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Trolleybuses in South Lancashire

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South Lancashire
trolleybus system
Operation
LocaleLancashire, England
Open3 August 1930 (1930-08-03)
Close31 August 1958 (1958-08-31)
StatusClosed
Routes4
Operator(s)South Lancashire Transport
Infrastructure
Stock71 (maximum)

The South Lancashire trolleybus system once served towns in South Lancashire, England, including Atherton, Bolton, Swinton and Leigh (all now in Greater Manchester) and St Helens (now in Merseyside). Opened on 3 August 1930 (1930-08-03),[1][2] it replaced the South Lancashire Tramways network.

By the standards of the various now-defunct trolleybus systems in the United Kingdom, the South Lancashire system was of medium size, with four routes and a maximum fleet of 71 trolleybuses.[2] It was closed on 31 August 1958 (1958-08-31).[1][2]

None of the former South Lancashire trolleybuses has been preserved.[3]

History and Background

Trackless trolleybuses were first considered in 1922[4] by the independent South Lancashire Tramways Company - a subsidiary company of the Lancashire United Transport and Power Company - as substitute vehicles for its tramcar fleet. However the manager of the undertaking Mr E H Edwardes found the trackless trolleybuses of the time slow and rough-riding and deemed them unsuitable. By 1928 infrastructure renewals on the South Lancashire Tramways - including the doubling of single and loop tram track and new tramcars - were indicated. The projected expenses for these were very high because tramway industry costs had doubled since the end of the First World War. This factor led the company to consider again replacing the tramcars by trackless trolleybuses. Advances in trackless trolleybus design such as lower overall body height and foot controls meant that its tramcar ancestry was much less evident. Increased passenger carrying capacity and covered staircases, more rapid acceleration, pneumatic tyres and passenger comfort in the form of upholstered seats in the late 1920s had made this type of electrically powered vehicle a more attractive proposition than the then contemporary motorbus. Trackless trolleybuses replacing the tramcars in South Lancashire would also be able to utilise the existing company power plant and electrical feeder system and would release the company from using fixed rails which attracted a rateable value payable in each separate locality of the several that the system traversed. In any case, some of the roads traversed by the SLT trams were unable to accommodate double tram track and their associated loading gauges but they would be able to accommodate two passing trolleybuses.

Act of Parliament, Plans and Execution

The Act dated May 10th 1929 (19 and 20 Geo. V cap. LXXXIII) allowed the company name to be altered from the South Lancashire Tramways Company to South Lancashire Transport Company. It also authorised the company to abandon its tram routes and to run trackless trolleybuses in their place nothwithstanding certain restrictions placed on some established lines, notably from Leigh to Lowton.

The first section converted from tram to trolleybus was the Atherton to Ashton-in-Makerfield section which opened on 3rd August 1930. The remainder of the system was converted thus:

Growth of System

On 21st March 1934 the Nottingham Evening Post reported that the South Lancashire Transport Company was the second largest in the country with 27 miles of route and 46 vehicles[5]

Characteristics of the System

Although Atherton could be considered the hub of the South Lancashire Trolleybus network, this was an unusual and atypical trolleybus system[6] in that it primarily provided long interurban routes rather than the short urban routes with frequent stops which would come to constitute accepted trolleybus practice[7] in the United Kingdom. These long routes on the SLT system connected somewhat scattered mill and mining towns and villages as well as some isolated collieries on the South Lancashire coalfield. The routes followed almost exactly the lines of the former South Lancashire Tramways and also included long sections of route in open countryside[8]. Contemporary timetables indicate an average service speed of 12mph or faster which was a considerable improvement over the trams' average service speed of 8mph.

Routes and Services

The main routes and services were as follows:

  • Atherton to St. Helens (14 miles)
  • Atherton to Farnworth (14.3 miles)
  • Leigh to Bolton (8.6 miles)

Two of these routes were among the longest daily scheduled trolleybus routes in the United Kingdom. Additionally, on Saturdays from 23rd December 1933 to early September 1939, the Atherton to Farnworth route was extended beyond Atherton to Leigh making it for a time the longest regular through trolleybus route in the country at 17.1 miles Leigh to Farnworth (Saturdays only)[9]

Supplementary and Extra Services

In addition to the main services, there were daily shift and rush-hour associated "extras" as well as short workings (known to platform staff and local people as "Jiggers")[10] between the following destinations:

  • Leigh (Spinning Jenny Street) and Mosley Common
  • Leigh (Spinning Jenny Street) and Four Lane Ends
  • Bolton (Howell Croft) and Hulton Lane (ceased 25th March 1956)
  • Bolton (Howell Croft) and Four Lane Ends (ceased 25th March 1956)
  • Swinton and Farnworth
  • Walkden and Farnworth
  • Swinton and Worsley
  • Atherton and Tyldesley
  • Leigh (Spinning Jenny Street) and Tyldesley
  • Atherton and Boothstown
  • Haydock and Ashton-in-Makerfield
  • Hindley and Hindley Green "Leigh (Road)"

The short workings at shift times and the "jiggers" therefore provided periods of intensive service over sections of the main routes. Details can be seen in [11].

Joint working with other systems

South Lancashire Transport also ran two joint trolleybus services. One such service ran between Atherton and St Helens with St. Helens Corporation and the second ran between Leigh and Bolton with Bolton Corporation. Joint trolleybus routes were comparitively rare in the United Kingdom - two other examples of joint trolleybus operation being the Mexborough and Swinton Traction Company and Rotherham Corporation and the Corporations of Manchester and Ashton-under-Lyne (whose vehicles once also interran with those of Oldham Corporation).

Other Operational Practices

Route Numbers and Destination Indicators

No route numbers or intermediate points of travel were ever displayed on the SLT vehicles. Only the final destination was shown on the front and back of the vehicles[12] However, from 1943, St. Helens Corporation gave the St. Helens to Atherton service the number 1 and displayed this on its own vehicles; its service to Ashton in Makerfield the number 2 and that to Haydock the number 3 with a further number 3A reserved for workings to Blackbrook, short of Haydock. For its part from June 1940, Bolton Corporation numbered its trolleybus services thus: Bolton to Hulton Lane 17A; Bolton to Four Lane Ends 17B; and Bolton to Leigh 17C, although these numbers only appeared in timetables provided by Bolton Corporation and never on the vehicles themselves.

Bus Stop signs and Flags

From 1930 until 1940 no Trolleybus Stop signs or flags were used anywhere on the system. Since the inception of the South Lancashire Tramways trams, all stops - both compulsory (Board of Trade) and request - being indicated by a white band painted on the green traction poles. Local practice dictated that the stop was observed on both sides of the road even when there was only one traction pole with a bracket arm. However during the blackout in the 1939-1945 war and as the white bands faded, Bus Stop signs and flags became necessary and were provided by the company. The timetable up to 1939 had stated that in rural parts of the routes, the trolleybuses would pick up and set down passengers "anywhere within reason."

Ticketing

On the Bolton and Farnworth routes no through fares or tickets were available, passengers having to pay again at the boundaries (for a journey to Bolton originating from the Leigh side of Four Lane Ends, a new ticket had to be purchased at Four Lane Ends; for through passengers to Farnworth, a new ticket had to be purchased at Swinton Church)[13]

Route Topography Aspects

At Platt Bridge the SLT trolleybus route to St. Helens ran along the company's private tramroad (Templeton Road) which dated to 1903. This unmetalled section still included the tram rails around which the only paving was the statutory requirement provided pursuant to the Tramways Acts of 1870 and 1903.[8][Tramways Act 1870 (Regnal. 33 and 34 Vict) Part 2, subsections 29 et seq]. The road was not used by other vehicles (except for access) than SLT trolleybuses [14]

Vehicles

The original batch of ten Guy BTX trolleybuses was bodied by Charles H. Roe Ltd., to a lowbridge design.

Four of the trolleybuses in the South Lancashire fleet belonged to Bolton Corporation. They were not painted in the Bolton Corporation livery however and were numbered within the series of South Lancashire company vehicles. When the system closed in 1958, these four vehicles were taken to Bolton Corporation bus depot for the first time but only for scrapping purposes.

So high was the increase in passengers during the war due to the influx of workers to factories engaged in war work in the area, that the company was allocated new trolleybuses during the war.

Depots

The South Lancashire Transport Company used three depots. The main depot, power station and offices were at Howe Bridge (between Atherton and Leigh). The other depots were at Swinton (Partington Lane) and Platt Bridge. These depots also housed vehicles (motor buses) of sister company Lancashire United Transport.

Company Reputation and Unique Practices

This was an efficient service but with less intensive frequencies than might be encountered in more urban trolleybus systems[15]. The system was held to employ eccentric practices[16] not encountered on other British trolleybus systems. For example some span wires were secured to convenient trees in the Boothstown area after the failure of traction poles through rust. Occasional use of live but insulated DC trailing cables (jump leads) in the street supervised by SLT staff when trolleybuses had to be manoeuvred or turned short of their usual terminus during Whitsuntide religious processions was also confined to this company.

Amongst transport historians and enthusiasts South Lancashire Transport also gained several unique reputations during its operations. For example, utilising its equipment to the maximum. Some of the original vehicles from 1930 were still in service on the very last day (August 31st 1958). In addition, several overhead wiring bracket arm supports in the Leigh and Bamfurlong areas remained throughout the life of the system at the gauge of 18 inches (the gauge of the original 1930 installation) and were never upgraded to the standard 24 inches throughout the life of the system[17]. Both gauges could be seen at several places on the system on opposite sides of the same road, for example in Atherton at the bifurcation of the Bolton and Farnworth services and at the curve leading from Partington Lane to the main A6 road at Swinton.




See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Joyce, J.; King, J. S.; and Newman, A. G. (1986). British Trolleybus Systems, pp. 133–136, 159. London: Ian Allan Publishing. ISBN 0-7110-1647-X.
  2. ^ a b c Short, Peter. "Former UK systems". British Trolleybus Society. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
  3. ^ Zebedee, John (30 November 2010). "A List of Preserved Trolleybuses in the UK". British Trolleybus Society. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
  4. ^ South Lancashire Tramways E. K. Stretch Manchester Transport Museum Society 1972 P.64
  5. ^ Nottingham Evening Post 21st March 1934, page 7, col.,6
  6. ^ British Trolleybus Systems, J. Joyce, J S King, A G Newman; Ian Allan 1986 ISBN 071101647X
  7. ^ British Trolleybus Systems, J. Joyce, J S King, A G Newman; Ian Allan 1986 ISBN 071101647X[pp. 133-135]
  8. ^ Trolleybus Trails, J Joyce; Ian Allan 1961
  9. ^ South Lancashire Tramways, E K Stretch, Manchester Transport Museum Society 1972, p79
  10. ^ South Lancashire Tramways, E K Stretch, Manchester Transport Museum Society 1972, p.82
  11. ^ South Lancashire Tramways, E K Stretch, Manchester Transport Museum Society 1972, p.82
  12. ^ History of the British Trolleybus, Nicholas Owen; ISBN 0715363700; p.141
  13. ^ A Trolleybus to the Punchbowl, Phillip J. Taylor; Triangle Publishing 2002 ISBN 0-92529333-7-3, p.67
  14. ^ History of the British Trolleybus, Nicholas Owen, David and Charles 1974 pp.140-141
  15. ^ Trolleybus Trails J Joyce Ian Allan 1963
  16. ^ History of the British Trolleybus, Nicholas Owen, David and Charles 1974 pp.140-141
  17. ^ A Trolleybus to the Punchbowl, Phillip J. Taylor; Triangle Publishing 2002 ISBN 0-92529333-7-3, p.67

Further reading

  • Taylor, Phillip (2001). A Nostalgic Tour of South Lancashire by Trolleybus. Kettering, Northamptonshire, UK: Silver Link Publishing. ISBN 978-1-85794-164-7.
  • Taylor, Phillip (2002). A Trolleybus to the Punchbowl. Leigh, Greater Manchester, UK: Triangle Publishing. ISBN 0-9529333-7-3.

Media related to Buses in Lancashire at Wikimedia Commons