In the Midwest, Indiana and Ohio, interurbans were more common than Interstates today. Railroads like the Pennsy, the
Milwaukee through the northwest, and even Henry Ford's DT&I in Detroit ran electric locos and catenary. With all this "juice" running through the countryside, what kept livestock crossing tracks, not to mention locals, from lighting themselves up?
How does that work? My grandfather was a motorman on a streetcar on urban streets, but I only later rode it once or twice as a kid before they yanked it up. That situation means, I'd guess, no hot rails in the street. How does all that work, for
electrical safety?