Reading Corporation Tramways

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Reading Corporation Tramways
Reading Corporation Tramways, 22 July 1903.jpg
Tram No. 6 has just crossed the junction, heading westwards along Oxford Road. Photograph taken on 22 July 1903, the first day of operation for the electric cars. Photograph by Walton Adams.
Operation
LocaleReading
Open1 November 1901
Close20 May 1939
StatusClosed
Infrastructure
Track gauge4 ft (1,219 mm)
Propulsion system(s)Electric
Depot(s)Mill Lane
Statistics
Route length7.45 miles (11.99 km)

Reading Corporation Tramways operated a tramway service in Reading in the English county of Berkshire between 1901 and 1939.[1]

The tramway is one of the ancestors of the current Reading Buses, the town's municipally owned bus operator.

History[]

The cross-over at the junction of Broad Street, St. Mary's Butts, Oxford Road and West Street, looking westwards along Oxford Road, 1903. The rails are in place, but not yet filled in with cobble-stones.
Broad Street, Reading, looking eastwards from an upper storey window, c. 1904. A tramcar heads eastwards, and two horse-drawn cabs wait in the middle of the road, by the trolley-pole.
A plaque in Erleigh Road on the pavement outside Café YOLK, placed around 1903 to herald the arrival of the electric tram.

The corporation purchased the assets of the horse drawn services of the Reading Tramways Company and took ownership from 1901. Modernisation was undertaken and the first electric service started operating in July 1903. Extensions were constructed to the Wokingham Road and London Road (both from Cemetery Junction), and new routes added to Whitley, Caversham Road, Erleigh Road and Bath Road. The trams operated from a new depot in Mill Lane, a site that was to remain Reading Transport's main depot until it was demolished to make way for The Oracle shopping mall in 1998.[2]

The electric tram services were originally operated by 30 four-wheeled double decked cars supplied by Dick, Kerr & Co. In 1904, six bogie cars and a water car (used for keeping down the dust on the streets) were added to the fleet, also from Dick, Kerr & Co. No further trams were acquired, and a planned extension from the Caversham Road terminus across Caversham Bridge to Caversham itself was abandoned because of the outbreak of World War I. The war also led to a significant maintenance backlog.[2]

Closure[]

In 1919, Reading Corporation started operating its first motor buses.[3] These ran from Caversham Heights to Tilehurst, running over the tram lines and beyond the tram termini. Because of the state of the track, the Bath Road tram route was abandoned in 1930, followed by the Erleigh Road route in 1932. Eventually it was decided that the tramways should be abandoned and replaced by trolleybuses, operating over extended routes. The last tram ran on the Caversham Road to Whitley route in July 1936, and last car on the main line ran in May 1939.[2]

References[]

  1. ^ The Golden Age of Tramways. Published by Taylor and Francis.
  2. ^ a b c "Reading Corporation Tramways / Transport". Bus Zone. Archived from the original on 27 August 2008. Retrieved 27 February 2008.
  3. ^ "Reading Bus Depot Previously Reading Corporation Electric Tramways on Berkshire Industrial Archaeology Group".

External links[]

Retrieved from ""