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17.12.2018 23:51:00

Blue Water Area Transit Celebrates Legacy of Innovation Captured by New Sculpture

PORT HURON, Mich., Dec. 17, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- unveiled a new sculpture on December 14 at the Blue Water Transit Bus Center. The sculpture celebrates milestones of local transit innovation and recognizes William Pitt Edison as the father of local public transit.

TRANSIT HISTORY UNVEILED: Blue Water Area Transit General Manager Jim Wilson and artist Mino Duffy Kramer unveil a new sculpture that tells the story of transit innovation in Port Huron, Michigan, starting some 150 years ago with William Pitt Edison’s horse-pulled trolley service. (photo by Rose Norton)

The powder-coated fabricated aluminum sculpture measures 16 by 7.5 feet and was created by local artist Mino Duffy Kramer. Her credentials include the prestigious Accademia de Belle Arte in Florence, Italy, and an apprenticeship with sculptor Ferenc Varga at his Florida studios.

"We started out wanting a statue of William Pitt Edison, but Mino suggested focusing on our many innovative milestones," said Jim Wilson, BWAT general manager. "The finished sculpture includes five panels seen through five streetcar windows. It not only honors William Pitt, but also highlights our local transit history."

William Pitt Edison was born in Vienna, Ontario. He settled with his family in Milan, Ohio, and then Port Huron, where he lived until his death at 59 in 1891. He is the oldest brother of world-renowned inventor Thomas Alva Edison.

Both Edison brothers started out serving passengers on the Grand Trunk Railroad train to Detroit that opened in 1859.

Years before his name became synonymous with mass produced lightbulbs, Young Tom Edison worked as a candy butcher selling fruit and newspapers aboard the train. Meanwhile, his older brother saw an opportunity to transport travelers to the train station with a horse-pulled trolley and then by horse-pulled streetcars guided by rails along several local routes. He left the public transit industry in 1883.

William Pitt's legacy of innovation continued, with the Blue Water Area remaining at the forefront of new transit developments. Port Huron was one of the nation's first communities to use electric streetcars in 1886 and motor coaches in 1927. After an eight-year hiatus ended in 1976, the Blue Water Area Transportation Commission became Port Huron's first publicly funded bus service. Since then, it has carried more than 31 million riders.

BWAT started using and producing Compressed Natural Gas in 1996 and will soon add two zero-emission electric battery buses. The agency ranks as Michigan's top CNG producer with four public CNG stations and operates the state's largest fleet of buses powered by natural gas.

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SCULPTURE CAPTURES TRANSIT HISTORY: Blue Water Area Transit’s unveiled sculpture tells the story of transit innovation in Port Huron, Michigan, starting some 150 years ago with William Pitt Edison’s horse-pulled trolley service. (photo by Rose Norton).

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SOURCE Blue Water Area Transit

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