LARy 665

Built

1911

Type B "Huntington Standard" Streetcar
665 Broadway scene 04 sm.JPG (133101 bytes)
John Smatlak photo, click to enlarge

 

Car 665 represents the Los Angeles Railway's largest class of streetcars, the Type B or "Huntington Standard". Designed by the L.A. Railway in 1902, this class of wood-bodied city cars bore the name of the system's owner, Henry E. Huntington (of Huntington Library, Beach and Drive fame). This was the type of car that Los Angeles grew up with; at one time there were 747 of them roaming the streets of L.A. They frequently appeared as backdrops in Hollywood films, including the well-known Laurel and Hardy and Keystone Cops two-reel comedies.

Hollywood actually gets the credit for saving this very car; it was purchased by Twentieth Century-Fox in 1948 from L.A. Railway successor Los Angeles Transit Lines. It was moved to studio property in West L.A. for use as a movie prop. When that land was developed into what is now Century City, the 665 was moved to Fox's Malibu Studio Ranch. The Museum acquired the car in 1967.

LARy 665 operates regularly on the Museum Railway.


Additional Photos:

665 front sm.JPG (138585 bytes) 665 Broadway sm.JPG (133121 bytes) 665 sm.JPG (153117 bytes)

 665 in service on the Museum railway

     

665 interior sm.JPG (110822 bytes)

LARy 665 CH1 b sm.JPG (115839 bytes)

LARy 665 night scene 08 b sm.jpg (193452 bytes)

665 interior, May 2005

March 2006

April 2008

     
665 with Twin Coach 5-3-09 sm.jpg (128618 bytes) 665 with buses 5-3-09 sm.jpg (148022 bytes) 665 Broadway truck meet 5-3-09 sm.jpg (133077 bytes)
665 poses with some 1930s buses and other interesting vehicles at the Antique Truck Meet, May 3, 2009
John Smatlak photos-

 

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Page updated 5/7/09