London Transport in the 1950s
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Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #307029 in Books
- Published on: 2004-10-31
- Binding: Hardcover
- 96 pages
Editorial Reviews
Synopsis
The 1950s represented years of considerable change for London Transport. After the destruction wrought by the Luftwaffe during World War 2, it took LT some years to be in a position to reinstate its prewar policy of tramcar replacement, but - in contrast to the years prior to World War 2 - it was the diesel bus that was destined to replace the capital's final trams, rather than the trolleybus. Indeed the trolleybus itself would be under threat by the end of the decade, with a policy of wholesale conversion being introduced in 1959. With trams having disappeared in 1952 and with trolleybuses destined to follow them into oblivion a decade later, LT's bus fleet was also to be altered radically during the course of the 1950s, with the final RTs being delivered and the launch of the superb Routemaster. The decade was to see the elimination of many of the prewar designs that had survived the war and the arrival of other classic designs, such as the single-deck RF. It was not only LT's road services that saw considerable change in this period; on the Underground, LT took over responsibility for several ex-LNER branches and saw the expansion of the electrified network.




