Aidan
master brummie
Loverly shot - Thanks Lloyd.... Here's A241, HA 2318 with 'coach' body C18.
Loverly shot - Thanks Lloyd.... Here's A241, HA 2318 with 'coach' body C18.
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Garfords did come in various sizes, according to the fascinating catalogue discovered by Aidan (post #1012).
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I suspect from your Forum name, mikeya, that you are Mikey Ashworth. In which case I had better quickly confess that I have already posted your "Map of Midland Red Routes" picture here, as an "advertisement" for your wonderful collection. I hope you will forgive my impertinence!
Any of your pictures of Midland Red memorabilia will be welcome on this thread (the older the better!).
I believe that to be the one-off English Electric body for a FEDD, BB 2600, new in 1936 and fitted as a second body to A1567 (HA 9432) whose original body, Short Bros no BB 2256 became a spare "float" body (I'm sure it was reused later but I can't immediately drop on that info at the moment) ... but I also know I saw them in Stafford early in 1961 too ... Very sadly none have survived into preservation.
Yes the long front seat in front of the staircase with the side entrance was a great place to ride. Stourport would have included Mucklows Hill would it not. Those old busses used to grind a bit up there and some steam from the rad might have been seen.
Yes the long front seat in front of the staircase with the side entrance was a great place to ride. Stourport would have included Mucklows Hill would it not. Those old busses used to grind a bit up there and some steam from the rad might have been seen.
It's fascinating that English Electric went to the trouble of building a one-off FEDD body. They probably hoped for a big order, which didn't eventuate. HA9432's original body BB2256 was in 1937 mounted on another of the same batch (HA9408), according to my Midland Red body lists (ex-Hardy).
On the "DD" theme, there is a REDD albeit in a terrible state at the Black Country Museum. Still fited with a petrol engine. It is in a terrible state and the Museum , as far as I know, has no plans to restore it. In fact I would not be at all suprised to see it eventually end up at Wythall. It is not on general display but tucked up in a corner of the workshop area.
... It's funny but just thinking about it brings back aroma memory...could it be the aroma that one used to experience in an older leather seated car ... There is a picture of such a bus with a sliding door on here but my memory recalls a concertina one ... It was such a delight to motor through the pre-highway road system on those old busses...with the hedges at the side and the cast round red mailboxes with shallow rounded tops, here and there. We did not know it but it was the end of an era when mindless immediacy was not important and snailmail was ok. I think we write more now but not better and not with as much thought for feelings and when everything is so fast...then nothing is of much value.
... This left that chassis' intended body, Brush BB1951 as a spare, which went on A1366 (HA 8291) in 1934, releasing BB1947 which went onto A1363 (HA 8288) in 1936, similarly releasing BB1944 which went onto A1346 (HA 8270) in 1940. (Etc, etc) ...
Aidan, that supposed 1897 Birmingham Motor Omnibus Company vehicle is a complete mystery that has baffled all the "usual experts". The only thing I could think of was that it was an experimental vehicle of the Birmingham General Omnibus Co Ltd, which was active 1897-1899 (as a horse bus operator), and reserved powers "to operate motor cars on any ... routes whenever it may be demonstrated that it will be profitable to do so" (Hardy). There is no direct evidence for this whatsoever; I am only going by circumstantial evidence of time-frame and similarity of name.
[If you can remove the veils of obscurity from this pioneering little Brum motor bus, you will be (even more of) a hero!]