PCC Streetcar Toronto

What the original Red Rocket looked like in Toronto

It's a fairly common misconception that the TTC's old Gloucester subway cars gave birth to the term "red rocket." Perhaps less common is the theory that the expression derives from the old Peter Witt streetcar (we have been guilty of this mistake ourselves).

The more likely scenario, as outlined by Transit Toronto, is that Toronto Sun columnist John Downing coined the term in the 1970s in reference to Toronto's PCC (President's Conference Committee) streetcars, which he campaigned to keep on the rails when the city seemed determine to retire the fleet.

Knowing a good thing when they heard it, the TTC picked up the term in promotional materials some years later.

Although PCC streetcars were a fixture in a number of cities during their years of production, photos of them always seem quintessentially Toronto to me. Produced between 1936 and 1952, Toronto had the largest fleet of PCC streetcars with a total of 744 in the TTC's rolling stock.

The last of these cars was retired from regular service in 1995, though the Commission has retained two in its fleet for special occasions and has run one along the 509 Harbourfront line in the summer months for the past few years.

It's hard to explain, I suppose. But images that feature these cars in some way are some of my favourite depictions of Toronto. Perhaps it's the period in which they served the city or the retro stylings of the cars themselves, but there's a certain grittiness to these photos that speaks to a former version of the city that has long since been sterilized.

So in celebration of this aesthetic, here's a gallery of Toronto's PCC streetcars. Enjoy.

PHOTOS

PCC streetcar Toronto

Queen and Yonge in the mid 1950s

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Advertising efforts in the 1960s

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Just north of Queen, King and Roncesvalles, 1960s

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Humber loop, 1960s

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Dundas and Bathurst, 1970s (via Chuckman's blog)

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Outside the old University Theatre in the 1960s

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Yonge and Bloor in the early 1960s (via Chuckman's blog)

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Coasting by MLG in the 1970s

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Coxwell and Gerrard, 1970s

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Leaving Bathurst Station, 1970s

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Sherbourne and Dundas, 1970s

PCC Streetcar Toronto

On St. Clair West in the 1970s (via Chuckman's blog)

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Roncesvalles at Howard Park, 1970s

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Sunnyside loop, 1970s

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Mount Pleasant (yup, it had streetcar tracks) early 1980s

PCC Streetcar toronto

Church and Richmond in the early 1980s

PCC Streetcar toronto

The interior of a PCC streetcar (present day)

PCC Streetcar Toronto

Still looking good at the Halton County Radial Railway (photo by bigdaddyhame)

See also:

A visual history of Toronto streetcars
The history of Toronto in photos


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversation Load comments

Latest in City

Doug Ford just got even tougher on Ontario bike lanes with new measures

Toronto's $27 billion Ontario Line just crossed its biggest construction milestone so far

Rare Canadian gold coin sells for over $1.5 million

Toronto ranked among the top 100 best cities in the world for 2025

A full list of all the items included in Canada's holiday GST cut

Liquid soap sold at stores across Canada recalled due to contamination

Canadians to get GST cut on groceries and new $250 rebate ahead of holidays

Snow is finally coming to southern Ontario and here's when it will hit