Trams in Adelaide

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Adelaide's first electric tram ("Type A") on display at the Tramway Museum, St Kilda
Adelaide's first electric tram ("Type A") on display at the Tramway Museum, St Kilda

Until 1958, Trams in Adelaide formed a network spanning most of suburban Adelaide, with a history dating back to 1878. Adelaide ran horse trams from 1878 to 1914 and electric trams from 1909, but has primarily relied on buses for public transport since 1958. Today there is a single remaining tram line with two classes of electric tram, built in 1929 and 2006, respectively. The tram line connects the central business district of Adelaide, capital of South Australia, to the seaside suburb of Glenelg. Electric trams and trolleybuses were Adelaide's main public transport throughout the life of the electric tram network and are enjoying a resurgence with the expansion of the remaining line and the first new tram purchases for more than 50 years.

The early use of trams was for recreation as well as daily travel, by entire families and tourists. Until the 1950s, trams were used for family outings to the extent that the Municipal Tramways Trust (MTT) constructed gardens in the suburb of Kensington Gardens, extending the Kensington line to attract customers. By 1945 the MTT was collecting fares for 95 million trips annually—295 trips per head of population.

After the Great Depression, the maintenance of the tramway system and the purchase of new trams suffered. Competition from private buses, the MTT's own bus fleet and the growth of private car ownership all took patrons from the tram network. By the 1950s, the tram network was losing money and being replaced by an electric and petrol-driven bus fleet. Adelaide's tram history is preserved by a volunteer run museum and tramway at St Kilda, and the continuing use of 1929 H Class trams on the remaining Glenelg tram line.

Contents

[edit] Horse trams

Horse tram 18. Used in Adelaide from 1882 to 1910, first on the Walkerville line
Horse tram 18. Used in Adelaide from 1882 to 1910, first on the Walkerville line

In early 1855, less than twenty years after the colony was founded, South Australia's first horse tram began operating between Goolwa and Port Elliot on the Fleurieu Peninsula.[1] Just over twenty years later Adelaide became the first city in Australia to introduce horse trams, and eventually the last to discard them for more modern public transport.[2] Although two trials of street level trains were run, the state of Adelaide's streets, with mud in winter and dust in summer, lead to the decision that they would not be reliable.[3] Sir Edwin T. Smith and W. C. Buik, the latter formerly mayor of Kensington and Norwood, spent some time inspecting European tramways during the 1870s. They were impressed with horse tram systems and, on returning to Adelaide, they promoted the concept leading to a prospectus being issued for the Adelaide and Suburban Tramway Co. (A&ST). Private commercial interests lobbied government for legislative support, over Adelaide council's objections related to licensing and control. As a result the Government of South Australia passed an 1876 private act, authorising construction of Adelaide's first horse tram network.[4] It was scheduled for completion within two years, with 10.8 miles (17.4 km) of lines from Adelaide's city-centre to the suburbs of Kensington and North Adelaide.[5] Completed in May 1878,[6] services began in June from Adelaide to Kensington Park with trams imported from John Stephenson Co. of New York, United States.[7]

Until 1907 all horse tram operations were by private companies, with the government passing legislation authorising line construction. Growth of the network and rolling stock was driven largely by commercial considerations. On the opening day, the newly founded Adelaide and Suburban Tramway Co. (A&ST) began with six trams, expanding to 90 trams and 650 horses by 1907 with its own tram manufacturing facility at Kensington.[8] A Private act, passed in September 1881, allowed the construction of more private horse tramways and additional acts were passed authorising more line construction and services by more companies.[2] Most of the companies operated double decker trams, although some were single level cabs with many built by John Stephenson Co., Duncan and Fraser of Adelaide, and from 1897 by the A&ST at Kensington.[8] The trams ran at an average speed of 5 miles per hour (8 km/h), usually two horses pulling each tram from a pool of four to ten.[9]

The horse tram network in 1907
The horse tram network in 1907

[edit] Horse tram network

Various companies expanded the network from its initial line to Kensington, with eleven companies operating within six years, three more having already failed before constructing tracks.[10] The Adelaide to North Adelaide line opened in December 1878, a separate one from Port Adelaide to Albert Park in 1879, Adelaide to Mitcham and Hindmarsh in 1881, Walkerville 1882, Burnside, Prospect, Nailsworth and Enfield in 1883, and Maylands in 1892.[11] Various streets were widened especially for the tram lines including Brougham place, North Adelaide by 10 feet (3 m) and Prospect road to a total width of 60 feet (18 m).[12][13]

All but one line was built in 4 foot 8½ inch (1.435 m) standard gauge with the exception from Port Adelaide to Albert Park. This line was built in 5 foot 3 inch (1.6 m) broad gauge to accommodate steam engines, also requiring some of the line to be raised on embankments to avoid swampy ground and flooding.[14] There were 74 miles (119 km) of tramlines with 1062 horses and 162 cars by 1901[15] and isolated lines from Port Adelaide to Albert Park and Glenelg to Brighton, as well as a network joining many suburbs to Adelaide's CBD by 1907. The network had termini in Henley Beach, Hindmarsh, Prospect, Nailsworth, Paradise, Magill, Burnside, Glen Osmond, Mitcham, Clarence Park, Hyde Park and Walkerville.[16] To accommodate the specific needs of horses, most streets were left unsealed. The horses' urine needed an unsealed surface for absorption and their hooves a soft surface for good traction.[9]

[edit] Electric trams

First Electric tram trial on November 30, 1908.
First Electric tram trial on November 30, 1908.
The opening of the Glenelg tram.
The opening of the Glenelg tram.

Adelaide's first experiment with electric powered trams was a demonstration run on the Adelaide and Hindmarsh Tramway company's line. A battery powered tram fitted with "Julien's Patent Electric Traction" ran in 1889 to Henley Beach. The trial was unsuccessful due to the batteries poor capacity, and the promoters' deaths in a level crossing accident shortly after precluded further experiments.[17] As with horse trams, commercial interests pursued government support for the introduction of electric tramways. The most influential was the "Snow scheme", promoted by Francis H. Snow largely on behalf of two London companies, British Westinghouse and Callender's Cable Construction. The scheme involved the purchase of major horse tramways, merging into an electric tramway company with twenty-one years of exclusive running rights. Legislation was passed in 1901, a referendum held in 1902, but the required funds had been spent and the scheme collapsed. Adelaide's council proposed their own scheme backed by different companies, but couldn't raise the required capital, and J.H. Packard promoted various schemes of his own devising that also never eventuated.[18]

By 1901 Adelaide's horse trams were seen by the public as a blot on the city's image. With a population of 162,000 the slow speed of the trams, and the lines subsequent low traffic capacity, made them inadequate for public transport needs. The unsealed roads the horses required became quagmires in winter and sources of dust in summer. The 10 pounds of manure each horse left behind daily, was also not well regarded.[9] Under these various pressures the government negotiated to purchase the horse tramway companies. A March 28, 1906 newspaper notice announced that the government had purchased all of the city tramways for £280,000.[15] Bill No.913, passed December 22, 1906, created the Municipal Tramways Trust (MTT) with the authority to build new and purchase existing tramways.[19]

Not all tramway companies were purchased, as the Glenelg to Marino company continued operating separately until its failure in 1914.[20] The government purchased the properties, plant and equipment of existing tramways but did not purchase the companies themselves.[19] The equipment included 162 trams, 22 other vehicles and 1056 horses. By 1909 at the launch of Adelaide's electric tram services there remained 163 horse trams and 650 horses under the control of the MTT.[21] Due to the time required to electrify the network the MTT continued to run horse trams until 1914. The cost of purchasing the tramways was funded by treasury bills[19] and the act capped total construction costs at £12,000 per mile of track.[22] £457,000 was let in contracts to March 1908 for construction of the tramways, trams, strengthening the Adelaide bridge over the River Torrens and associated works.[23] The official ceremony starting track construction was in May 1908, with tracks originally laid on Jarrah sleepers.[24]

On Monday November 30, 1908 there were two trial runs, from the MTT's depot on Hackney Road to the nearby Adelaide Botanic Garden and back, the evening trial carrying the Premier and Governor.[24] At the official opening ceremony on March 9, 1909, Electric Tram 1 was driven by Mrs. Price, wife of Premier Thomas Price. Mrs Price opened the tramway and drove the tram from the Hackney Depot to Kensington and back, assisted by the MTT's chief engineer.[25]

[edit] Municipal Tramways Trust

The MTT was created in 1906 and became part of the State Transport Authority in 1975. It was created as a tax-exempt body with eight members, mostly by appointed local councils but with some government appointees.[26] They established a 9 acres (3.6 ha) tram depot site near the corner of Hackney Road and Botanic Road with a depot building, twenty-four incoming tracks and a large administration office.[27] William George Toop Goodman was appointed as its first engineer, later general manager and remained as general manager until his 1950 retirement.[28]

To cater for family outings the MTT constructed gardens in the current suburb of Kensington Gardens, extending the Kensington line to attract customers.[29] By 1945 the MTT was collecting fares for 95 million trips annually, representing 295 trips per head of population (350,000).[30]

By 1958 the tram network was reduced to just the Glenelg line (see Decline of the network). The MTT continued to operate most of the local bus routes in the inner metropolitan area. In 1975 the services of the MTT became the Bus and Tram division of the State Transport Authority and the MTT ceased to exist.[21]

The electric tram network in the late 1950s
The electric tram network in the late 1950s

[edit] Electric tram network

At the 1909 opening, 35 miles (56 kilometres) of track had been completed with electricity supplied by the Electric Lighting and Supply Co.[31] The electric tram system ran on 600 Volts DC supplied at first from two converter stations,[32] No.1 converter station on East terrace, Adelaide with 2,500 kW of AC to DC capacity and No.2 station at Thebarton with a capacity of 900 kW.[33] To cope with variable loads on the system, very large storage lead-acid batteries were installed, the initial one at East terrace comprising 293 cells and a 50 ton tank of sulphuric acid.[34]

The Adelaide-Glenelg line was, from 1873, a broad gauge steam railway that ran at street level into Victoria Square.[35] Originally privately owned it was taken over by the South Australian Railways then transferred to the MTT in 1927. The line was closed to be rebuilt to standard gauge, electrified at 600 Volts DC and converted to tramway operation, reopening in late 1929.

The Port Adelaide line, which until that time had still used horse trams, began to be converted to electric operation in 1914 and opened April 3, 1917[21] A line from Magill to Morialta opened in 1915 for weekend tourist traffic with only a single return service on weekdays. The line ran in the valley of 4th creek, a tributary of the River Torrens, across farmland and along unmade and ungazetted roads.[36] All services on the Morialta line were replaced by buses in 1956. The last tram line built in Adelaide was the Erindale line which opened in early 1944.[37] At maximum extent the lines connected Adelaide with the sea at Henley Beach, Grange and Glenelg, reached the base of the Adelaide Hills at Morialta and Mitcham and had Northern and Southern limits of Kilburn and Colonel Light Gardens.[38]

[edit] Electric tram types

From 1908 to 1909, a hundred electric trams were manufactured by Duncan and Fraser of Adelaide[39] at a cost of approximately £100 each.[40] Up to its last tram purchase in 1953, the MTT commissioned over three hundred electric trams, some of which have been kept in service for over seventy-five years. TransAdelaide, the publicly owned company now operating Adelaide trams, began introducing a new class of trams in 2006.

Electric tram types used in Adelaide.[21][40][41][42]
Designation Known as Tram numbers First used Last used Seating/crush load[43]
Type A California combination 1-30,61-100 1909 1952 40/101
Type B Open crossbench (toastrack) 31-60 1909 1930s 50/102
Type E Bogie open combination 101-120 1910 1936 54/152
Type D Bogie closed combination 121-170, 191-194 1911 1954 50[44]/152
Type A1 California combination 44-60 1917 1950 40/101
Type A2 Tank cars 41-43 1917 1935 40/101
Type C Desert gold 171-190 1918 1954 40/102
Type F Dropcentre 201-250 1922 1958 60/170
Type F1 Dropcentre 251-284 1925 1958 60/170
Type G Birney safety car 301-304 1925 1935 32/80
Type H Glenelg tram 351-380 1929 5 in service (2008) 64/170
Type E1 Bogie saloon 101-120 1936 1958 49/152
Type H1 (prototype) 381 1953 1957 52/184
Type S Flexity Classic 101-111, 103* 2006 11 in service (2008) 64/115[45]

*The original 103 was damaged during shipping from Germany. In its damaged form, it is now held for parts at TransAdelaide's Glengowrie depot. The replacement 103 was the final tram that was delivered, and is now in service.

Type A

Type A trams were the most common on the newly opened lines with seventy of the initial hundred trams made in this single truck combination style. They incorporated a closed central saloon and open crossbenches on the same tram. Capable of up to 22 miles per hour (35 km/h), they had a seating capacity of twenty in the saloons with an additional twenty in the open benches. The bodies were made by Duncan and Fraser, who had built horse tram cars for the AS&T as well as bodies of electric trams for Melbourne service.[46] On March 9, 1909 the first type A was the lead car in the procession at the tramway systems official opening. Most were removed from the lines and stored in the 1930s, returning to service in 1941 due to petrol rationing increasing passenger numbers. Fifty-eight were permanently joined in "Bib and Bub" (named after comic characters by May Gibbs) pairs to conserve manpower and used this way until 1950. Although the bib and bub pairs still required a conductor per tram to collect fares, they needed only one driver per pair resulting in a twenty-five percent reduction in labour.[47] All type As were withdrawn from service in 1952 with many being sold for use as shacks, although trams 10, 69 and 92 had been sold in 1936 to the State Electricity Commission of Victoria.[48]

Restored "Toastrack" tram 42 at the St Kilda Tramway museum
Restored "Toastrack" tram 42 at the St Kilda Tramway museum
Type B

Thirty of the initial trams became known as Toast rack trams due to their open structure. They were open trams with passengers seated on cross-benches, and no weather protection on the cars' sides.[46] Duncan and Fraser built them with summer excursions in mind but they had limited utility due to the lack of weather proofing. Twenty of the cars were converted to combination trams in 1917 and redesignated as types A1 and A2.[49] All type B, A1 or A2 cars, except for tram 42, were withdrawn from service in 1936 and scrapped in 1946.[48]

Type E

Due to public antipathy to imported trams, type E trams were built by J.G. Brill & Co in Philadelphia, United States, then imported in parts and assembled by Pengelley & Co of Adelaide from 1910 to 1912.[50] They were partially open trams with passengers sitting on cross bench seats and a closed saloon at one end. Their main use was on the Glen Osmond and St Peters routes, also taking picnic parties to Burnside and Magill. Type E trams were rebuilt into type E1 in 1936.[51]

Type E1

When converted from Type E trams, the crossbenches were removed and the saloon extended the entire car length. As before conversion, these trams were used mainly on the Glen Osmond and St Peters routes. Tram 101 was temporarily renumbered 100, painted in ivory and gold, and used in the 1936 South Australian centenary celebrations.[51]

Type D

Similar to Type E with crossbenches and a saloon, type D trams also had sliding doors at the end of the benches giving weather protection. Four similar cars were built in 1912 for the Prahan & Malvern Tramways Trust, Melbourne, on sold to the Hawthorn Tramways Trust then purchased by the MTT in 1925 becoming trams 191-194.[52] After injuries to conductors collecting fares while standing on the footboards, a centre isle was cut through the centre bulkhead and four of the six crossbench seats of the trams in 1934. Trams 192-194 had been similarly modified in Melbourne prior to their purchase by the MTT.[49]

Type C

A planned purchase of large trams was delayed by World War I. Type C trams were small combination cars, built in 1918–1919 as an interim measure. Physically very similar to Type A trams, they were fitted with more powerful motors. Due to the their consequent higher speeds they became known as Desert Gold trams, after a New Zealand racehorse that had won races in Australia at the same time. This speed became useful in competition against unlicensed buses in the 1920s, and they were used in peak service until 1952 with the last use for the royal visit of 1954.[49]

Types F and F1

Type F and F1 trams, built from 1921 to 1929 by Pengelley & Co, became commonly known as dropcentre trams, as the centre of the tram was lowered for easy boarding and alighting. They had the first tram airbrakes in Adelaide and were designed so that six streams of passengers could board or alight at the same time, with a large capacity and reportedly comfortable ride.[51] F series trams were the most common trams used in Adelaide from their introduction to the closure of the main tram network.[49]

Type G

Designed by Charles Birney and imported complete from J.G. Brill & Co these trams seated 32 passengers. They entered service as one man cars on the Port Adelaide line in 1925, were sold for use in Geelong in 1935 then transferred to Bendigo in 1947.[53]

Type H

Known as Glenelg trams, Type H are a long rigid body tram that is end loading with a full length saloon, power operated doors and reversible leather seats. Built by Pengelley and Co in 1929 specifically for the Glenelg line, they commenced operations on December 14 1929. They also saw service on the Henley North, Kensington Gardens and Cheltenham routes.[53] As of 2007 there are five restored trams still in service for weekend, public holiday and charter trips.[49] With the purchase of replacement trams, sixteen H class trams were disposed of with some sold, for a total of $65,000, and the remainder donated. They were destined for uses as varied as a restaurant, an attraction at a bed and breakfast boarding house and a tourism display at Glenelg, Adelaide.[54]

Type H1
Flexity Classic tram in Adelaide's city centre
Flexity Classic tram in Adelaide's city centre

A prototype tram was built in 1952 based on a 1939 plan to build forty new trams. Tram 381 was just completed by JA Lawton & Sons of Adelaide when the reconstitution of the MTT caused cancellation of the remaining thirty-nine cars.[53] It was a modern design with all steel construction and power operated doors, commencing service on the Henley North-Kensington Gardens in 1953 and withdrawn in 1957.[49]

Flexity Classic

Beginning in January 2006, 30 metres (98 ft) long, articulated, low-floor Flexity Classic Light Rail vehicles, built by Bombardier in Germany, began operation. Eleven trams were ordered at a total cost of $58 million to replace most of the seventy-seven year old H class on the Glenelg line.[55] Bombardier won the supply tender against one other bidder, receiving an initial order for nine trams in September 2004.[56] Station platforms were lowered to match the new trams lower floors, and some of the track and sleepers replaced to provide a smoother ride. There have been problems with the tram's airconditioning systems, during Adelaide's very hot summer weather, but these were rectified with engineering changes to the trams.[57]

By 2008 the state government was considering lengthening the trams, instead of purchasing more, to accommodate increasing passenger numbers.[58]

[edit] Trolleybuses

During the Great Depression the MTT needed to expand services but finances prevented laying new tracks. A decision was made to trial trolleybuses, and a converted petrol bus began running experimentally on the Payneham and Paradise lines. Apart from the trial bus, the MTT eventually operated four models of trolleybuses.[59] By 1937 there was a fleet of double-decker trolleybuses running to Tusmore with extensions to Port Adelaide, Semaphore and Largs Bay in 1938. Trolley buses continued running until July 1963 when the last run was converted to motorbuses.[49]

Green Goddess

Petrol bus 216 was converted to electric operation and ran from May 1932 to August 1934. It was the first trolleybus in Australia and become known as "The Green Goddess" by its distinctive livery. It seated twenty-three with room for twenty standing passengers.[59]

A.E.C. double decker

Imported English trolleybus chassis were completed with bodywork by Lawtons of Adelaide in 1937, then numbered as buses 401 to 430. The A.E.C. trolleybuses seated fifty-seven with a crush load of eighty-four and were withdrawn in mid 1957, with a brief return to service in August 1958.[59]

Leyland double decker

With chassis brought in from England prior to World War II, the MTT constructed buses 431 to 435. When put into service in 1942 the Leyland buses were the largest in the MTT fleet and remained so until withdrawn in 1958.[59]

Leyland canton trolleybus

As part of the World War II supply effort, English bus chassis, with a final intended destination of the Guangdong province in China, were brought to Adelaide where they remained. The MTT built bodies for them from 1942 to 1944, as buses 501 to 530, with a seating capacity of thirty and a crush load of sixty. The became popularly known as cantons or wombats and remained in service until 1963.[59]

Sunbeam trolleybus

Buses 501 to 530 were built by Lawtons of Adelaide on a Sunbeam chassis in late 1951. They seated forty passengers, had a crush load of seventy-seven and were used in services until mid 1963.[59]

[edit] Decline of the network

Double decker Garford bus, used by the MTT from 1927
Double decker Garford bus, used by the MTT from 1927

From 1915 onwards the MTT had to compete against unregulated private buses, often preceding the trams on the same route to steal fares, which the MTT countered by opening their own motor bus routes from 1925.[60] The South Australian government began regulating buses within the state in 1927, although some private operators used a provision in the Australian constitution to their advantage. By notionally marking each ticket as a fare from the pickup point to Murrayville, Victoria (but allowing passengers to board or alight sooner) companies avoided having to abide by the regulation for some time.[61] Up until the end of World War I, most Adelaideans were dependent on public transport for daily journeys. The introduction of private automobiles decreased passenger numbers until petrol rationing during World War II lead to a resurgence in patronage; patronage remained higher than before the war, until rationing was discontinued in 1951.[62]

From the start of the great depression until the closure of the network only one lot of trams was purchased by the MTT. Due to shortages there was minimal maintenance of the network during World War II and post-war shortages prevented the purchase of new trams.[63] In 1951–1952 the MTT lost £313,320 and made the decision to convert the Erindale, Burnside and Linden park lines to electric trolleybuses. The last trams on these lines ran on May 24, 1952 with the lines lifted from April 18, 1953. A 1953 royal commission was held to inquire into the financial affairs of the MTT resulting in a completely reconstituted board.[64] Late the same year, with driver safety concerns about the conflict with increasing traffic on the road, the Glen Osmond line was temporarily converted to motor buses. The line was never converted back to trams and much comment was made about the continuing maintenance of unused overhead lines.[65]

Trolley buses gradually made way for motor buses until the last electric tram or bus service ran on July 12, 1963 leaving only the Glenelg tramline as a remnant of a once extensive light rail network.[66] Except for the Glenelg H class, the trams were sold off or scrapped, variously ending up being used as shacks, playrooms and preserved by museums.[40]

[edit] Remaining line

Main article: Glenelg Tram

The Glenelg line is a 11.9-kilometre (7.4 mi) route from the centre of Adelaide, South Australia to the beachside suburb of Glenelg. It is Adelaide's only remaining tramway, running at approximately twenty minute intervals, and is part of the integrated Adelaide Metro public transport network.[67] Until January 2006, H class cars provided all services on the Glenelg line. Eleven, thirty metre long articulated low-floor Flexity Classic Light Rail vehicles, built by Bombardier in Germany, have since replaced the H-class trams in regular day-to-day service, although five refurbished H-class trams have been retained and operate a restricted 'heritage service' timetable on Saturdays, Sundays and Public Holidays. They have been fitted with safety measures similar to those of the new trams, including vigilance control and electro-magnetic track brakes.

A 1.2-kilometre (0.75 mi) extension from Victoria Square, along King William St and North Tce opened to the public on 14 October 2007. Further extensions remain the subject of public debate. Tourism minister, Jane Lomax-Smith has, in 2007, expressed support for the line to be extended to North Adelaide and Prospect although the Transport minister has stated that this is not a practical option,[68] with his preferred option the creation of a fare free city loop.[69]

[edit] Adelaide trams in museums

Tram Type Trams in Museums (2007)[70][49]
Horse Trams Horse trams 15 and 18 are at the St Kilda museum with car 15 in very poor condition and car 18 restored to operational condition but not used in service.
Type A Trams 1,10,14,15,17 are at the St Kilda Museum. Cars 14&15 are also at the museum to be restored as a "bib and bub" set and trams 1 and 10 are operational.
Type B Tram 42 was converted into a type A2 (straight sided saloon car) and used on the Port Adelaide until its closure in 1935. It was stored then moved to the St Kilda museum where, by 1994, it had been returned to original condition and service.
Type C Tram 186 was recovered from use as a junior school playroom at Woodlands school and has been rebuilt at the St Kilda museum.
Type E Tram 118 is being restored at the St Kilda museum.
Type E1 Tram 111 is at the St Kilda museum and is operational.
Type D Tram 192 ( formerly M&MTB tram 130) is at the St Kilda museum and was refurbished in 1979. Tram 156 can be seen at The Old Canberra Tram Company.
Types F, F1 Trams 244,264,282 are at the St Kilda museum with 264 and 282 having been restored.
Type G Tram 303 is on show at the St Kilda museum. Trams 301,302 and 304 are preserved at the Bendigo tramway museum.
Type H Tram 356 is on display at the The Old Canberra Tram Company.

Trams 357 and 358 are preserved at the Sydney Tramway Museum at Loftus in 'as withdrawn' condition by TransAdelaide.

Trams 360, 362 and 364 are preserved by the St Kilda Tramway Museum in Adelaide. 360 is in circa 1929 condition, 362 is in circa 1952 silver and 364 is preserved in 'as withdrawn' condition by TransAdelaide.

Tram 368 is preserved by the W2 568 Group in Melbourne in 'as withdrawn' condition by TransAdelaide.

Tram 369 is preserved by the Bendigo Tramway Museum in a slightly altered version of the original tuscan and cream livery of the MTT.

Trams 371 and 372 are preserved by the Perth Electric Tramway Society at Whiteman Park in 'as withdrawn' condition by TransAdelaide.

Tram 373 is preserved by the Tramway Museum Society of Victoria at Bylands in 'as withdrawn' condition by TransAdelaide

Type H1 The only tram in this class is on display at the St Kilda museum
Trolleybuses The Green Goddess and one of each of the other Adelaide trolleybus models, excluding a Leyland double decker, are on display at the St Kilda museum.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ The Critic (1909), p.6
  2. ^ a b The Critic (1909), p.8
  3. ^ Kingsborough L.S. (1965), p.2
  4. ^ Radcliffe, I.C. (1974), p.23
  5. ^ The Critic (1909), p.7
  6. ^ Lewis H. (1985), p.139
  7. ^ Hickey A. (2004), p.16
  8. ^ a b Steele C. (1981), p.11
  9. ^ a b c Steele C. (1986), p.5
  10. ^ Kingsborough, L.S. (1965), p.8
  11. ^ Horse tram line opening dates from Steel C. (1981), p.10, The Critic (1909), p.9-11, Nagel P. (1971), P.50 and Lewis H. (1985), p.139
  12. ^ Nagel P. (1971), p.50
  13. ^ Lamshed M. (1972), P.30
  14. ^ Kingsborough L.S. (1965), p.17
  15. ^ a b The Critic (1909), p.14
  16. ^ 1945 map of the 1907 Horse tramways, Published by the MTT and created by L.S. Kingsborough and C.J.M. Steele. Kingsborough L.S. (1965), p.85
  17. ^ Australian Electric Transport Museum (1974), p.24
  18. ^ Radcliffe, I.C. (1974), pp.31-33 and The critic (1909), p.13
  19. ^ a b c The Critic (1909), p.15
  20. ^ Kingsborough L.S. (1965), pp.43-44
  21. ^ a b c d State Transport Authority (1978)
  22. ^ The Critic (1909), pp.17-18
  23. ^ The Critic (1909), pp.19-21
  24. ^ a b The Critic (1909), p.21
  25. ^ The Critic (1909), p.37
  26. ^ The Critic (1909), pp.15,17-18
  27. ^ The Critic (1909), p.27
  28. ^ McCarthy, G.J (22 June 2005). Goodman, William George Toop (1872 - 1961). The University of Melbourne eScholarship Research Centre. Retrieved on 2007-04-23.
  29. ^ Steele C. (1981), p.15
  30. ^ Steele C. (1981), p.37
  31. ^ The Critic (1909), p.23
  32. ^ The Critic (1909), p.32
  33. ^ The Critic (1909), p.34
  34. ^ The Critic (1909), p.35
  35. ^ State Transport Authority (1979), p.9
  36. ^ Steele C. (1986), p.43
  37. ^ Steele C. (1981), p.37
  38. ^ The Municipal Tramways Trust Adelaide (1952), Electric Transport System Map
  39. ^ Steele C. (1981), p.15
  40. ^ a b c Oldland, Jenny. "Tram 104 departs Foul Bay", Yorke Peninsula Country Times, 2007-01-16. Retrieved on 2007-02-06. 
  41. ^ Metropolitan Transport Trust (1974), pp.2-5
  42. ^ Radcliffe, I.C. (1974), Appendix 11
  43. ^ Crush load was defined by the MTT as, all seats filled, 9 inches of clearance in front of the seat and one standing passenger per 1.27 foot² of remaining floor space. Radcliffe I.C. (1974), Appendix 11, The bombardier website uses a definition of 4 passengers per square metre
  44. ^ According to Metropolitan Transport Trust (1974), p.3 the type D trams seated 54 until remodelling in 1934 reduced capacity to 50
  45. ^ Bombardier FLEXITY Classic — Adelaide, Australia. Bombardier Inc.. Retrieved on 2007-03-31.
  46. ^ a b The Critic (1909), pP.29-30
  47. ^ Steele C. (1981), p.36
  48. ^ a b Municipal tramways trust (1974), p.2
  49. ^ a b c d e f g h The Tramway Museum, St Kilda (S.A.) (Undated), information brochure on tram fleets
  50. ^ Radcliffe, I.C. (1974), p.45
  51. ^ a b c Municipal tramways trust (1974), p.4
  52. ^ Municipal tramways trust (1974), p.3
  53. ^ a b c Metropolitan Transport Trust (1974), p.5
  54. ^ King, Melissa. "At last, our new Bay trams", The Advertiser, News Corporation, November 16, 2005, p. 30. 
  55. ^ STARICK, Paul. "EXCLUSIVE Why it's back to the workshop; Our flawed trams", The Advertiser, News Corporation, January 27, 2006, p. 3. 
  56. ^ King, Melissa. "Farewell red rattlers, hello air-con and TV", The Advertiser, News Corporation, September 17, 2004, p. 11. 
  57. ^ "Modifications to beat heat", The Advertiser, News Corporation, January 23, 2007, p. 9. 
  58. ^ NOVAK, LAUREN. "Trams may be s-t-r-e-t-c-h-e-d to beat overcrowding", The Advertiser, News Corporation, 2008-01-10. 
  59. ^ a b c d e f Municipal tramways trust (1974), p.8
  60. ^ Steele C. (1981), p.23
  61. ^ Steele C. (1981), p.32
  62. ^ Steele C. (1986), pp.23,43
  63. ^ Steele C. (1981), p.42
  64. ^ Steele C. (1981), p.43
  65. ^ Steele C. (1981), P.45
  66. ^ Steele C. (1981), P.47
  67. ^ Trams. TransAdelaide. Retrieved on 2007-01-11.
  68. ^ Bildstien, Craig. "Minister 'mortified' by ruling on trams", Adelaide Now, News Limited, January 23, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-02-11. 
  69. ^ "Free tram network 'to drive city's future"", The Advertiser, News Limited, February 19, 2007, pp. 2. 
  70. ^ Our Fleet. Australian Electric Transport Museum (S.A.) Inc. Retrieved on 2007-01-11.

[edit] References

  • Australian Electric Transport Museum (1974). Australian electric transport museum, St Kilda, South Australia. 
  • Hickey, Alan (editor) (2004). Postcards: On the Road Again. Wakefield Press. ISBN 1862545979. 
  • Kingsborough, L.S. (1965). The horse tramways of Adelaide and its suburbs, 1875–1907. Adelaide: Librararies board of South Australia. 
  • Lamshed, Max (1972). Prospect 1872–1972, A portrait of a city. Adelaide: The corporation of the city of Prospect. ISBN 0959901507. 
  • Lewis, H. John (1985). ENFIELD and The Northern Villages. The corporation of the city of Enfield. ISBN 0-85864-090-2. 
  • Metropolitan tramways trust (1974). The Adelaide tramways, pocket guide. A catalogue of rolling stock 1909–1974. Adelaide: Metropolitan tramways trust. 
  • Metropolitan tramways trust (1975). 1907-1974 Development of street transport in Adelaide, Official history of the municipal tramways trust. Adelaide: Metropolitan tramways trust. 
  • Nagel, Paula (1971). North Adelaide 1937–1901. Adelaide: Austaprint. ISBN 0-85872-104-X. 
  • Radcliffe, I.C. (1974). Adelaide road passenger transport, 1836–1958. Adelaide: Libraries board of South Australia. ISBN 0724300457. 
  • State Transport Authority (1979). Adelaide Railways. Adelaide: State Transport Authority. 
  • State Transport Authority (1978). Transit in Adelaide : the story of the development of street public transportation in Adelaide from horse trams to the present bus and tram system. Adelaide: State Transport Authority. ISBN 0724352996. 
  • Steele, Christopher (1981). The burnside lines. Sydney: Australian Electric Traction Association. ISBN 0909459088. 
  • Steele, Christopher (1986). The Tramways and Buses of Adelaide's North-East Suburbs. Norwood, South Australia: Australian Electric Traction Association. ISBN 1862520895. 
  • Taylor, Edna (2003). The History and Development of ST KILDA South Australia. Salisbury, South Australia: Lions Club of Salisbury. ISBN 0-646-42219-7. 
  • The Critic (1909). The Tramways of Adelaide, past, present, and future : a complete illustrated and historical souvenir of the Adelaide tramways from the inception of the horse trams to the inauguration of the present magnificent electric trolley car system. Adelaide: The Critic. 

[edit] External links