When streetcar service stopped on October 31, 1956, service on the McDonald Avenue branch ended as well. In the picture above, I am sorry, I lost the reference, a south bound PCC car is about to cross Cortelyou Road and McDonald Avenue. In the foreground and above and perpendicular to the picture is the wooden support for the B-23 Cortelyou Road trolleybus which also ended on the same day. The car shown, may make a short turn at the Kensington Loop on the next street or may go all the way to Coney Island. PCC cars entered Church Avenue service around 1951 and notice above that the wooden ties are missing to three of the four tracks on the structure. Through service to Coney Island started on October-November 1954 on the elevated structure above, so this picture can be dated from 1951 to 1954.
In the sixty years plus that Brooklyn lost it's trolleys, trolleys have made a comeback in various forms to even cities that were hostile to them, such as Los Angeles, Paris, London and other cities. Of the world class cities, only New York and Chicago and some others cannot, will not, or simply cannot bring trolleys back, even for a demonstration line running a few hundred feet.
Many years ago, I posted a video of the Volgograd tram subway from the former Russia. There, PCC type cares run on the street then descend into a tunnel with nice stations. I would if I could would build such a line between Brooklyn and Staten Island. Why not a subway? I believe that modern PCC cars can make up the grade on the roadway of the Verazano Bridge. Thus you would not need to build a billion dollar tunnel. The line can go underground in Bay Ridge and meet at platform level at one of the "R" stations on 4th Avenue in Bay Ridge for a cross platform transfer. In Staten Island, the line can run underground like in Volgograd, or private right of way or in the middle of an important but wide street.
Just a suggestion.
Tramway Null
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