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Blackpool tramway - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Blackpool tramway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Brush Railcoach No 623 in Mystique livery
Brush Railcoach No 623 in Mystique livery
Illuminated tram No 633, rebuilt in the shape of a Trawler
Illuminated tram No 633, rebuilt in the shape of a Trawler

The Blackpool tramway serves Blackpool and Fleetwood and is the only surviving first-generation tramway in the UK, dating back to 1885. It is one of the oldest electric tramways in the world and is run by Blackpool Transport, owned by Blackpool Borough Council.

Contents

[edit] History

The oldest part of the tramway, along Blackpool Promenade, was opened on 29 September 1885 using conduit collection. It was the first practical electric tramway in the world, just six years after Werner von Siemens first demonstrated electric traction. The inauguration was presided over by Holroyd Smith, the inventor of the system, and Alderman Harwood, Mayor of Manchester. On 1 July 1898 a new line, the Blackpool & Fleetwood Tramroad, was opened. In 1899 the electric supply was converted to overhead power; the Promenade was later widened and the tram tracks separated from road traffic.

[edit] The network

Double-decker balloon tram 700, restored to wartime livery, passes 720 at Bispham
Double-decker balloon tram 700, restored to wartime livery, passes 720 at Bispham

The other surviving part of the tramway is the Blackpool and Fleetwood Tramroad, linking Blackpool to Fleetwood on railway-type sleeper track, originally with street running at both ends; trams in Blackpool now go onto the Promenade without sharing space with road vehicles, except for a short stretch north of Talbot Square, past the Metropole Hotel. At the northern end of the line, trams continue to share Lord Street, Fleetwood with road traffic.

Thanks to the lack of street track and extensive investment in the 1930s, Blackpool was the only town in Britain that retained its trams. Between 1962 and 1991, Blackpool had the only urban tramway in the UK. (The last English city to lose its conventional trams was Sheffield in 1960; the last in the UK was Glasgow in 1962. The opening of Manchester Metrolink in 1991 heralded a revival.)

[edit] The overhead wiring

English Electric Railcoach No 679 at Bispham
English Electric Railcoach No 679 at Bispham

The tramcars are powered by 550 V overhead wire with electricity transmitted to the tramcars by pantograph or trolleypole.

The system originally used the conduit system, in which trams took electricity from a conduit situated below and between the tracks. Electrical resistance was greater than anticipated and the voltage in portions of the conduit was far less than that generated at Blundell Street - 230 V dropped to 210 V at the junction with the main line on the Promenade, 185 V at Cocker Street and 168 V at Victoria Pier. In addition there were difficulties during floods.

Despite the difficulties, the conduit line was extended to Station Road in 1897. Overhead wiring was installed in 1899, and the conduit removed.

[edit] Tram depots

Over the years six depots were built to service the fleet.

Headstone from Bispham depot in Crich.
Headstone from Bispham depot in Crich.

[edit] Bispham depot

Built in 1898, it had room to house 36 trams on six tracks, after being extended in 1914 by the Blackpool and Fleetwood Tramway Company. A substation was built to the side of depot. The depot was used to receive pantograph cars in 1928 and Brush cars in 1940. The depot closed on 27 October 1963 but used as a store until the mid 1970s. The building was demolished to make place for a local Supermarket and eventually a Sainsbury's supermarket. The Depots headstone was installed at Crich's National Tramway Museum.

[edit] Bold Street depot

Bold Street depot opened in January 1899 and had a capacity of four cars, on two tracks. The depot was used only by the last two trams to Fleetwood in the evening and the first two trams in the morning. After passing to the B.C.T., Bold Street closed. Wires were taken down in 1924 when the Fleetwood loop was built. After World War II the depot was used by Fisherman's Friend and was demolished in 1973 to make way to flats.

[edit] Blundell Street depot

Blundell Street depot opened in 1885 to house ten conduit trams. It was extended in 1894, 1896 and 1898 when the roof was raised to accommodate overhead wiring. After extension Blundell Street could house 45 trams on five tracks. The depot became a store in 1935 when the new central depot opened. The inspection pits were filled in after World War II and after 1956 the building was used as a bus garage. Blundell Street was reopened for trams in March 1963 after the closure of Marton depot. A new entrance was built in July 1964 but capacity was restricted by the presence of an ambulance station in the building. Due to damage to the central roof caused by gale, the depot was demolished on 4 November 1982.

Corporation Tramways' building, Blackpool.
Corporation Tramways' building, Blackpool.
Rigby Road depot, Blackpool.
Rigby Road depot, Blackpool.

[edit] Copse Road depot

Fleetwood's Copse Road depot was built in 1897 by the Blackpool and Fleetwood Tramroad with six tracks, capable of housing 18 trams. It was originally used as a store and service depot. After passing to Blackpool Corporation Tramways it was used to break-up old tramcars. Between 1925 and 1949 a line connected the depot with the railway and was used to shunt wagons. Copse Road depot is now a car showroom and the substation still feeds the Fleetwood section.

[edit] Marton depot

The depot was built in 1901 to accommodate 50 trams. It was used for central routes but saw decline in use after the closure in 1936 of the Layton and Central Drive sections. The depot closed for tram use between 1939 and 1944 due to the war, and accommodated aircraft of the Vickers Aircraft Company. It closed on 11 March 1963. The last car to leave the depot was Standard car 48. The front half of the depot was demolished while the rear half is in commercial use.

[edit] Rigby Road

Rigby Road was built in 1935 and is the only depot in use. It has capacity of 108 trams. It was designed to replace the Bispham and Blundell Street depots. Rigby Road has been modernised several times: in 1955, tracks 15 to 18 were enclosed by a partition to be used as an electrical compound; in 1962, a tram washing plant was built, along with the replacement of the roller-blind doors by folding aluminium doors.

[edit] Rolling stock

Preserved Standard tram 177 at Bispham
Preserved Standard tram 177 at Bispham

[edit] The 'Standard' cars

The fleet of 55 cars were built between 1923 and 1929 by the Blackpool Corporation Transport Department. They are double-decked, originally with open balconies and a capacity of 78 passengers, 32 seats on the lower deck and 46 on the upper. The four-window design came from the 1902 Motherwell tramcars. The Standard cars were 33 ft 10 in long, 16 ft 7 in high and 7 ft 2&nbspin wide, hadd Preston McGuire bogies with 4 ft 1 in wheelbase with 30 in diameter wheels, BTH B510 motors and hand and rheostatic brakes.

[edit] The 'Pantograph' cars

The Pantograph cars were built in 1928 by English Electric in Preston. These cars were single-deckers and purchased at a cost of £2000 by the Blackpool and Fleetwood Tramroad. These were designed for inter-urban use and of American appearance. They could carry 48 seated passengers. The cars had a pantograph built by Brecknell, Munro & Rogers, mounted on a tall tower. The first car, 167 was delivered on 30 July 1928 and the last, 129, in 1929. The Pantograph cars were 40 ft long and 7 ft 6 in wide, had Dick Kerr bogies, BTH B510 motors and air-brakes, hand and rheostatic brakes.

Double-decker Balloon tram 712 at Bispham
Double-decker Balloon tram 712 at Bispham

[edit] The 'Balloon' cars

Balloon cars were built in 1934 and delivered on 10 December to Blackpool. These were presented on 3 December to Sunderland, Leeds and Belfast. The 14 cars destined to Blackpool were capable of seating 64 passengers; 20 on the lower deck and 44 on the upper. These cars were heated by thermostatic-controlled radiators through grills at floor level. Half-drop windows provided ventilation while 6 ft sliding roof panels. Art-deco curved glass lines provided lighting and alhambrinal panel ceilings, indoor decoration.

The cars operated on the Squires Gate service all year round until 1951, they then operated on the Squires Gate service in summer only until 1961. The Balloons then went onto the Fleetwood service once the track had been fitted with check-rail. The cars ran to Fleetwood until 2002 and have since resumed service on the line [1].

The cars are numbered 713 to 726. 714 and 725 were rebuilt in 1979 and 1982 as Jubilee cars; 707, 709, 718 and 724 were rebuilt with square ends.

Jubilee tram 762 at the Sand Castle, Blackpool
Jubilee tram 762 at the Sand Castle, Blackpool

[edit] The 'Jubilee' cars

The two Jubilee cars, 761 and 762, were rebuilt from Balloon cars 714 and 725. The reconstruction of 725 included moving the stairs to the end and extending its body length. 762 remained with central door.

The cars were 46 ft long and 7 ft 6 in wide. They have two English Electric 305 HP 57 motors. They served on the Fleetwood to Starr Gate service year-round with a driver in winter plus a conductor in summer. Since 2003 they have been limited to the Cleveleys to Pleasure Beach service. 761 currently wears a News of the World livery, whilst 762 wears a Unison advertisement. 761 is awaiting inspection by the Rail Accident Investigation Board after a collision in early November 2006.

Preserved Coronation tram 304 at Fleetwood
Preserved Coronation tram 304 at Fleetwood

[edit] The 'Coronation' cars

So-named because they were introduced in Coronation Year, only three members of this 1953 class of car remain, two preserved under the private ownership of the Lancastrian Transport Trust (LTT). The sophisticated VAMBAC (Variable Automatic Multinotch Braking and Acceleration Control) control system of these vehicles proved to be their Achilles heel as it proved to be extremely unreliable in service. Thirteen of the class had their VAMBAC systems replaced by conventional controllers during the 1960s, prolonging their comparatively short service life to 1975, when they were withdrawn. The unmodified examples were withdrawn from 1968.[2]

Blackpool Coronation 304 (later 641), the first of the fleet, was bought for preservation and achieved celebrity status in 2002, being the subject of an episode of the UK Channel 4 television programme Salvage Squad, when the vehicle was returned to working order by squad and LTT members. It was unveiled to the public on 6 January 2003 when it was filmed carrying out test runs along Blackpool Promenade.[3]

[edit] Operations today

Open-topped Balloon tram 706 "Princess Alice" at Bispham
Open-topped Balloon tram 706 "Princess Alice" at Bispham

Blackpool is notable today as one of the three surviving non-heritage tramways to use double-deck trams, the others being Hong Kong and Alexandria, Egypt; they are, however, outnumbered by single-deck trams.

The Blackpool tram fleet is diverse. Some of the 1930s trams are still in regular service in virtually unchanged condition; others have had their bodywork rebuilt. Occasionally, historic trams are borrowed from the National Tramway Museum for public service.

The trams run from Starr Gate in the south to Fleetwood in the north. Some services (especially in busy periods such as during the Blackpool Illuminations or Bank Holidays) start or terminate short, either at Cleveleys, the foot of Red Bank Road in Bispham, or at Blackpool Pleasure Beach. This is to allow a more intensive service through the centre of Blackpool.

During the Blackpool Illuminations specially-decorated trams carry passengers through the illuminated area.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Double-decker balloon tram 712 at Bispham
  2. ^ Higgs, Philip (12 May 2004). Coronation tram – back on the Blackpool throne. Old Glory Magazine. Retrieved on 2007-03-12.
  3. ^ Hall of Fame: Blackpool Coronation 304. British Trams online (2003). Retrieved on 2007-03-12.
  • Palmer, S., (1988), Blackpool & Fleetwood By Tram, Platform 5 Publishing, ISBN 0-906579-83-X

[edit] Gallery

[edit] External links

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