From 1901 to 1969, Angels Flight was America's most famous incline
railway, familiar from its many appearances on postcards and in pulp
fiction and film noir. It inspired the titles of five novels, including
a 1999 best seller, and three films. Angels Flight's two colorful
trolleys glided up and down the side of Bunker Hill in the heart of Los
Angeles, carrying 100 million passengers between a downtown business
district and a Victorian aerie that gradually deteriorated into a gritty
slum. When the city turned Bunker Hill into an acropolis of skyscrapers,
Angels Flight was packed up like a boy's electric train set and stored
away for nearly 30 years. After a restoration in the mid-1990s that led
to a fatal accident, Angels Flight has reopened and is now ready to
claim its next chapters in Los Angeles history.