The trolley traveled from Spring City to Phoenixville and made many stops on its way, one being the Bonnie Brae Amusement Park.
In a period of 22 months ending in June 1954, rails were removed from city streets where trolleys once traveled to be replaced by General Motors buses.
As the trolley travels it also serves as a means of transportation for the southern suburbs.
Five trains and two trolleys travel along 835 feet of track in the 6,000-square-foot display, which winds through two greenhouses and has as its centerpiece a 30-foot Christmas tree.
The moving trolley had been traveling to Heath Street in Boston's Roxbury neighborhood to the south.
A new trolley in the city travels through downtown and to the Farmer's Market.
The Zoo's trolley travels between Wild Asia and Zoo Center, stopping along the way near Tiger Mountain.
Every half-hour, trolleys travel to the John Adams and John Quincy Adams Birthplaces, the oldest presidential birthplaces in the United States.
The 31 trolley travels from the Schottenring across the Danube to Stammersdorf, which has retained an outright rural character, with wine cellars lining the district's streets.
The trolley had traveled another block before he happened to glance in through the door.