American Ground 
      Transport*
Page 
      2
            Steam railroads provided 
      frequent service between urban centers and branch lines carried passengers 
      and freight to the remotest comers of the country. Barely a dozen years 
      earlier, Frank Spragues first successful trolley installation in 
      Richmond, Va., heralded a new era of electric transportation for our 
      cities and towns. 
     But even as electric 
      transit technology evolved and overspread the nation, the infant auto 
      industry was producing the antique ancestors of the vehicle that was to 
      indelibly alter, and, many would say, ruin, the American style of 
      living. 
     The electric railway industry 
      grew rapidly and peaked early. During the era preceding World War I 
      changes in the physical structure of the industry mainly took the form of 
      adjustments. New service was instituted for new markets, as trimming of 
      marginal lines marked areas where promoters ambitions exceeded patronage 
      potential. 
     After the World War a new 
      and disturbing element made itself felt in the urban picture as the 
      introduction of advanced assembly techniques began to turn a rich mans 
      toy into a transportation alternative for many amidst the prosperity of 
      the '20s. 
     Trolleys and autos got in each 
      others way as they fought for the same street space and a contemporary 
      observer might not have believed which mode would eventually 
      prevail. 
     As auto development and 
      marketing progressed, the street railway industry didnt stagnate. 
      Differing approaches to transit needs produced a variety of ideas and 
      inventions, but it was not until 1936 that the efforts of the Presidents 
      Conference Committee (PCC) produced the fist batch of 100 modern 
      streetcars, which represented the greatest single advance ever made in 
      electric rail transportation. More than a mere cosmetic facelift of old 
      equipment, or a series of minor improvements in previous technology, the 
      PCC car set a new standard of comfort, performance and patron acceptance 
      through technical innovations still used in the design and manufacture of 
      rapid transit and light railway equipment throughout the 
      world. 
      Yet, just 20 years after 
      that huge forward step, the street railway had all but disappeared from 
      the American scene. Why? 
     A casual 
      observer might well ask whether that question has more than historical 
      significance in todays auto-dominated world. His answer would be a 
      definite yes. We have reached a crossroads in national transportation 
      policy, where our future way of life may well depend upon decisions which 
      may be better understood in the context of recent transit 
      history. 
     Against this background, 
      American Ground Transport, a new report prepared by Bradford C. Snell and 
      financed by the Stern Fund of New York, ties together many of the loose 
      ends of years of transportation transition to present a picture of public 
      policy goals influenced by private business considerations. The report was 
      submitted in February [1974] to the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust 
      and Monopoly of the Committee on the Judiciary. Mr. Snell is presently 
      assistant counsel to the sub-committee, which is chaired by Sen. Philip A. 
      Hart of Michigan. 
       
                   
           This is a study of the social consequences of monopoly, the 
      report begins. What follows reveals, among other things. the anatomy of 
      changes which altered the American landscape.
      Continued on page 3
      
      
      Copyright © 1974 by Third Rail Press, © 1999 by The Composing Stack 
      Inc.
Reprinted by permission. Not responsible for 
      typographical errors.
      *Quotations in this article are taken from AMERICAN GROUND TRANSPORT, 
      A Proposal for Restructuring the Automobile, Truck, Bus, and Rail 
      Industries, © 1973 by Bradford C. Snell. Excerpts used by permission of 
      the author.
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      logo are trademarks of The Composing Stack Inc.