Midland Red
|
151 of 321
Tue 14th Mar 2017 7:21am
Tram 21
|
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
152 of 321
Sun 25th Mar 2018 11:36am
I remember an evening when the street lamps burnt amidst a baleful gloom, a drizzle of sooty raindrops dripped remorselessly from the dirty sky. And Broadgate had an unending string of trams grinding their way one behind the other, all the time one's ears were battered by the scraping and grating of their wheels and the striking of their bells, and looked a menace in the darkness. The grating put your teeth on edge and a shiver down your spine. I think I was about 5/6 years of age. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Annewiggy
Tamworth |
153 of 321
Sun 25th Mar 2018 3:15pm
Tram lines being laid in The Burges in the late 1920's
|
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Mr Blue Sky
Abingdon, Oxfordshire |
154 of 321
Mon 26th Mar 2018 2:48pm
My great grandfather was killed by a tram on the Stoney Stanton Road near the Red House Inn in late December 1939 at 7.30 pm in the blackout. He was 73 yrs old and had worked at Alfred Herberts so maybe the noise of working in the machine shops had made him go deaf. As Kaga said the trams were very noisy. He was the 50th road victim and the 18th in the blackout of 1939. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
155 of 321
Tue 27th Mar 2018 11:57am
No one is going to know the real amount of damage and injury the blackout caused because most of the injuries were not reported, even if they caused serious problems later. The blackout never really got the blame. A person walked behind a parked lorry shining a torch on the ground and hit her head on a piece of piping tied on the lorry. Twenty years later had serious head trouble that caused her death?
But people did play risky games with the trams because they were so slow.
I have no idea if the trams had a special electricity supply, that was hit early on, but there were trams ground to a halt in outlying districts just a few hours after the Blitz started. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
156 of 321
Tue 27th Mar 2018 12:26pm
Kaga, not wishing to stray from this thread of Coventry Trams but over the years I have since learned the blackouts were blamed for a lot of incidents during the war.
|
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Helen F
Warrington |
157 of 321
Tue 27th Mar 2018 2:36pm
I have trouble remembering when the tram lines were built. That's an interesting photo Anne. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Midland Red
|
158 of 321
Tue 27th Mar 2018 3:25pm
This will be a good place to start |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Helen F
Warrington |
159 of 321
Tue 27th Mar 2018 3:47pm
Thanks for that MR. I'll try to remember that you posted the link because I fear the information will fall out of my head again. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
CKV 1D
COVENTRY |
160 of 321
Tue 17th Apr 2018 11:04pm
|
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Rob Orland
Historic Coventry |
161 of 321
Thu 3rd May 2018 7:22am
3rd May 1883
The first tracks laid for steam trams in Coventry.
Post copied from topic What happened on THIS day in Coventry's history? on 4th May 2018 10:30 pm |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Midland Red
|
162 of 321
Thu 3rd May 2018 9:29am
The route was from Coventry Railway Station to Bedworth - steam tram locomotives hauled open-topped trailers - and services commenced in 1884.
They proved somewhat unreliable - one major problem was the climb up Bishop Street - and passenger numbers were never good.
The service was ended in 1893.
|
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
CovPoliceHistory
Coventry |
163 of 321
Fri 4th May 2018 10:18pm
I don't know where you gained your information from, but you are so far away from the truth - it hurts!
I have seen copies of the yearly accounts/returns for the years, 1885, 1886, 1887, 1889 & 1891, and nowhere in them do I find any mention of lack of passengers!
There were problems, many.
1, Southern owners who had an office in London, but very rarely (if ever) visited Coventry, They were only in it to make a 'quick buck',
2, They rented the system out to a 3rd party for just over a year and it was only the threat from the major investor of court action that they took it back,
3, Lack of spending on maintenance and other dubious activities, they were caught doing. Like for instance, buy cheap industrial coke rather than the more expensive locomotive coke, disconnecting the brakes on the trailers and much more.
4, The Corporation banned the trams from running through the city centre in 1892, this act then led to lack of passengers.
There's a lot more I could say.
|
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Midland Red
|
164 of 321
Fri 4th May 2018 10:28pm
CPH - my source
Please don't shoot the messenger |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
CovPoliceHistory
Coventry |
165 of 321
Fri 4th May 2018 10:40pm
Your source, well, yes! Understand now, say no more! |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams |
Website & counter by Rob Orland © 2024
Load time: 563ms