Nottingham kept their trams well into the 1960s when they morphed into trolley buses. Abroad, Belgium kept theirs as did many reconstructed German towns.
My Uncle Stan, full name Stanley Livingstone Nutting, drove trams in Leicester. As an aside, I think my grandparents felt they had gone a bit overboard with the 'Stanley Livingstone' thing, as they christened their next child simply 'Jim'. Uncle Jim went into the police, and was not, I guess, very ambitious, as he remained a constable for his entire career. We used to occasionally see him on his bicycle, in his uniform, and my Mum would say 'there goes your Uncle Jim'. Stan's wife, Auntie Maggie, used to give me tea when I took the corporation bus down from Humberstone junior school to go to the library at East Park Road, near Stan and Maggie's house. There was an old Great Northern elevated railway station just by the railway bridge by East Park Road. BTW, that cost of £445 for a house on the Fletcher estate seems like a real bargain - though from the video, that was in 1935, not 1949, as I thought from the description. My parent's first semi, on Colchester Road, cost £700, bought with help from their parents in the late 1930s.
Number 36, with extended platforms was little used in the final days and employed on enthusiasts' tours. At the closure in 1949 it was offered to the Museum but 'no room' was the response. Finally, after some delay, a 'yes' was received, but it had been broken up the day before. Only a few bodies were then left to survive out at Markfield, having been purchased from Edlins, the scrappers at Blaby.
Nottingham kept their trams well into the 1960s when they morphed into trolley buses. Abroad, Belgium kept theirs as did many reconstructed German towns.
My Uncle Stan, full name Stanley Livingstone Nutting, drove trams in Leicester. As an aside, I think my grandparents felt they had gone a bit overboard with the 'Stanley Livingstone' thing, as they christened their next child simply 'Jim'. Uncle Jim went into the police, and was not, I guess, very ambitious, as he remained a constable for his entire career. We used to occasionally see him on his bicycle, in his uniform, and my Mum would say 'there goes your Uncle Jim'. Stan's wife, Auntie Maggie, used to give me tea when I took the corporation bus down from Humberstone junior school to go to the library at East Park Road, near Stan and Maggie's house. There was an old Great Northern elevated railway station just by the railway bridge by East Park Road. BTW, that cost of £445 for a house on the Fletcher estate seems like a real bargain - though from the video, that was in 1935, not 1949, as I thought from the description. My parent's first semi, on Colchester Road, cost £700, bought with help from their parents in the late 1930s.
Number 36, with extended platforms was little used in the final days and employed on enthusiasts' tours. At the closure in 1949 it was offered to the Museum but 'no room' was the response. Finally, after some delay, a 'yes' was received, but it had been broken up the day before. Only a few bodies were then left to survive out at Markfield, having been purchased from Edlins, the scrappers at Blaby.
Thank you, fascinating
Amazing well done all in putting this together
I look at this and wonder if any of the people are my ancestors