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  2. Horsecar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horsecar

    The Swansea and Mumbles Railway ran the world's first passenger tram service in 1807. The horse-drawn tram (horsecar) was an early form of public rail transport, which developed out of industrial haulage routes that had long been in existence, and from the omnibus routes that first ran on public streets in the 1820s [citation needed], using the newly improved iron or steel rail or 'tramway'.

  3. History of trams - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_trams

    The history of trams, streetcars, or trolleys began in the early nineteenth century. It can be divided up into several discrete periods defined by the principal means of motive power used. [2] Eventually the so-called US "street railways" were deemed advantageous auxiliaries of the new elevated and/or tunneled metropolitan steam railways. [3] [4]

  4. Streetcars in North America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streetcars_in_North_America

    Streetcars or trolley(car)s (American English for the European word tram) were once the chief mode of public transit in hundreds of North American cities and towns. Most of the original urban streetcar systems were either dismantled in the mid-20th century or converted to other modes of operation, such as light rail.

  5. History of transportation in New York City - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_transportation...

    Portions of Broadway were once a part of a primary route of the Lenape people in Pre-Dutch New York. [1] In the 18th century, the principal highway to distant places was the Eastern Post Road. It ran through the East Side, and exited out of what was the northernmost point of Manhattan, in present-day Marble Hill. Bloomingdale Road, later called ...

  6. Omaha Traction Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Omaha_Traction_Company

    The Omaha Traction Company was a privately owned public transportation business in Omaha, Nebraska. Created in the early 1900s by wealthy Omaha banker Gurdon Wattles, the company was involved in a series of contentious disputes with organized labor.

  7. Timeline of transportation technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_transportation...

    Early 2020s - Multiple electric, autonomous buses open for public transport – albeit with a local professional driving-assistant – are being launched around the world [100] [101] after the first such bus started operating for the general public in a Swiss town in 2018. [102] [contradictory]

  8. Interurban - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interurban

    Interurban as a term encompassed the companies, their infrastructure, their cars that ran on the rails, and their service. In the United States, the early 1900s interurban was a valuable economic institution, when most roads between towns, many town streets were unpaved, and transportation and haulage was by horse-drawn carriages and carts.

  9. Streetcar suburb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streetcar_suburb

    A streetcar suburb is a residential community whose growth and development was strongly shaped by the use of streetcar lines as a primary means of transportation. Such suburbs developed in the United States in the years before the automobile, when the introduction of the electric trolley or streetcar allowed the nation’s burgeoning middle class to move beyond the central city’s borders. [1]