Trams in Ballarat
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Locale | Ballarat, Victoria, Australia | ||||||||||||
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Trams in Ballarat were first used for public transport in 1887. They ceased to operate as a means of public transport in 1971, but a section continues to be operated today as a tourist attraction.
At its peak in 1937, the Ballarat tramway network was the largest in Australia operating outside one of the capital cities,[1] with 7 principal routes and more than 20 kilometres of track.[2]
Most of the network was closed and replaced with buses on 19 September 1971[3] after which the Ballarat Tramway Museum preserved a single electrified track along Wendouree Parade at Lake Wendouree to operate a tourist service. From its depot adjacent to the Ballarat Botanical Gardens, the museum operates its historic collection of electric trams from around Australia, including some that were operated on the original Ballarat system.[3]
1880s — origins and the horse-drawn tramway
In an 1884 council meeting, the City of Ballaarat decided on the establishment of a tramway to meet the growing city's transport needs and a Tramway Committee was formed.[4]
Tenders were called in 1886 to operate a tramway in the city. The successful tenderer was Mr. Thompson, of Adelaide who proposed a horse drawn system.[5] He was granted a 30-year licence for the sum of £1575 per annum, after which the system would be handed to the council. Provision was to be made in future for the rolling stock being powered by other means.[5]
Thompson and business partner Moore formed the Ballarat Tramway Company which built and promoted the tramway. The first line was opened at a banquet in the Botanical Gardens on 26 December 1887. The six mile (9.7 km) standard gauge line ran from Sturt Street to the gardens and around Lake Wendouree. The rolling stock consisted of double-decker trams built in Adelaide, each drawn by multiple horses.[6] The company constructed and operated a maintenance facility north of the gardens.[6]
The tramway was immediately popular and it was not long before work began on extensions for the southern branch line to the town of Sebastopol via Skipton Street Redan and Albert Street, and two northern branch lines to service the city's suburbs along Drummond Street North and Soldiers Hill.[6]
At its peak, the horse-drawn system had 19 trams, servicing 5 principal routes: Drummond Street; Gardens; Lydiard Street; Sebastopol; Sturt Street West. All were double decker, with the exception of the Drummond Street tram.[7]
1900s — electrification
In November 1900, the Ballarat City Council gave permission to the British Insulated Wire Company Limited to build an electric tram network. The building was done by its subsidiary, the Electric Supply Company of Victoria,[8]: 13 which was also to supply electricity to the town. A bluestone power station was built at the corner of Ripon Street and Wendouree Parade in 1901 to provide the electricity supply.[9] The company took over the running of the horse trams from the Ballarat Tramway Company in December 1902, and work on the electric network began in November 1904 and the first electric trams went into service on 18 August 1905.[8]: 15 The whole tramway was electrified and the rolling stock was replaced by electric trams operated by the Electric Supply Company of Victoria.[10] The last horse tram ran in August 1913 on the Sebastopol line which was officially opened as an electric tramway on 14 August 1913.[8]: 16
1930s — SECV era
The State Electricity Commission of Victoria (SECV) acquired the network in 1934.[11]
In 1936, the state government proposed to extend the Lydiard Street route to the Ballaarat New Cemetery and Ballarat North.[12]
Despite strong patronage, the system posted its first significant loss in 1937 of £6013.[1] At the time, the Ballarat network was one of the largest such systems in Australia, behind that of Sydney (181 miles (291 km)), Brisbane (65 miles (105 km)), Melbourne (64 miles (103 km)), Perth (57 miles (92 km)),[13] Adelaide (35 miles (56 km)) and Hobart (18 miles (29 km)), but larger than that of Newcastle, Launceston (11.3 miles (18.2 km)), Geelong (11 miles (18 km)) and Bendigo (8.1 miles (13.0 km)).[1]
1970s — closure and preservation
Throughout the 1960s, passenger patronage fell and operating losses mounted. From 1962 onwards, the SECV and the Victorian government attempted to close the system but did not have the required parliamentary support in the Legislative Council. After winning control of the Legislative Council in the 1970 election, the Bolte government had the numbers to close the tramways in both Ballarat and Bendigo. In 1971 the government announced that the tramway system would be closed and replaced by buses. In September 1971, a large contingent of the Ballarat population turned out to farewell the last trams after the government systematically shut down the network.
In May 1971 the Lake Wendouree Tramway Museum Committee began negotiating with the SECV to continue to maintain a section of track.[8]: 41 The Ballarat Tramway Preservation Society was also formed in 1971 to start, and run, an authentic tramway.[8]: 44
The Ballarat Tramway Preservation Society's original plan was to keep all the tramway that ran around the shores of Lake Wendouree. However, after discussions with the SECV and the City of Ballarat, only the section of track in the Botanical Gardens was retained. The first trip on the museum's tramway was in December 1974, and the track was officially opened on 1 February 1975.[8]: 48 The first tram to run was Ballarat No. 40, which had been the last tram to run on the SECV network.[14]: 14
The Society changed its name to the Ballarat Tramway Museum. It operates trams on weekends, public and school holidays. In December 2014, the Museum installed an 18 kW solar power system, with 72 solar panels, which allows the trams to operate on renewable energy.
Revival proposals
Since the 1990s proposals have been put to the City of Ballarat to reinstate sections of the network. Many of these focus on trams as a major tourist transport facility and tourist attraction. Others support a return of trams as a viable component of the Ballarat public transport system. Proposed destinations include Ballarat railway station, Sovereign Hill, Lake Wendouree loop, Bridge Mall and Sturt Street.
In 2001 there was a strong push to reinstate a tram system.[15] By mid-2001, a vocal lobby for a tourist route through the CBD had gained the support of the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Australian Hotels Association and the Ballarat operations of transport manufacturer Alstom.[16][17] Financial assessments completed in 2002 deemed the $20 million project viable with a projected profit of $150,000 per annum, though dependent on a grant from the state and Commonwealth.[18] Public support for it was also high.[19] The chosen route would have run from Ballarat Railway station at Doveton Crescent, along Lydiard Street, down Mair Street, Peel Street, through the Llanberris reserve to Sovereign Hill and the Gold Museum. Ballarat City Council voted down the proposal in 2002, stating that the idea would not be reconsidered for at least a decade.[20]
Submissions relating to the reinstatement of trams along Sturt Street during the City of Ballarat's CBD Strategy consultation in 2009. The project had been costed at $70 million and deemed as too expensive and inflexible for the local council to maintain in the final report.[21]
The Sturt Street route proposal was dismissed by Ballarat MP and Regional Australia Minister Catherine King in the lead up to the 2013 Australian federal election, claiming that at a cost of $90 million, the project would be too expensive, indicating instead a preference to invest in local sporting facilities. [22]
Calls were renewed in August 2014 with news that a feasibility study would be undertaken to extend Bendigo's network. A circuit route was proposed from Ballarat railway station to Lake Wendouree via Mair Street, Dawson Street, Sturt Street, Bridge Mall and Lydiard Street back to the railway station.[23] However, this proposal once again met with ambivalence from the council and members of parliament over issues such as the route and cost, and no commitment to a project was forthcoming.
Historic extent of the network
Size of Network by year | |
---|---|
1887 | 6 miles (9.7 km)[5] |
1934 | 10 miles (16 km)[24] |
1936 | 15.1 miles (24.3 km)[1][25] |
1975 | 0.85 miles (1.37 km)[8]: 56 |
At its peak, the Ballarat network included seven main routes some of which shared the same sections of track:
- Victoria Street
- Mount Pleasant
- Gardens via Drummond Street North
- Gardens via Sturt Street West
- Sebastopol
- Lydiard Street North
- View Point
The operation was mostly running recycled rolling stock from both Adelaide and Melbourne with a wide variety of tram models in service.
Surviving trams
There are a number of trams which operated on the Ballarat tramways which have survived, and some are still in service.
Ballarat Tramway Company
The Ballarat Tramway Company operated 18 horse-drawn trams in Ballarat. After the introduction of electric trams some horse trams were used as trailers and towed behind the electric trams. Tram 1 was used by the company to transport the crew's bicycles between the depot and the main terminus. It was then sold for use as a backyard shed. It was later rediscovered and returned to the Museum where it was extensively restored.
- Horse tram No.1 (1887) – in service Ballarat Tramway Museum (BTM)
Electric Supply Company
The Electric Supply Company operated 23 trams, including some that had been converted from old Sydney cable trams.
- Number 12 (1892–1905) – BTM being restored.
- Number 21 (1913) – BTM in storage in very poor condition.
- Number 22 (1913) – BTM restoration commenced, but now in storage.
- Number 23 (1913) – converted as scrubber 1934, static display TMSV.
SECV
The SECV purchased a large number of old trams from Melbourne, Port Adelaide, and Adelaide, which were then used in Geelong, Bendigo and Ballarat. Tram No. 37 was used in Melbourne, Geelong, and Bendigo before being moved to Ballarat in 1960.[26]: 133
- Number 11 (1915) – BTM in storage
- Number 12 (1915) – in service Sydney Tramway Museum (STM), Sydney
- Number 13 (1915) – in service BTM
- Number 14 (1915) – in service BTM
- Number 17 (1915) – in service Tramway Museum Society of Victoria (TMSV), at Bylands, Victoria [27]
- Number 18 (1913) – in service BTM
- Number 19 (1915) – in service Bendigo Trust (BT)
- Number 20 (1918) - scrapped 1970
- Number 21 (1909) – in service Tramway Museum, St Kilda, Adelaide (TMSK)
- Number 25 (1916) – in service, BT
- Number 26 (1916) – in service BTM
- Number 27 (1916) – in service BTM
- Number 28 (1916) – in service BTM
- Number 30 (1917) – damaged in a fire, Oregon, USA.
- Number 31 (1917) – in service Perth Electric Tramway Museum at Whiteman Park, Western Australia. (PETS)
- Number 32 (1917) – BTM in storage
- Number 33 (1917) – in service BTM
- Number 34 (1917) – in service TMSK
- Number 35 (1916) – BTM, used for spare parts.
- Number 36 (1917) – in service TMSV
- Number 37 (1916) – in service STM
- Number 38 (1914) – in service BTM
- Number 39 (1914) – BTM, body used as static display area.
- Number 40 (1913) – in service BTM
- Number 41 (1914) – static, used as a restaurant, Horsham, Victoria.[28]
- Number 42 (1914) – static display TMSV
- Number 43 (1914) – static display TMSV
Ballarat Tramway Museum
As well as its collection of original Ballarat trams, the Ballarat Tramway Museum also has several old Melbourne W class trams:
- No. 661 W3 class (c.1932) – in service BTM
- No. 671 W4 class (c.1934) – in service BTM
- No. 924 SW6 class (1946) – BTM in storage
- No. 939 SW6 class (1948) – converted to Melbourne Restaurant Tram 3—modified to BTM function tram "Cuthberts 939"
Cycling controversy
A section of track at Wendouree Parade has caused controversy since 2011 due to a notorious blackspot for cyclists—a curved track intersection emerging from the Tramway Museum depot. Several local cyclists who have been injured due to their bicycle wheels slipping on the track have called for a solution. The City of Ballarat spent more than $15,000 in 2011 investigating solutions, with limited success.[29] In November 2014 the council carried out extensive roadworks at the intersection. The tram tracks were left in place, but the road was realigned 12 metres west. This changes the angle at which bicycles cross the track and should make it safer. The roadwork was completed on 23 December 2014 and cost $420,000.
See also
References
- ^ a b c d pg. 7. Examiner. Tuesday 10 August 1937
- ^ Kelly, Maurice (2015). Australian Trams Through The Ages - Part 1. Parramatta, NSW: Topmill Pty Ltd. pp. 40–67.
- ^ a b Margaret Burin (6 September 2011). "End of the line: 40 years since No.40's last tram route". ABC Ballarat. Retrieved 9 August 2012.
- ^ Kelly, Maurice (2015). Australian Trams Through The Ages - Part 1. Parramatta, NSW: Topmill Pty Ltd. p. 40.
- ^ a b c pg. 4. Camperdown Chronicle. Saturday 22 May 1886
- ^ a b c pg. 9. The Argus. Thursday 22 December 1887
- ^ Kelly, Maurice (2015). Australian Trams Through The Ages - Part 1. Parramatta, NSW: Topmill Pty Ltd. p. 41.
- ^ a b c d e f g Scott, William F. (2008). Last tram at 11: Tramways of Ballarat, Bendigo, Geelong. Clunes, Victoria: Full Parallel Productions. ISBN 9780646489353.
- ^ Balderstone, Julia (20 February 1993). "SEC offers historic lake property for sale". The Courier.
- ^ Horse Trams of Ballarat Jack, W. Australian Railway Historical Society Bulletin, May, 1942 pp57-59
- ^ Ballarat and District Tramways Problem. The Argus. Tuesday 20 February 1934 p 3
- ^ pg 5. "Ballarat and District: Tramway Extension". The Argus. Friday 3 July 1936
- ^ Moving Crowds: Part that tram plays. Western Mail. Thursday 2 December 1937 p 17
- ^ Scott, William F. (1993). Ballarat's heritage tramway: The Story of the Ballarat Tramways and the Ballarat Tramway Preservation Society. Ballarat, Victoria: Ballarat Tramways Preservation Society Ltd. ISBN 0 9591918 1 X.
- ^ Fiamengo, Mariza (1 May 2001). "Tram plans on track". The Courier. Retrieved 22 November 2013.
- ^ Danaher, Carla (2 May 2001). "Chamber of Commerce backs tram plan". The Courier. Retrieved 22 November 2013.
- ^ Barlow, Leonie (25 June 2002). "Ballarat's hotels support push to bring back trams". The Courier. Retrieved 22 November 2013.
- ^ Easton, Alex (2002), Project viable, report finds, retrieved 22 November 2013
- ^ Best, Catherine (2002), Support for Tram Plan, retrieved 22 November 2013
- ^ Molloy, Andrew (2002), No trams for at least a decade, retrieved 22 November 2013
- ^ pg. 147. Ballarat CBD Strategy 2012 – Appendix A – Other Ideas Considered.
- ^ Cowie, Tom (2013), Ballarat tram return could cost $90 million, retrieved 15 September 2013
- ^ Cunningham, Melissa (8 August 2014). "Call to bring trams back". The Courier.
- ^ BALLARAT AND DISTRICT Tramways Problem. pg 3. Tuesday 20 February 1934 p 3
- ^ pg. 8. The Argus Friday 7 August 1936 Supplement
- ^ Bradley, Alan (2005). The Golden City and its Tramways: Ballarat's tramway era. Ballarat, Victoria: Ballarat Tramway Museum Inc. ISBN 0959191828.
- ^ "VICSIG – Trams, Ballarat 17". vicsig.net. 2013. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
- ^ "VICSIG – Trams, Ballarat 41". vicsig.net. 2013. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
- ^ Ballarat tram tracks: council to trial solutions. The Courier. 23 Mar 2011