From the archive: North Shore Connector and Northside trolley history
By Bryant Schmude
Photo: A 1942 Pittsburgh streamliner-type T car #1676 climbs Itin Street near Goehring Street on the route #5-SPRING HILL light rail line with ease. Courtesy of Edward Miller
One of the country’s earliest electric T lines was opened in Allegheny City in 1888. You could say it was the original North Shore Connector.
It connected lower Federal Street with the Perry Hilltop. The success of this speedy line led to many others during the 1890s. Let me add that this new North Shore Connector’s track gauge—that is the distance between the rails on which the wheels sit on the track—is exactly the same 5-foot 2 ½ inches as the original North Side trolleys of decades ago.
The steepest regular T line in all of The United States was also found right here for many decades. The track that carried T Route 21-Fineview from Federal Street up the 12.9 percent grade of Henderson Street was steeper than any other US trolley grade without cables or cog-tracks.
Over a century ago, the area where today’s Heinz Field and River’s Casino now sit, was a segment of Allegheny City known as Old Rebecca. There was actually a T route called the Route 20-Rebecca until 1951. It ran over the Manchester Bridge, the pier of which now houses the Fred Roger’s statue, and ran through Rebecca to the Manchester T Yards.
This new T line has the best potential for future extensions further into the Northside, the North Hills and to the West Hills and airport corridor. Likewise, a dedicated source of funding for transit operations is vital for this region’s future well-being.
Let me further add that the original web of T lines were lost not because they were out dated or old fashioned as some people think. They were lost due to the influence of the anti-rail efforts of the oil and auto industry on the political powers, especially after World War II.
While Pittsburgh’s Northside said goodbye to the original trolleys through the mid-1960s, ultra-modern new systems were being reborn all over Europe and Asia.
Bryant Schmude is a descendent of the Schmudes who settled in the Woods Run Valley in the 1890s. He previously worked at the Pennsylvania Trolley Museum.