, and most probably have not survived. Photographs of K&UT
cars are exceptionally rare, but a few snapshots are known. Such
information as it has been possible to assemble is presented here.
Compiled by James J. Buckley, A. Bradley Martin, Jr., and H. George
Friedman, Jr. Thanks to Larry Thomas for information on the cars
from the Alton Jacksonville and Peoria.
Cars #100 and 101 were described in the Champaign County News
of December 21, 1912 on the occasion of the first service to Thomasboro
over the previous two days. The cars were received on December 18.
They were painted dark green with mahogany trim and gold lettering, and
included baggage, smoking, and “ladies'” compartments, with toilet rooms
and hot water heaters. There were seats for more than 50 people,
plus temporary seats that could be set up, presumably in the baggage compartment.
The Electric Railway Journal gives a bit more technical detail,
reporting that the cars were built by American Car Co., were 53'0" long,
and ran on Brill trucks. The two cars were originally built in 1911
as part of an order of five cars, numbers 100 through 104, for the Alton
Jacksonville and Peoria on American order #892. But the AJ&P
had financial difficulties and was unable to take delivery of the cars,
so 100 and 101 were sold to the K&UT. Later, one of these cars
was renumbered 244 (the reason is unknown). The other was reported
renumbered 243, but it also may have been the car which was rebuilt into
a freight motor numbered 282 or 1282.
| Pictures 14C-1 and 14C-2. |
|
|
Two pictures of car no. 244, showing both ends of the car.
The left picture may have been taken during construction of one of the
extensions to the line. The right picture was taken on the lead track
to the car barn, and shows shopman Del Morris at the controls. — Del
and Elsie Morris |
| Picture 14C-2.5. |
|
Number 282 in the car barn. — Del Morris |
Electric Railway Journal in 1917 reported that the K&UT had
taken delivery in 1916 of a 51' express motor built by Niles, and 7 wooden
freight cars of 36' length. The motor was originally numbered 50,
and was renumbered 1650 in 1923 (again, the reason for renumbering is not
known). The motor is believed to have been second hand. The
freight cars included 2 gondola cars from St. Louis Rail & Equipment
Co., and 5 box cars from Interstate Car Co. Nothing more is known
about the wooden freight cars.
Cars #201 and 202, a motor and trailer pair, were reportedly purchased
second hand from the Wilkes Barre and Hazelton Railway in 1917. The
Urbana Courier reported their arrival in Urbana in July 1917.
The motor car was 51' long and 9'6" wide, weighing in at 90,000 pounds.
The trailer car was 42' long, and may have been from the Dan Patch Line
of Minnesota. The motor car was eventually renumbered 232.
Perhaps in an effort to reduce operating expenses by using lightweight
equipment, the K&UT in 1924 placed order #1342 with the St. Louis Car
Co. to purchase their lightweight demonstrator safety car, built in 1922
by St. Louis on order #1266 as their car #600 for exhibition in Chicago.
This was the last and the most modern car acquired by the line. Car
242 was 42' long, weighed 36,000 pounds, and was arranged for one-man operation.
It was powered by four 35 hp. Westinghouse 510-A motors, and ran on St.
Louis 64 trucks. The paint scheme was Pullman green with a Venetian
red roof, and passengers were carried on 22 red plush reversible seats.
After the K&UT was abandoned, this was the only car to be sold for
operation elsewhere. It was sold in 1930 to the Third Avenue Railway
Co. of New York, where it was modified and became their #1702. In
1934, it was renumbered by Third Avenue as #1250. The car was finally
retired in 1948.
| Picture 14C-3. |
|
Car 242, the lightweight double truck safety car. As Third
Avenue Railway car no. 1702, and later no. 1250, this car survived long
after the demise of the K&UT. Note the route sign over the right
front window, saying “University Route”. |
| Pictures 14C-4 and 14C-5. |
|
The body of one of the heavyweight cars survived into
the 1950s as the office of the Broadway Coal Co., sitting on the ground
near the site of the K&UT car barn on North Broadway. The exact
date when it was finally scrapped is not known. — Howard Morris |
|
Many of the pictures in this part of Chapter 14 and in
Chapter 6 are from the collection of A. Bradley Martin Jr., whose assistance
is gratefully acknowledged. Snapshots taken by Del Morris, a K&UT
shopman, were acquired by Bradley Martin from Del's wife, Elsie Morris.
D. University of Illinois Test Car
Professor Morgan Brooks of the University of Illinois Electrical Engineering
Department visited the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904, and became interested
in the electric railway displays. Upon his return to the University,
he sought out a car for practical instruction of students in problems of
rails and equipment, and for research into electric railways. He
obtained cooperation from the Illinois Traction System, on whose tracks
he wanted to operate the new car. He later wrote, “I wanted a certain
car that actually had been exhibited at the Fair, but I have a feeling
that, because I desired a car without seating, the manufacturers shipped
us another car from the factory rather than remove the seats from the one
that had been on display.” Brooks placed the order with the Jewett
Car Co. of Newark, Ohio on April 7, 1905, and the car was delivered on
June 14, but it was not ready to run at the University until the following
winter.
Within the next year or two, a new Railway Engineering Department was
organized in the College of Engineering, which sponsored programs of study
in Railway Civil Engineering, Railway Mechanical Engineering, Railway Electrical
Engineering, and Railway Administration. The car was described in
some detail in Street Railway Journal of June 9, 1906 (v. 27, no.
23, pp. 907-908), and the new programs of study were described in a University
Bulletin which was extensively quoted in Electric Railway Review
for June 15, 1907 (v. 17, no. 24, pp. 786-787).
The car was a standard double end wood sheathed interurban car, divided
into two compartments. One compartment was 22'6" long and was furnished
with a desk, filing cabinets, etc. to serve as a lab and office.
The smaller compartment was 11'10" long and contained the equipment.
The car was 45' long overall, 8'4" wide, 9'6" high, and was reported to
weigh 55,150 pounds. It rode on Standard Steel Car Co. C-60 trucks
having a wheel base of 6'4" and 33" diameter wheels, and was propelled
by four 40 or 50 hp. (depending on which report was accurate) Westinghouse
101-D motors, controlled by Westinghouse multiple-unit controls.
The control equipment that was usually mounted under the car floor was
instead mounted inside the smaller compartment where its operation could
be observed. The braking system was a simple straight air system,
with emergency hand brakes. The car was equipped with recording voltmeters,
ammeters, and wattmeters, “and with auxiliary measuring and recording devices
by means of which there is automatically made a graphical record of voltage,
current, power, speed, acceleration, time and [track] curvature.”
It was also equipped with a pair of wire brushes attached to the inside
ends of the truck frames so that they contacted the rails as the car operated
down the track. A low voltage current could be passed through these
brushes and the rail between them, providing a means of measuring the resistance
of rail bonds as the car passed over them. The readings were recorded
within the car on a continuous paper tape.
The car was operated over both ITS and K&UT lines for various testing
and instructional purposes over the years. It is known to have been
active at least as late as 1938 (see Picture 14D-5, below, whose date has
been recorded), and was still active when trolley fan writer Stephen D.
Maquire featured it in an article in his “Electric Lines” column in the
April 1943 issue of Railroad Magazine (vol. 34, no. 2, pp. 134-136).
The car is believed to have survived for a few more years, but was probably
scrapped when the Railway Engineering Department was discontinued later
in the 1940s.
| Picture 14D-1. |
|
The University of Illinois test car in its original livery, as operated
by the Electrical Engineering Department. It is seen here on Green
Street at Burrill Avenue around 1906. — University of Illinois Library
Archives |
| Picture 14D-2. |
|
The UI test car in its revised livery, as operated by the Railway
Engineering Department. The car is seen here on Green Street about
1908, looking south from Engineering Hall toward University Hall, whose
tower can be seen above the trees to the right. (University Hall
was on the site presently occupied by the Illini Union.) — University
of Illinois Engineering Publications Office |
| Picture 14D-3. |
|
University students and faculty at work inside the test car.
— University of Illinois Library Archives |
| Picture 14D-4. |
|
The cab and instruments at one end of the test car. Although
it was always intended for test purposes, its interior seems to have been
constructed with many of the luxury touches found on typical interurban
passenger cars. Note, for example, the woodwork above the floor,
the ceiling lights, and the clock. This suggests that the car was
a “stock” car fitted out to UI specifications. The handle on the
hand brake was later replaced with a horizontal wheel. — University
of Illinois Library Archives |
| Picture 14D-5. |
|
The test car on August 1, 1938. The Locomotive Testing Laboratory
is in the background, and the rails of the private right-of-way are in
the foreground. Compare the simple striping on the car to that in
earlier pictures, above. Note the white flags for an “extra” on the
upper front corners of the car. — University of Illinois Public Information
Office |
| Picture 14D-6. |
|
The test car in 1940. For some reason, the dash has been
painted white (or some light color, perhaps cream). — Photo by UI alumnus
G. A. Roush |
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