LONDON TRANSPORT
At the end of the war, London Transport emerged â like the city it served â damaged but undefeated. There had been in terms of destroyed and damaged trams and much of the infrastructure had also been affected. It was not only the physical damage that the German assault had caused but the war had also resulted in the tramwayâs life being extended longer than the LPTB had anticipated and there was also a significant backlog of maintenance. Despite the pre-war conversion programme, the London network was still significant, comprising some 102 route miles â 75 per cent conduit â with a fleet of some 900 trams. It was â after Glasgow â still the second largest tramway system in the country.
Itâs 1945 and ex-Leyton UDC No 176 heads outbound across Westminster Bridge with a route 31 service whilst a âFelthamâ heads south onto the Embankment with a service towards Purley via Croydon. Ian L. Wright/Online Transport Archive
Although there was not as yet any formal conversion programme, the scrapping of surplus trams recommenced in November 1945; by the end of the year, more than 41 ex-LCC âE/1â class cars plus one of the ex-Croydon cars â No 376 â had been disposed off. At this stage, trams were being scrapped at Hampstead depot. The process continued the following year when some 90 âE/1sâ were scrapped. In late 1946 a fire at premises adjacent to Hampstead depot resulted in a number of withdrawn trams being damaged. Although the LPTB had intended to sell some of the bodies as bungalows, the fire rendered them suitable only for scrap.
On 17 April 1946, route 42 was extended about quarter of a mile to the Coombe Road crossover; this extension used existing track and was designed to relieve congestion outside the Davis Theatre. Two months later, on 26 June, the all-night services were given route numbers. The most complex of these was route 1, which operated effectively a double figure of eight based on the Elephant & Castle from the Embankment. Other services were 3 (Battersea to Blackfriars), 5 (Downham to Savoy Street via Old Kent Road), 7 (New Cross Gate to Savoy Street, 26 (Clapham Junction to London Bridge) and 35 (Bloomsbury to Highgate).
With the return of peace, thoughts once again turned to the long-term future of public transport in London. The first post-war report issued in 1946 stated âThe urgent necessity of replacing trams in South London with a more modern and attractive form of transportâ; on 15 November 1946 the LPTB announced that this âmodern and attractive transportâ was to be the diesel bus. However, the conversion was not anticipated to be imminent â largely as the greater priority was in the replacement of life-expired buses, the strengthening of existing services and the introduction of new bus routes â and so Lord Latham announced on 12 January 1948 a programme of some ÂŁ1 million into the refurbishment of the tramway system. This work included a programme of overhauling the fleet, including, where necessary, the strengthening of bodies as well as the planned relaying of some fifteen miles of track. Amongst improvements to the fleet noted at the time was the appearance of âE/1â No 1397 with flush-sided lowerdeck panelling and the use of skid-head trolleyheads on ex-Croydon Nos 378, 382 and 387. This was said to improve operation and reduce dewirements. Early 1948 also saw a tram featured in the shooting of the film London Belongs to Me starring Richard Attenborough
A wonderful period piece â note the two âDiddlerâ trolleybuses in the background â sees âE/1â class No 1581 standing at the terminus of route 4 in Wimbledon. This service â to Embankment via Blackfriars â was to be one of those converted to bus operation during Stage 2 of âOperation Tramawayâ. Geoffrey Ashwell/ Online Transport Archive
On 11 May 1946 a pedestrian warily crosses the road at Vauxhall Cross as âE/1â No 1312 stands behind him on route 24 towards Savoy Street whilst a Victoria-bound âFelthamâ is also visible. Geoffrey Ashwell/Online Transport Archive
The next major change for the system was organisational; following the Labour majority in the 1945 election, the nationalisation of major public transport operators was government policy. This was given effect by the Royal Assent 6 August 1947 to the Transport Act. One of the bodies to be nationalised was the LPTB. The new London Transport Executive, a subsidiary of the British Commission, officially took over on 1 January 1948. During 1947, the number of tramcars to be scrapped was reduced to 42; of these all bar two were again âE/1sâ. The two exceptions were ex-West Ham No 325 and the first âFelthamâ to be scrapped post-war (No 2122 in May 1947). The pace of scrapping was further reduced in 1948 when only four trams â all âE/1sâ â were dispatched. Following the cessation of scrapping at Hampstead in early 1947, these cars were largely disposed of at Clapham High Street depot.
In a view taken from Thornton Heath depot, one of the ex-Croydon Corporation âE/1â- type cars, No 386, heads back to Croydon with a route 42 service. The 42, from Thornton Heath to Croydon, was the preserve of the ex-Croydon cars and was to survive through until Stage 3 of âOperation Tramawayâ in April 1951. Geoffrey Ashwell/Online Transport Archive
By the late 1940s the immediate struggles of the post-war recovery were largely behind the LTE and planning for the final conversion of the tramway system could commence. One issue was the disposal of large numbers of trams once withdrawn; in order to progress this, a lease was taken on land on Penhall Road, close to Charlton Works. Work to make the site suitable for scrapping was undertaken and, in July 1950, the first car â âE/1â No 1322 â was disposed off there to test the local reaction.
A scene that could almost be re-enacted today save for the lack of a tram, given the survival of the Southampton Road exit...