General Motors streetcar conspiracy (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "General Motors streetcar conspiracy" in English language version.

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amazon.com

  • Thompson, Francis R. (1940). Electric transportation. International texts in electrical engineering: E. E. Dreese ... Consulting editor (1 ed.). Scranton, PA: International textbook company. p. 40. ASIN B003IH9ZNA. Retrieved 2015-03-11.

archive.today

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cliffslateralso.com

  • Slater 1997. Slater, Cliff (1997). "General Motors and the Demise of Streetcars" (PDF). Transportation Quarterly. pp. 45–66. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-25.
  • Slater 1997 "Mayor Alioto, himself a nationally prominent antitrust attorney, congratulated Snell on the "excellence" of his "very fine monograph." Alioto testified that, "General Motors and the automobile industry generally exhibit a kind of monopoly evil" and that GM "has carried on a deliberate concerted action with the oil companies and tire companies...for the purpose of destroying a vital form of cotric rapid transit. ... Mayor Bradley also testified, in absentia, saying that General Motors, through its American City Lines and Pacific City Lines affiliates, "scrapped" the Pacific Electric and Los Angeles streetcar systems to "motorize" Los Angeles. After GM was through, the 'electric train system was totally destroyed.'" Slater, Cliff (1997). "General Motors and the Demise of Streetcars" (PDF). Transportation Quarterly. pp. 45–66. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-25.
  • Slater 1997 "The issue is whether or not the buses that replaced the electric streetcars were economically superior. Without GM's interference would the United States today have a viable streetcar system? This article makes the case that under a less onerous regulatory environment, buses would have replaced streetcars even earlier than they actually did." Slater, Cliff (1997). "General Motors and the Demise of Streetcars" (PDF). Transportation Quarterly. pp. 45–66. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-04-25.

coachbuilt.com

  • "Untitled". New York Times. 1924-07-16 – via Coachbult.com.
  • "Coachbult.com - Hertz". www.coachbuilt.com. Retrieved 2024-03-01.
  • Snell 1995 "Members of GM's special unit went to, among others, the Southern Pacific, owner of Los Angeles' Pacific Electric, the world's largest interurban, with 1,500 miles of track, reaching 75 miles from San Bernardino, north to San Fernando, and south to Santa Ana; the New York Central Railroad, owner of the New York State Railways, 600 miles of street railways and interurban lines in upstate New York; and NH, owner of 1,500 miles of trolley lines in New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island and Massachusetts. In each case, by threatening to divert lucrative automobile freight to rival carriers, they persuaded the railroad (according to GM's own files) to convert its electric street cars to motor buses – slow, cramped, foul-smelling vehicles whose inferior performance invariable led riders to purchase automobiles." Snell, Bradford (Autumn 1995). "The StreetCar Conspiracy: How General Motors Deliberately Destroyed Public Transit". The New Electric Railway Journal – via Coachbuilt.com.

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library.cqpress.com

  • Federal Highway Aid and the Depression. CQ Researcher Online. CQ Press. 1932. pp. 425–443. The annual federal highway allotment to the states, which stood for a number of years prior to 1931, at $75,000,000, was increased to $125,000,000 for the fiscal years 1931, 1932, and 1933. These sums were further augmented by emergency appropriations totaling $200,000,000, the large additional funds for road building being advanced as a means of giving work to unemployed men in every state.

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doi.org

  • Bianco, Martha J. (Winter 1997). "The Decline of Transit—Corporate Conspiracy or Failure of Public Policy?: The Case of Portland, Oregon". Journal of Policy History. 9 (4): 461–464. doi:10.1017/S0898030600006175. S2CID 154495266.

economist.com

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filmsite.org

  • Dirks, Tim. "Citizen Kane". Filmsite. Retrieved 2022-08-17. Soon, Kane uses the paper to attack trusts, Thatcher and others among America's financial elite. Headlines of the Inquirer blare out the exposé in a montage of early Inquirer newspaper headlines: "TRACTION TRUST EXPOSED," "TRACTION TRUST BLEEDS PUBLIC WHITE," and "TRACTION TRUST SMASHED BY INQUIRER."

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  • Ruggles, C.O. "Problems in public utility economics and management". McGraw Hill. Retrieved 2014-11-19 – via Hathitrust.org.
  • U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly (1973). The Industrial Reorganization Act: Hearings, Ninety-third Congress, First Session [-Ninety-fourth Congress, First Session], On S. 1167. U.S. Government Printing Office. Retrieved 2014-11-18 – via Hathitrust.org.
  • Thompson, Francis R. (1940). Electric transportation. International texts in electrical engineering: E. E. Dreese ... Consulting editor (1 ed.). Scranton, PA: International textbook company. p. 40. ASIN B003IH9ZNA. Retrieved 2015-03-11.
  • U.S. House Committee on Interstate and Foreign Commerce (1941). "Hearings: Seventy-seventh Congress, First Session". p. 1124. Retrieved 2015-02-02 – via Hathitrust.org.

catalog.hathitrust.org

jstor.org

  • Smerk, George M. (Fall 1986). "Urban Mass Transportation: From Private to Public to Privatization". Transportation Journal (American Society of Transportation & Logistics Inc). 26 (1): 83–91. JSTOR 20712890. See p. 85.

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metroprimaryresources.info

  • "1922 Los Angeles: Unprecedented Growth, Congestion And A Plan For Relief". Dorothy Peyton Gray Transportation Library. 2010-07-06. He concludes that the downtown street area is insufficient for present traffic, street area is inefficiently used, outlets for traffic are insufficient, and that increasing efficiency is practically impossible due to the railway systems in operation at the time. He goes on to discuss the 2nd Street Tunnel project, the opening of 5th Street, the Pacific Electric tunnel, and plans for a Union Passenger Station.[author missing][date missing]

news.google.com

newspapers.com

  • "Ford says Smith too close to traction interests". The Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 1922-09-03. p. A5. Retrieved 2017-03-04.
  • "The Nebraska State Journal from Lincoln, Nebraska". 1943-10-19. p. 5. The five Fitzgerald brothers, who in 24 years ran a secondhand bus into a transportation system extending from Michigan to Texas... The five brothers started on the well known shoestring and ran a second hand bus into a monster transportation system which spreads from Michigan to Texas.
  • "Control of Rail System:Acquired". San Bernardino Sun. United Press. 1941-01-09. p. 17. Control of Rail System: Acquired (By United Press) San Francisco, Jan. 8. Control of the Railway Equipment & Realty Co., formerly the Key System, which operates interurban train service between San Francisco, Oakland and Alameda and local service in the latter cities, has been acquired by a group of Oakland businessmen, headed by A. J. Lundberg, president, and William P. St. Sure, vice-president, it was announced tonight. St. Sure said control of the transit firm was acquired "to prevent its acquisition by outside interests." National City Lines, a Chicago corporation, had been reported interested in buying Railway Equipment & Realty for the last year. The Oakland group purchased a majority of the stock on the San Francisco stock exchange today. A block of 26,500 shares sold at $5 a share.

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openlibrary.org

  • United States Senate 1974, pp. 2325–2326. United States Senate (1974). Hearings before the Sub-Committee on Antitrust and Monopoly of the Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate, Ninety-third Congress, Second Session on S.1167 Part 4 Ground Transportation Industries, April 4, 9, 10 and 11. OL 13510163M.
  • United States Senate 1974, p. 2204. United States Senate (1974). Hearings before the Sub-Committee on Antitrust and Monopoly of the Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate, Ninety-third Congress, Second Session on S.1167 Part 4 Ground Transportation Industries, April 4, 9, 10 and 11. OL 13510163M.

pbs.org

  • "Beyond the IRT". Public Broadcasting Service. The Dual Contracts doubled the size of the current system, pushing Manhattan's population northward and fostering residential growth in Brooklyn, the Bronx, and Queens. The new lines connected the beaches of Coney Island with the theaters of Times Square, and the citizens of Queens with the shopkeepers of Manhattan. But the terms of the contracts, particularly the fares and how they would be divided, would later cripple the system and threaten its continued growth.

proquest.com

search.proquest.com

  • "Plan for Public Purchase of Transit Lines Revealed: Legislature Will Get Bill to Legalize Agreements on Sale With Metro and LATL Transit Lines". Los Angeles Times. 1955-05-06. ProQuest 166781491.

sandiegohistory.org

semanticscholar.org

api.semanticscholar.org

  • Bianco, Martha J. (Winter 1997). "The Decline of Transit—Corporate Conspiracy or Failure of Public Policy?: The Case of Portland, Oregon". Journal of Policy History. 9 (4): 461–464. doi:10.1017/S0898030600006175. S2CID 154495266.

streetsblog.org

  • "U.S. Parking Policies: An Overview of Management Strategies" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-11-12. Minimum parking requirements subsidize driving by shifting the costs of car use onto development and the non-driving public.. There is a growing realization that the dysfunction caused by poorly conceived parking policies is a major impediment to creating an effective and balanced urban transportation system

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ucla.edu

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metrotransportationlibrary.wikispaces.com

  • "Pacific Electric Railway (1901–1965)". Archived from the original on 2011-03-15. Although the railway owned extensive private rights-of-way, usually between urban areas, much of the Pacific Electric trackage in urban areas such as downtown Los Angeles west of the Los Angeles River was in streets shared with automobiles and trucks. Virtually all street crossings were at-grade, and increasing automobile traffic led to decreasing Red Car speeds on much of its trackage. At its nadir, the busy Santa Monica Boulevard line, which connected Los Angeles to Hollywood and on to Beverly Hills and Santa Monica, had an average speed of 13 miles per hour (20.9 km/h)

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