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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.
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