Osmiroid
UK |
241 of 321
Sat 24th Apr 2021 5:56pm
What would be left before the bombing, just Broadgate-Burges-Fairfax Street or something, in the centre?
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Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
242 of 321
Sun 25th Apr 2021 8:50am
It wasn't the trams that disappeared, it was all the overhead stuff.
Osmiroid, did you mean after the bombing, before the bombing was ok. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Osmiroid
UK |
243 of 321
Mon 26th Apr 2021 1:31am
Kaga,
I meant about what MR was saying, how various tram routes were withdrawn before the bombing.
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Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Midland Red
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244 of 321
Mon 26th Apr 2021 8:18am
Here's the details of the tram routes prior to the closures detailed above:
By 1926 the development of the tramway was almost complete. The original route from Coventry Station to Bedworth divided at Hales Street, with a service via Jesson Street along Stoney Stanton Road to Bell Green and one via White Street, Primrose Hill Street, King William Street, Berry Street and Paynes Lane to Gosford Green and then along Binley Road to the Bull's Head. There was an alternative loop to Gosford Green via Ford Street, Lower Ford Street and Far Gosford Street. In the other direction, there was a branch at Broadgate via Smithford Street, Fleet Street, Spon Street and Spon End to Allesley Road (later known as Allesley Old Road). This divided at Spon End, where the Earlsdon route ran via The Butts, Albany Road, Earlsdon Street, Radcliffe Road and Rochester Road to its junction with Beechwood Avenue. 1926 saw the opening of the tramway loop from Greyfriars Green to Albany Road, the final link in the tramway network. The Earlsdon Service was re-routed via the new loop because of the congestion in Smithford Street. In 1930 the final extension of the tramway was opened, running further East along Binley Road to the New GEC factory. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Osmiroid
UK |
245 of 321
Mon 26th Apr 2021 11:36am
Thanks
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Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
PeterB
Mount Nod |
246 of 321
Mon 26th Apr 2021 4:47pm
The Hiroshima trams were running three days after the atomic bomb. I think Coventry trams could have run after the blitz if there had been a will to repair the system. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
247 of 321
Tue 27th Apr 2021 9:17am
Peter B,
No, Coventry already had them on the way out before the war. They were slow, awkward, and as Coventry were becoming a motor industry, buses were in the mind. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Helen F
Warrington |
248 of 321
Tue 27th Apr 2021 9:52am
I believe that the tracks were also a nightmare for cyclists, something else Coventry had a lot of. I agree, the trams were doomed before the war.
I've been on the trams in Salford that wiggle round the docks. Loads of fun and worth the cost if you're ever in the area. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Old Lincolnian
Coventry |
249 of 321
Tue 27th Apr 2021 3:04pm
Tram tracks get very slippery when it rains and I have had a few "interesting" moments on them on both pushbikes and motor bikes. Just after they built the new ones in Manchester I was up there and somebody was knocked over by one - at the time they were very quiet - I heard the policewoman on her radio saying "We've got yet another one been hit". The person wasn't seriously hurt but it took a while for people to get used to them. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Dreamtime
Perth Western Australia |
250 of 321
Wed 28th Apr 2021 5:34am
On 27th Apr 2021 3:04pm, Old Lincolnian said:
I heard the policewoman on her radio saying "We've got yet another one been hit". The person wasn't seriously hurt but it took a while for people to get used to them.
I was going to ask about the accident rate when the trams were in operation. Wasn't sure if there was a record kept or not at the time. Imagine them today ?
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Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Prof
Gloucester |
251 of 321
Wed 28th Apr 2021 9:29pm
Neil, Birmingham had trams in the 50s to the Lickey Hills. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
252 of 321
Thu 29th Apr 2021 8:33am
Dreamtime, hello,
Hope you're keeping well, through that hot weather and now the lockdown. To answer your question, I would think small in number, you could hear them from a long way off, and you could feel the underfoot vibrations close up, but I loved them because they offered more open air spaces than the buses that became smoke laden travel. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
argon
New Milton |
253 of 321
Thu 29th Apr 2021 10:10am
Kaga, my aunt who lived on Stoney Stanton Road opposite the Swanswell in the 1930's had a Jack Russell that used to board the tram by himself and stay on to Bell Green terminus and return, getting off at the Swanswell again.
That was your tram riding era, so you may have met him. |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
Kaga simpson
Peacehaven, East Sussex |
254 of 321
Sat 21st Aug 2021 2:15pm
Just inside the bottom of Bishop Street was a loop, that turned the trams from a double track to a single, when they passed by The Old Wheel. There was another loop onto the Foleshill Road, that turned them back to double track from single, but what was the method that trams knew when they could enter a single line from either end? I do not know, as there where no radio's in those days, and blind to each other.
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Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams | |
mcsporran
Coventry & Cebu |
255 of 321
Sun 22nd Aug 2021 6:54am
An article entitled "A History of Coventry Tramways" by F.K. Farrell appeared in the "Tramway Review" issue 30 of 1961 in a section headed "SIGNAL LIGHTS" had the following to say:
"The signal lights invented by Mr. Whitehead, the Coventry manager, were installed to cover all single-track sections where it was not possible to see a car at the next loop. When a car approached a single-track section it switched on a green light at its own end of the section, a red light at the far end. If two cars approached from opposite directions, red and green lights appeared at both ends of the section, but the driver would have observed if the green or red appeared first. When two cars in the same direction entered the same section, the first car to reach the other end would clear the red light, so that a car in the opposite direction could enter the section, and meet the second car between loops; a furious argument between the drivers then ensued as to which car should reverse". |
Public Transport and Travel - Coventry Trams |
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