Lloyd
master brummie
The stock and infrastructure of the remaining tramways in this country was sorely in need of replacement after the damage and lack of maintenance during WW2 that abandonment and replacement with diesel buses was often the most economical answer. Had it not been for the war, tramways would have been replaced or renewed as necessary following existing plans - some lines actually survived longer because of the war. Trolleybuses, powered by electricity drawn from overhead wires, had a brief comeback in the 1950s, but in most cases because the hidden infrastructure (overhead wires, underground power feeder cables, power substations etc) dated from the 30s when they had replaced trams anyway. Towns and cities needed reliable economic public transport systems and once power generation was removed from local ownership, the commercial rate of the fuel was an added burden. Sadly the planners of the day were not concerned with (or probably even aware of) the future need for cleaner air, nor did they realise the damage private car ownership would do to the transport undertakings. Fares today exceeding a pound are the norm, but only because public transport is not the main travel provider, the private car is. And because most transport companies are privately owned, and in business to make profits for their shareholders.