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ILKESTON TRAMWAYS |
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Ilkeston holds the distinction of being the first town in Derbyshire to have adopted and operated a fully electrical tramway system.
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In 1898 the matter was further debated
and despite the initial proposal by the Derbyshire Brothers, it was decided
that the Corporation itself should carry out the necessary work, though with
the assistance of the said Derbyshire Brothers. |
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During the following months, the Town
Clerk visited the following towns and cities - Dover, Walsall,
Wednesbury, Darlaston and Birmingham - to examine those tramway
systems then in use. |
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In 1899, Parliament passed the Ilkeston Corporation Tramways Act, thus allowing the Council to press ahead with the project. |
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Despite earlier calculations, it was finally estimated that the cost of the construction of the system would amount to a total of £80,345. This accounted for £32,479, for the construction of the power station and £47,848 for the construction of the tramway and eight tram cars. Approximately £8,000 was added to the total figure to cover any unforeseen extra costs. |
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There were a number of objections to the proposed tramway system. Local Solicitor John Ormond called for a meeting of ratepayers, the majority of whom voted to petition Parliament opposing the project. A number of tradesmen and shopkeepers, whose businesses lay along the route also objected. These few objections were over-ruled, Alderman Robinson claiming that 75% of the populace were fully in favour of this new mode of transport. |
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The townsfolk of Ilkeston could now
look forward to travelling with comparative ease - from Church Street in
Cotmanhay - along Cotmanhay Road to the bottom of Bath Street - up Bath
Street to the junction of Station Road, from where a change of tramcar would
take the passenger down to Ilkeston Junction. From Bath Street the traveller
could then continue to the Market Place - along South Street - down
Nottingham Road and eventually through to Hallam Fields. |
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On Saturday 16th May 1903, all nine of the Corporation's vehicles, painted in maroon and cream and heavily festooned with bunting and other decorations, trundled out of the Park Road depot for the first time and out onto the streets of Ilkeston. The route was lined with cheering (and not to say curious) Ilkestonians. Eventually 13 tramcars would be operated on the system. |
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Thomas Roe, a local printer, had secured the advertising
rights for £13 per tramcar per annum. Each tramcar bore posters promoting
such products as Sunlight Soap and Colman's Mustard, as well as advertising
local businesses as Wooliscrofts Drapers and Outfitters and Broughton's the
watch and clock maker, both of Bath Street. |
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Re-painted in their new colours of light green (later dark green) and cream and with a reduced fleet of just eight tramcars, the system ran for another 15 years before being fully replaced by trolley buses in 1931. |
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Of the original tramway system, little if anything remains. A section of rail track and two of the seats from the upper deck of an Ilkeston tramcar can be seen at the Erewash Museum. An electrical junction box stands on the corner of the Market Place adjacent to the churchyard, while what is alleged to have once been the lower deck of one of the tramcars stands in the rear garden of a house on Heanor Road. |
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A full and definitive account of the
tramways can be found in Ilkeston Tramways by |
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| Other sources for this article were - Ilkeston as a Borough by Cyril Hargreaves and Trams and Trolley Buses of Ilkeston 1903 - 1953 by John David Watts. | ||||