Peter Witt streetcar

{{Short description|North American streetcar}}

{{more citations needed|date=December 2018}}

{{Infobox train

| background =

| name =

| image = AFreshlyPaintedMilanPeterWittTramInTwoToneGreenOnItsThirdWeekOfServiceOnTheFLine.jpg

| imagealt =

| imagesize =

| caption = This ex-Milan car, now operating in San Francisco, carries the two-tone green color scheme used by Milan from 1926 to the 1970s.

| interiorimage = Interior of a Peter Witt streetcar of the TTC, showing the pay upon exit system.jpg

| interiorimagealt =

| interiorcaption = Interior of a Toronto Transportation Commission Peter Witt streetcar on October 30, 1928. Note the second crew member, sitting by the fare box, waiting to collect fares from passengers.

| service =

| manufacturer =

| designer = Peter Witt

| assembly =

| ordernumber =

| factory =

| family =

| replaced =

| yearconstruction =

| yearservice =

| refurbishment =

| yearscrapped =

| numberconstruction=

| numberbuilt =

| numberservice =

| numberpreserved =

| numberscrapped =

| predecessor =

| successor =

| formation =

| diagram =

| code =

| fleetnumbers =

| capacity =

| operator =

| depots =

| lines =

| carbody =

| trainlength =

| carlength =

| width =

| height =

| lowfloor =

| floorheight =

| platformheight =

| entrylevelorstep =

| doors =

| art-sections =

| wheeldiameter =

| wheelbase =

| maxspeed =

| weight =

| axleload =

| steep gradient =

| traction =

| engine =

| enginetype =

| cylindercount =

| cylindersize =

| traction motors =

| poweroutput =

| tractiveeffort =

| transmission =

| acceleration =

| deceleration =

| aux =

| powersupply =

| hvac =

| electricsystem =

| collectionmethod =

| uicclass = Bo'Bo'

| aarwheels = B-B

| wheels driven =

| bogies = 2

| minimum curve =

| brakes =

| safety =

| coupling =

| multipleworking =

| light =

| gauge =

| notes =

| box_width =

| label_width =

| seating =

| stocktype =

}}

The Peter Witt streetcar was introduced by Cleveland Railway commissioner Peter Witt (1869–1948) who led the transit agency from 1911 to 1915 and designed a model of streetcar known by his name{{cite patent

| inventor-last = Witt

| inventor-first = Peter

| issue-date = 1916

| title = P. Witt Street Railway Car

| country-code = US

| patent-number = 1180900}} that was used in many North American cities, most notably in Toronto, Buffalo, and Cleveland.

Features

This design was distinguished from other streetcars of the era by its use of the center door as an exit only, with a conductor stationed inside just in front of the door. Passengers could board through the front doors without waiting or paying; they could pay the conductor immediately and sit in the rear of the car (in the nicer seats), or wait in front and pay just before they exited. This had the effect of reducing the car's dwell time at stops, improving schedule times and increasing capacity. Many vehicles were later converted to pay-as-you-enter operation in order to reduce the number of staff needed, but they continued to be known as Peter Witt cars.

History

Witt completed the first prototype in 1914 and filed his patent for the car design in 1915. G.C. Kuhlman Car Company then delivered 130 cars of this design to Cleveland in 1915 and 1916. From this point the design was licensed to a number of cities that needed large capacity trolleys. Toronto Transportation Commission ordered 575 custom Peter Witt cars from 1921 to 1923 and operated them until 1965. Philadelphia Rapid Transit ordered 525 cars from 1923 to 1926, while also converting most of their 1,500 Nearside streetcar fleet to center exit models. Production continued until the introduction of the PCC streetcar in the mid-1930s.

Peter Witt cars were also built in Italy and used in several Italian cities, including Milan, where 200 out of 502 originally built class 1500 cars (introduced in 1928) are still in regular service in 2021. Additionally eleven ex-Milan cars can be seen today on the streets of San Francisco, where they operate on the F Market & Wharves streetcar line. Also in Italy, 30 heavily rebuilt Peter Witt cars are still in use in Naples.{{cite magazine| first=Fabrizio| last=Tellini| title=Sessantenni in linea| magazine=I Treni| issue=316| date=June 2009| pages=24–29| language=it}} Neapolitan prototype cars 901 and 902, built in 1930, and the first series order cars 903–906, built in 1932, were the only Peter Witt cars in use by 1950; they were rebuilt, eliminating the center door and adding a rear door to match the rest of the fleet built from 1932 on. The present rebuilt fleet has some of these cars, though they are no longer in Peter Witt format.{{Cite book|title=Storia dei trasporti urbani di Napoli e delle linee interurbane gestite dalla SATN, dalle Tramvie di Capodimonte e dalle Aziende municipalizzate|last=Bevere, Eduardo, 1959-|date=1998–1999|publisher=Calosci|others=Chiaro, Gerardo, 1959-, Cozzolino, Andrea, 1948-|isbn=8877851457|location=Cortona|oclc=40954549}}

In early 1930s, а group of Soviet engineers from Leningrad headed by designer D. I. Kondratyev visited the United States and, on their return, adapted the American design to the local narrower loading gauge to start local production of the model LM-33 (popularly known as "американка" (Amerikanka, Russian for "an American lady") that was later used in the city for 45 years (in its last decades, together with other tram models), until mid-March, 1979, according to St.Petersburg Museum of the City's Electric Transport.{{cite web| title=Трамвайный поезд ЛМ-33 №4275 + ЛП-33 №4454 ("Американка")| language=ru| url=http://retro.tramway.ru/vagons/4275+4454.html}}

Besides their continued use in day-to-day service in Milan, San Francisco and (in a rebuilt form) Naples, Peter Witt cars have been preserved in several locations. Gomaco Trolley Company, a US streetcar renovation specialist, has bought 70 ex-Milan cars which it is offering to museums and heritage streetcar operators.{{cite web| url=http://gomacotrolley.com/Resources/pages/peterwitt.html| title=Reconditioned Peter Witt Trolley| publisher=Gomaco Trolley Company| accessdate=2016-03-21}} A St. Petersburg, Russia, museum has a restored sample of the version once made and used in the city.

=Operators=

Operators that used Peter Witt streetcars included:

class="wikitable sortable"
Operator

! City

! State/province

! Country

Azienda Municipalizzata Trasporti {{nowrap|{{small|(now Gruppo Torinese Trasporti)}}}}

| Turin

| Turin

| Italy

Azienda Napoletana Mobilità

| Naples

| Naples

| Italy

Azienda Trasporti Milanesi

| Milan

| Milan

| Italy

Baltimore Transit Company

| Baltimore

| Maryland

| United States

Brooklyn & Queens Transit

| New York

| New York

| United States

Chicago Surface Lines

| Chicago

| Illinois

| United States

Cleveland Railway

| Cleveland

| Ohio

| United States

Dallas Railway & Terminal Co.

| Dallas

| Texas

| United States

Department of Street Railways

| Detroit

| Michigan

| United States

Empresa Municipal de Transportes

| Madrid

| Madrid

| Spain

International Railway Co.

| Buffalo

| New York

| United States

Kitchener & Waterloo Street Railway

| Kitchener and Waterloo

| Ontario

| Canada

Leningrad

| Leningrad

|Russian SFSR

|Soviet Union

London Street Railway

| London

| Ontario

| Canada

Los Angeles Railway

| Los Angeles

| California

| United States

Louisville Railway

| Louisville

| Kentucky

| United States

Melbourne & Metropolitan Tramways Board

| Melbourne

| Victoria

| Australia

New York State Railways

| Rochester & Syracuse

| New York

| United States

Ottawa Transportation Commission

| Ottawa

| Ontario

| Canada

Philadelphia Rapid Transit &
Philadelphia Transportation Company

| Philadelphia

| Pennsylvania

| United States

Porto Rico Railway, Light & Power Co

| San Juan

|

| Puerto Rico

Rochester Industrial & Rapid Transit Railway

| Rochester

| New York

| United States

San Francisco Municipal Railway

| San Francisco

| California

| United States

Saskatoon Municipal Railway

| Saskatoon

| Saskatchewan

| Canada

Servicio de Transportes Eléctricos

| Mexico City

| Distrito Federal

| Mexico

St. Louis Public Service Company

| St. Louis

| Missouri

| United States

Toronto Transportation Commission / {{nowrap|Toronto Transit Commission}}

| Toronto

| Ontario

| Canada

United Railways & Electric Company

| Baltimore

| Maryland

| United States

=Builders=

class = "wikitable sortable"

! Company

! City

! State/province

! Country

J. G. Brill Company

| Philadelphia

| Pennsylvania

| United States

Canadian Car and Foundry

| Montreal

| Quebec

| Canada

Carminati & Toselli

| Milan

| Milan

| Italy

Cincinnati Car Company

| Cincinnati

| Ohio

| United States

G. C. Kuhlman Car Company

| Cleveland

| Ohio

| United States

Officine Elettro-Ferroviarie Tallero (OEFT)

| Milan

| Milan

| Italy

Officine Moncenisio

| Condove

| Turin

| Italy

Officine Ferroviarie Meridionali (OFM)

| Naples

| Naples

| Italy

Ottawa Car Company

| Ottawa

| Ontario

| Canada

Petersburg Tram Mechanical Factory (PTMF)

| Leningrad

|Russian SFSR

|Soviet Union

Preston Car Company

| Preston

| Ontario

| Canada

St. Louis Car Company

| St. Louis

| Missouri

| United States

Gallery

HCRY-Peter-Witt-TTC-2984.jpg|This ex-Toronto car is in its 1921 livery and is located at the Halton County Radial Railway Museum.

Napoli Tram carrelli 1047.jpg|An example of the rebuilt Peter Witt cars used in Naples

SF Vintage tram '1807' 1301.jpg|An ex-Milan Peter Witt car Class 1500 operating on the Embarcadero in San Francisco

Melbourne Y1 Class Tram 611 Sydney Tramway Museum December 2023 2.jpg|Melbourne, Australia, operated a number of Peter Witt–style trams. Pictured is a 1930s version.

ATM Car 1813 rainbow livery.jpg|Milan ATM car 1813 in rainbow livery in service in 2022

See also

{{Commons category|Peter Witt streetcars}}

References