
This 1935 CSL brochure shows experimental pre-PCC car 7001 and one of the 100 “Sedans,” which were then only six years old.
We continue our celebration of Chicago streetcars with several more great and rarely seen pictures. We managed to find another picture showing track work at Clark and Van Buren in 1954, and we’ve added it to a previous post on that subject that we made back in February.
Since we know some of you are also bus fans, we’ve thrown in a couple pictures of Chicago’s trolley coaches. While we have managed to identify most of these locations, there are a few that still need to be identified. If you can help with more information, don’t hesitate to contact us, either via a comment, or to: thetrolleydodger@gmail.com
-The Editor
PS- If you enjoy seeing these classic photographs, we can use your help. Check out our online store, where you can purchase our compact discs and electronic books. Our latest, Chicago’s PCC Streetcars- The Rest of the Story, ships this week and contains more than 3,500 pages of useful material plus hundreds of photographs, plus track maps and essays.
You can also make a donation to The Trolley Dodger if you support our continuing original research. We thank everyone who has helped us.

When this was published in 1935, free transfers between Chicago’s streetcars and the “L” were a new thing.

CTA streetcars 225 and 4406, in fantrip service, at Broadway and Ardmore on October 21, 1956., with 6000s on the “L” in the background.

CTA streetcars 225 and 4406, in fantrip service, at Clark and 16th on October 21, 1956. By this time, streetcars were only being used on weekdays on the busy Clark-Wentworth line, so the fantrip cars did not really get in the way of the replacement bus service being offered by CTA.

Here is another photo showing track work at Clark and Van Buren on July 17, 1954. We’ve added this to ten others we posted back in February. You can find that post at: http://thetrolleydodger.com/2015/02/12/track-work-clark-van-buren-1954/

Jeff Wien writes, “CTA 4275 at Clark and Devon turning east onto Devon on route 36: Broadway-State.”

Jeff Wien writes, “PCC 7165 is a route 49 Western pullout from Devon Station (Clark and Schreiber). Car is pulling off of Clark onto Devon to head west and south along Western to 79th St. In back of photo one can see the wall of the Ridge Theater that later became a part of the Clark-Devon Hardware Store.”

CTA 4049 on that section of Cottage Grove that ran parallel to the Illinois Central electric suburban service (now Metra). The ad of the side of the PCC, advertising the Mickey Spillane film “The Long Wait,” currently playing at the Woods Theater, dates this photo to between about May 19 and June 14, 1954.

Eastbound CTA 194 passes Wieboldt’s department store, which was located at about 850 W. 63rd Street, on May 1, 1952.

CTA 188 heads west on 63rd Place near Austin during the summer of 1952. By this time, red cars had replaced PCCs on 63rd.
CTA 7148: Clark-Devon looking north from just south of Devon: route 22
Thanks!
CTA 4275 at Clark and Devon turning east onto Devon on route 36: Broadway-State
Thanks!
CTA 4309 prepares to leave the nicely landscaped Clark-Arthur loop and head south on route 22.
That loop is still used for the Broadway Bus as it end of the line. No longer landscaped.. it’s just a big hunk of tar and concrete.
have some apparently rare photos of PCC cars in the much better looking in my opinion Blue Goose paint scheme. nice collection, even admire and I’m not a Chicago fan.
thanks for sharing your hard work
minor point…but streetcar passing Wieboldts on 63rd would be eastbount….the store was on the southside of 63rd Street
I’ve corrected the caption, thanks!
PCC 7165 is a route 49 Western pullout from Devon Station (Clark and Schreiber). Car is pulling off of Clark onto Devon to head west and south along Western to 79th St. In back of photo one can see the wall of the Ridge Theater that later became a part of the Clark-Devon Hardware Store.
I’ve updated the caption, thanks!