Pass to Ride on Final Trip of the Pelham Trolley,
July
31, 1937
Trolley tracks once criss-crossed lower Westchester County carrying clattering
streetcars throughout the region. By 1899 travelers could journey between the
Battery and New Rochelle, Pelham, Mount Vernon or Yonkers for a single
fare of eight cents.
Early last century, one of those trolley lines in Pelham inspired the creative
genius of a man named Fontaine Talbot Fox (1884-1964). He created one of the
most popular comics in the United States – “Toonerville Folks”.
The cartoon centered around the quirky inhabitants of a town called “Toonerville” and
its rickety and unpredictable trolley. The operator of the trolley was “The
Skipper.”
Fontaine Fox, as he stated a number of times in published interviews, based the
comic on his experience during a trolley ride on a visit to Pelham on August
8, 1909. “Toonerville Folks” ran in hundreds of newspapers from about
1913 to 1955 and brought national attention to Pelham.
On July 31, 1937, the H-Line Trolley that inspired Fontaine Fox was shut down
for good – replaced by a bus line. That day the Village of Pelham Manor
hosted a celebration attended by about 8,000 people for the last run of the "Toonerville
Trolley".
This “pass,” signed by Fontaine Fox who attended the event, entitled
the bearer to ride the trolley car during its last trip. That trip took hours
to travel only a couple of miles due to the crowds and the antics of local residents
dressed as various characters from the “Toonerville Folks” comic
strip.
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