Home Sweet Home: Oak Lawn Car No. 755
by Paula Bosse
by Paula Bosse
I came across these photos several years ago, but I don’t really know anything about them. They show a decommissioned Oak Lawn streetcar (car #755), which was manufactured in the 1920s for the Dallas Railway & Terminal Co. The photos, which look to be from the 1950s, show the car remodeled into a home (or, as the text below suggests, a sort of weekend “lake house”). When I clipped these photos (they were on some obscure railroad forum I stumbled onto), the only info was that someone had placed a for-sale ad for this on Craigslist in 2009. Below is the seller’s ad:
Antique 1920s or 1930s Dallas interurban trolley car. Trolley was retired from service in the 50s. Has a porch built on the back. Has a separate room with bath. There’s a kitchen and a 1930s refrigerator that works very well. On about a half acre wooded lot at Lake Whitney. Not far from boat ramp. Walking distance to water. Used to be on the “Oak Lawn” run in Dallas. Unusual, neat place to spend summers at the lake. Call Carol or Ron (214) xxx-xxxx. No owner financing.
I don’t know where the photos came from (they look like photos that would have accompanied a story in a magazine like Life), but they are great.
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I don’t think that’s an interurban car, but it’s really long for a streetcar. (How would it turn corners?) Has it been extended? Below is a typical Oak Lawn streetcar:

This photo was actually in the video below (“Dallas Oak Lawn Streetcar Line No. 8”). It’s a pretty uneventful video — a man in a car retraces the Oak Lawn streetcar route. My mother grew up in Oak Lawn and talks about riding the streetcar to and from downtown, but I had no idea how far into Oak Lawn it traveled.
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While looking to see if I could find anything more about the renovated Dallas streetcar, I came across a story which showed something similar (but more elegant) in this article about a renovated interurban car in New Jersey: “One-of-a-Kind Point Pleasant Home Built Around Century-Old Trolley Car.”
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An ad from 1930, not long after the Oak Lawn car was manufactured:

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If you know more about Oak Lawn car #755 — where it’s been, where it is now — please comment below!
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Sources & Notes
First four photos are from a Dallas Craigslist ad placed in or before 2009 — I believe the photos were posted with the ad. The ad was then reposted on a railroad forum.
Ad from the April 1930 issue of Dallas magazine.
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Copyright © 2023 Paula Bosse. All Rights Reserved.






I can’t help with the history of the car… but I remember my dad taking me on my one and only ride on a streetcar in the mid 50s… because they were going to be discontinued. I could probably find the date if that would help… it’s mentioned in letters my dad wrote to my grandparents…
But I remember mostly one thing about that ride… and that was that the front doors were 4-panels wide… like in these pictures… and the busses back then had front doors that were only two panels wide.
It’s a nice memory that my dad wanted me to remember about these… and I *do* remember at least a little.
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Video starts off going “east on Elm St.” car is headed west on elm as it crosses Ervay.
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Great video of the route.
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Reach out to the McKinney Avenue Transit Authority. They will know.
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Can offer no evidence on this point, but I agree with you that this streetcar (not interurban) body has been stretched, probably by cutting two bodies and sticking ’em together. There may even have been an additional shorty if they used all the material from two complete units.
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This is the standard length for a 700 series Dallas streetcar. The main modification is that the center doors were removed.
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Thanks!
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It’s not an Oak Lawn car. It’s just a streetcar. It was used on most lines in the city. It is known as a Peter Witt Style car. MATA runs a Witt car, No. 754. Car 404 is a an early 1910s streetcar known as a Stone and Webster standard or Turtle Back. Car 183 on McKinney Avenue is the same style.
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Thanks!
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The twin beds are surplus WWII stackable bunk beds.
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Here was another use for surplus Interurban and trolley cars:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/NTTraction/posts/7254781571215211/
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My name is Jason Walthers and I used to work for McKinney Avenue Transit Authority. the car in question is a 700 series Peter Witt car originally had a center door that was filled in sometime in the 30s this is its 1950s paint scheme McKinney Avenue has worked on 746 and 754 these cars were typically bought for less than $100 and were used as trailer home around Lake Whitney to Homestead .most likely this street car was bought for less than $100 and moved out there for that purpose we jokingly called Lake Whitney the Strategic trolling car Reserve
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Thank you for the info, Jason!
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