British Buses, 1967
By Jim Blake
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About this ebook
Jim Blake
Jim Blake was born at the end of 1947, and he soon developed a passionate interest in railways, buses and trolleybuses. In 1965, he bought a colour cine-camera, with which he captured what is now very rare footage of long-lost buses, trolleybuses and steam locomotives. These transport photographs have been published in various books and magazines. Jim also started the North London Transport Society and, in conjunction with the group, he has compiled and published a number of books on the subject since 1977, featuring many of the 100,000 or so transport photographs he has taken over the years.
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British Buses, 1967 - Jim Blake
INTRODUCTION
Over the past thirty-five years, I have written several books on London’s buses and railways, featuring selections from the 100,000 or so transport photographs I took between 1961 and 2014. In recent times, several people have asked me if I have photographs of buses outside London. Indeed I have, since until 1968 my interest in ‘provincial’ bus, coach and trolleybus fleets equalled that in London Transport (LT), and I travelled widely throughout England and Wales photographing them.
Therefore I am pleased to present a selection of these here, taken in the year 1967. They recall the days when it was possible to travel by train to the Midlands on a Sunday for about thirty bob (£1.50 in today’s money) on a cheap day return, or, after the electrification of the West Coast Main Line, for fifty shillings (£2.50) to Liverpool or Manchester. I was able to combine visiting the various bus operators with British Railways’ fast disappearing steam engine sheds, too.
In this book, for example, there are several photographs I took in Hampshire, Wiltshire and Dorset when travelling by steam train from Waterloo. Also very useful in the mid/late 1960s were the coach trips organised by the Omnibus Touring Circle (OTC), an offshoot of the PSV Circle, which went for the day to various bus and coach operators, whose depots were visited and whose vehicles were driven out for us to photograph. The highlight of the OTC’s year was always a weekend trip to Blackpool at the time of the illuminations in the autumn, visiting interesting operators on the way there and back again.
Sadly, my interest in provincial operators began to wane in 1967, by which time many of the interesting older vehicles had been replaced by such standardised types as the Leyland Atlantean, Daimler Fleetline and, of course, Bristol/ECW types. Trolleybuses – always my favourite mode of road transport – were fast disappearing, too, as were steam locomotives on British Railways. And when, in 1968, London Transport began their ill-fated ‘Reshaping Programme’, I decided from then on to concentrate only on that operator, which was of course my local one. Unfortunately, I also disposed of most of my photographs and books (notably Ian Allan’s British Bus Fleets booklets [BBF]) concerning non-London fleets. It was not until London Routemasters began to be sold to provincial fleets nearly twenty years later that I visited them again.
Therefore I must apologise if some of the details given for the vehicles illustrated herein are a little hazy. Some are from memory, but others I have been able to glean from various websites, and from such ‘BBFs’ as I have able to re-acquire in recent years.
Except for some of the colour photographs included herein, few of the images in this book have never previously been published. A few London Transport images are also included, and are contemporary to the provincial ones. They are not intended as a complete representation of Britain’s buses in 1967 but will, I hope, convey something of cross-section of the total.
Apart from the buses and coaches described in this book, it is perhaps worth putting them all into the context of the world at large in the year 1967. In Britain, Harold Wilson’s Labour government had been in power since October 1964, and following its optimistic start after ending what they called ‘thirteen years of Tory misrule’, was widely seen as beginning to totter. Much in-fighting went on between Wilson’s senior ministers, not least involving his deputy, the dipsomaniac George Brown. The economic situation went from bad to worse, culminating in the devaluation of the Pound towards the end of the year, despite Wilson’s frequent promises that he would never allow such a thing. On the other hand, Harold Wilson managed to keep Britain out of the disastrous Vietnam War, which was still raging at the time, in spite of relying heavily on ‘American’ economic help. Indeed, it could be said that Britain finally ceased to be a major world power in 1967, with most British troops being withdrawn ‘east of Suez’ (notably from Aden) during the year.
Back at home, it was ‘the summer of love’ with all the trappings of psychedelia and the ‘hippy’ craze, and although the Beatles were still at the top, their manager Brian Epstein died of an apparent drugs overdose in August 1967. A lesser-known, but equally important, British pop music manager and producer also perished in 1967. This was Joe Meek, whose production and composition Telstar by The Tornados band had topped the US record charts at the end of 1962, the first British pop record ever to do so: long before most people, even in Britain, had heard of the Beatles. Joe was also Britain’s first independent pop producer, turning out major hit records from his flat above a shop in Holloway Road between 1961 and 1966. He killed himself on 3 February 1967, the eighth anniversary of the death of his idol, Buddy Holly. One iconic British hit record from 1967 was The Kinks’ Waterloo Sunset and was it just coincidence, I wonder, that it was in the Top Five when the last steamhauled passenger trains ran in the London area, from Waterloo to Bournemouth, Southampton and Weymouth, on 9 July 1967? I suspect not.
After that, steam locomotives survived only in the northwest, apart from a few in the Sunderland area, and all were gone by August 1968. Beyond our shores, the Cold War was at its height, and many people lived in fear of the nuclear holocaust. I did not, however, and as a young lad who was exactly 20 years old as 1967 ended, I was far more interested in continuing my hobby of pursuing buses, coaches, trolleybuses and railway locomotives around the country than worrying whether I would have a future or not.
The photographs in this book are just a fraction of the 4,000 or so I took of them in 1967, and although intended to show just the buses, coaches and trolleybuses themselves, many show other longlost scenes exemplifying life in the Sixties: other road traffic, the fashions of the time, the advertisements on the buses (notably for cigarettes) and also various buildings that no longer exist today. Not least amongst the latter are the various bus and trolleybus depots I visited, particularly in London when many were closed and LT itself no longer existed by then, abolished the Thatcher regime and their sites sold off to eager property developers in the 1980s and early 1990s.
I hope readers will find the selection of pictures entertaining and different – and there are lots, lots more where these came from. Although this book will primarily be of interest to bus enthusiasts, I have tried to make it also of interest to the ‘layman’ and I hope that the pictures in it also convey some of the atmosphere of what life was like in Britain in 1967 – almost fifty years ago.
Special thanks go to my old friends Paul Everett and Ken Wright for their help in reminding me of the various chassis and body makes and types of the non-London Transport buses and coaches illustrated herein. It is most appropriate that they have done so, for they were actually with me back in 1967 when many of the pictures were taken.
I must also acknowledge the National Trolleybus Association’s website for its invaluable help in reminding me of the details of the various trolleybuses which appear in this book. I also must put on record my thanks to the PSV Circle, whose various detailed records of even the most obscure buses and coaches have proved invaluable in my being able to describe them.
My thanks also go to Colin Clarke, who has been painstakingly scanning my 100,000 negatives over the past four years or so, and John Scott- Morgan of Pen & Sword Books for all their help in making this book possible.
Jim Blake, Palmers Green, 5 April 2014
Part One
A BRIEF OVERVIEW
This very rare 1954 58-seat Crossley-bodied Foden PVD6 double-decker is No.104, one of three built that year for the Warrington Corporation fleet. Foden were based at nearby Sandbach, Cheshire. The firm was better known for building lorries.
By 1967, only a few of the once-numerous British municipal trolleybus systems were still operating, and the spring of that year saw two of them close within six weeks! Wolverhampton’s trolleybuses perished on 5 March, as will be seen later, whilst those in Maidstone did so on 15 April. Of their normal working, a 1946 Northern Counties-bodied Sunbeam trolleybus No.64 (HKR 3) is seen in the town centre. It had been new to the corporation and, unlike some of its fellows which received new bodies as recently as 1960, still retains its original body. The corporation’s coat of arms may be seen on the side of the trolleybus, which is in their traditional livery of light brown and cream. The new replacing buses carried a different scheme of light blue and cream. Note the ‘dolly bird’ spring fashions displayed in the shop windows on the right, in stark contrast to the doomed trolleybus, dating from the early post-war austerity years. Also, behind the trolleybus may be seen the premises of the Westminster Bank, several years before this was combined with the National Provincial Bank to become ‘NatWest’.
OPERATIONS
As 1967 began the operation of Britain’s buses, coaches and trolleybuses was divided into five clear-cut sections.
First of all, many cities and major towns, as well