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| Standard car 143 | |
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Blackpool
Corporation built a fleet of 42 ‘Standard’ cars during the
1920s in response to both growing patronage on the tram routes and
a need to rationalise the assortment of tram types, many
originating from the early 1900s. No.143
was built by the Corporation in 1924 as an unvestibuled, open
balcony ‘Standard’. Later, in December 1929 the tram received
enclosed drivers vestibules and upper deck. The red and cream
livery was replaced by green in June 1934. Withdrawal
of the Standards began in the 1940s and the numbers thinned out
during the 1950s as the Coronation class arrived. However, a
handful survived in service as late as 1966 and a number of them
survive in preservation. This
car has a rather unique history. Withdrawn from passenger duties
in October 1957, it was fitted with a bus engine and generator set
to allow it to operate separate from the overhead. An inspection
tower was fitted on the upper deck and the tram transferred to
Engineering car duties. Later renumbered 753 in the works car
fleet, it survived on such duties until June 1990 when the engine
caught fire and gutted the lower deck saloon. Retained by
Blackpool Transport for possible restoration as a Standard car, a
project to acquire sister car No.147 from an American museum led
to 753 being cannibalised and withdrawn surplus to requirements. Unwilling
to see such an historic tram broken up, the car was donated to the
LTT in February 2002 and was transferred to our Clifton Road depot
on 13 April 2003 to await future restoration. A grant application was submitted to the Local Heritage Initiative in August 2005 for a project to fully restore the tram to original 1924 condition, as an open platform, open vestibule tram, a type not represented by any of the other preserved Blackpool Standards. Work on the project started in November 2005. Click here for more details... |
| © Lancastrian Transport Trust - Registered Charity No. 1080404 | ||