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349:. As part of a strategy to encourage the use of automobiles and discourage use of public transport, the U.S. firm of General Motors formed a separate subsidiary named "National City Lines", whose business mission was to buy out tram/streetcar operations all around the US and replace the trams with fleets of
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In some countries, the word "tram" also refers to small localized transportation systems that do not run on rails. These can be small linked vehicles used to shuttle visitors around a tourist attraction or from a large parking lot into a building such as a shopping center. These trams run on regular
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Early trams were pulled along by horses. Later trams, known as cable cars, attached to a moving cable underneath the road. The cable would be pulled by a steam engine at a powerhouse. Railed vehicles pulled by cable up the hills at steep incline, such as ]'s
Victoria Peak Tram, and Monongahela and
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Early trams were pulled along by horses. Later trams, known as cable cars, attached to a moving cable underneath the road. The cable would be pulled by a steam engine at a powerhouse. Railed vehicles pulled by cable up the hills at steep incline, such as ]'s
Victoria Peak Tram, and Monongahela and
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mission was to buy out tram/streetcar operations all around the US and replace the trams with fleets of ]. Not all trams were removed; the ] cable cars are the most famous example of trams in the United States. More recently some
American cities have built ] systems which operate partially in the
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mission was to buy out tram/streetcar operations all around the US and replace the trams with fleets of ]. Not all trams were removed; the ] cable cars are the most famous example of trams in the United States. More recently some
American cities have built ] systems which operate partially in the
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Early trams were pulled along by horses. Later trams, known as cable cars, attached to a moving cable underneath the road. The cable would be pulled by a steam engine at a powerhouse. Railed vehicles pulled by cable up the hills at steep incline, such as
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In the United States, most trams were removed by the ]. As part of a strategy to encourage the use of automobiles and discourage use of public transport, the U.S. firm of
General Motors formed a separate subsidiary named "National City
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In the United States, most trams were removed by the ]. As part of a strategy to encourage the use of automobiles and discourage use of public transport, the U.S. firm of
General Motors formed a separate subsidiary named "National City
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systems which operate partially in the right-of-way of city streets. These systems could be called trams by
Europeans and Australians but are generally not known by that name within the US; they are known as "streetcars".
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Tram systems are common throughout Europe and were common throughout the
Western world in the early 20th century. In Australia trams are in use in several cities, most extensively in ] with its ].
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Tram systems are common throughout Europe and were common throughout the
Western world in the early 20th century. In Australia trams are in use in several cities, most extensively in ] with its ].
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Duquesne
Inclines in ], USA, are also called trams, but are more accurately ]s. Modern trams generally use overhead electric cables, from which they draw current through a ] or a trolley pole.
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Duquesne Inclines in ], USA, are also called trams, but are more accurately ]s. Modern trams generally use overhead electric cables, from which they draw current through a ] or a trolley pole.
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Tram systems are common throughout Europe and were common throughout the Western world in the early 20th century. In Australia trams are in use in several cities, most extensively in
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right-of-way of city streets. These systems could be called trams by Europeans and Australians but are generally not known by that name within the US; they are known as "streetcars".
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right-of-way of city streets. These systems could be called trams by Europeans and Australians but are generally not known by that name within the US; they are known as "streetcars".
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of city streets. Another distinguishing factor is the short length of the vehicle, which usually consists of a standalone car or three at most. A special type is the
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250:<div style="float:left; padding-top: 7px; padding-bottom: 7px; padding-right: 7px;">]<br/>''Interior of a tram''</div>
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paved road with rubber tires. Suspended cable cars, such as those found in ski resorts, may also be called trams, see
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cable cars are the most famous example of trams in the United States. More recently some American cities have built
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443:Light rail
419:Low German
393:pantograph
389:funiculars
359:light-rail
317:light-rail
288:A tram in
381:Hong Kong
338:with its
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329:cable car
313:streetcar
432:See also
56:Wikitext
315:) is a
309:trolley
305:tramway
294:Austria
173:Line 5:
170:Line 5:
290:Vienna
226:Lines"
210:Lines"
67:Inline
49:Visual
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422:traam
351:buses
347:1950s
215:Their
303:(or
301:tram
151:talk
137:undo
132:edit
108:talk
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