- Source: Troy Hill Incline
The Troy Hill Incline, also known as the Mount Troy Incline, was a funicular railway located in old Allegheny, Pennsylvania, which is now the North Side of the city of Pittsburgh.
History and notable features
Built by Gustav Lindenthal or Samuel Diescher, the incline was one of only a few funiculars constructed on the north side of Pittsburgh. It began construction in August 1887, and after considerable delay, opened on September 20, 1888.
The incline ascended from Ohio Street near the end of the second 30th Street Bridge to Lowrie Street on the crest of Troy Hill. Never very profitable, it shut down in fall 1898 and was razed a decade later.
A building now standing at 1733 Lowrie Street was long thought to have been the summit station, but later research found that the building did not appear on maps until well after the incline closed. The incline's length measured 370 feet (113 m), with a forty-seven percent (47%) gradient. The cost of construction was about $94,047.
See also
List of funicular railways
List of inclines in Pittsburgh
References
Sources
A Century of Inclines, The Society for the Preservation of the Duquesne Incline.
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Troy Hill Incline
- Troy Hill (Pittsburgh)
- Troy Hill
- List of funicular railways
- List of inclines in Pittsburgh
- Samuel Diescher
- List of Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation Historic Landmarks
- List of heritage railroads in the United States
- List of Latin phrases (full)
- Timeline of Spirit