Southampton Tramways Company

Southampton Tramways Company

Horse Tram in Oxford St., Southampton, c.1895.
Operation
Locale Southampton
Open 5 May 1879
Close 1 July 1898
Status Closed
Infrastructure
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in)
Propulsion system(s) Horse
Depot(s) Highfield

Southampton Tramways Company operated a tramway service in Southampton between 1879 and 1898.[1]

History

Services began on 5 May 1879, with takings of £26 (equivalent to £2,384 in 2015) [2] on that day. There was opposition to the running of trams on Sundays, and a petition of 3,500 signatures was raised against this practice. The manager of the company replied that patronage of the trams on Sundays showed that there was a demand for the service, and that as long as they showed a profit, the trams would continue to run.

The first route opened was Stag Gates – Holy Rood, with approval to operate Alma Road – Canute Road – Oxford Street – High Street – Floating Dock and Stag Gates – Lodge Road – Portswood being received on 6 May 1879. Tramway Junction – Commercial Road – Shirley opened on 9 June 1879.[3]

The company was soon in trouble, with one manager having absconded to America in 1881, and another dismissed in 1882 over irregularities in the accounts. By 1887, the company was on a sound financial footing, and paying dividends of 8% per annum to its shareholders.

The manager until he died aged 47 in 1887 was James Sutton. The offices were in Upper Prospect Place and Union Road, Shirley.

From 22 October 1889, the Portswood route operated via Spear Road and Avenue Road.

In 1896, fares were reduced from 3d to 2d for the through routes, and frequency doubled to 5 minute intervals from Stag Gates to Holy Rood. Four new trams and forty more horses were required to operate this service.[3]

Tram fleet

Closure

The Southampton Tramway Company was compulsorily purchased by Southampton Corporation on 30 June 1898, at a price of £51,000 (equivalent to £5,123,484 in 2015),[2] and modernised by Southampton Corporation Tramways.

References

  1. The Golden Age of Tramways. Published by Taylor and Francis.
  2. 1 2 UK CPI inflation numbers based on data available from Gregory Clark (2016), "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)" MeasuringWorth.
  3. 1 2 Horne, John (1979). 100 years of Southampton Transport. Southampton City Transport / Southampton City Museums. ISBN.
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