Question
What caused the decline of interurban railroad lines in Indiana?
(1 point)
Responses
Most interurban lines did not go to Indianapolis or connect to other interurban lines.
Most interurban lines did not go to Indianapolis or connect to other interurban lines.
The lack of profit and growing popularity of the car and bus led to fewer lines and riders.
The lack of profit and growing popularity of the car and bus led to fewer lines and riders.
Hoosiers turned to older transportation options, such as river and horse travel.
Hoosiers turned to older transportation options, such as river and horse travel.
Steam-powered locomotives replaced the quieter, electric-powered interurban cars.
(1 point)
Responses
Most interurban lines did not go to Indianapolis or connect to other interurban lines.
Most interurban lines did not go to Indianapolis or connect to other interurban lines.
The lack of profit and growing popularity of the car and bus led to fewer lines and riders.
The lack of profit and growing popularity of the car and bus led to fewer lines and riders.
Hoosiers turned to older transportation options, such as river and horse travel.
Hoosiers turned to older transportation options, such as river and horse travel.
Steam-powered locomotives replaced the quieter, electric-powered interurban cars.
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The decline of interurban railroad lines in Indiana was primarily due to the lack of profit and growing popularity of the car and bus, which led to fewer lines and riders.
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