MIDLAND GENERAL   -   AEC REGALS
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Last updated 18 March 2012
Another look at some delightful vehicles from the past. On this page we turn to Midland General and some of the AEC
single deckers they operated from the 1930s to the 1960s.
Here is No.175 (KRR 255), one of only two survivors from all the vehicles listed on this
page, seen at a rally at Swanwick Junction in July 2004. Note that the AEC badge on the radiator grille has been
replaced with the operator's 'MGO' logo. Photo by David Beardmore.
The Midland General Omnibus Company Limited operated in an area within and surrounding Derbyshire, and had a very
varied fleet in the period from the end of the second world war to the 1960s.
As well as the AEC Regals that we examine here, they operated a pair of pre-war Leyland TS8 Tigers with Weymann bus
bodies and a fleet of 25 Leyland PS1 Tigers built in 1948. The latter had Saunders front-entrance bus bodies seating
35 (or in some cases 32) and were numbered 200 to 224 (KRB 86 to KRB 110).
Among their double deckers they had a mixture of Guy, Leyland, Bristol and AEC products. The oldest machines still
around in the early 1960s were some utility-bodied Guy Arabs dating back to 1943/44, which were being progressively
withdrawn at the time. Once again the variety of the fleet was apparent, as the bodies were built variously by
Northern Counties, Brush and Weymann. Among the Weymann-bodied examples were two lowbridge buses of which one, No.
415 (GRR 62) had been acquired from their associate concern, Mansfield District - also part of the old Balfour Beatty
group of companies. This was not the only ex Mansfield vehicle in the fleet, as we shall see.
A selection of AEC Regents - all with Weymann bodies - a large batch of 1950s Bristol Lodekkas, and even a lone 1947
Leyland Titan PD1 completed the double deck fleet. Finally, as would be expected of a Tilling / B.T.C. operator, there
were about 50 single-deck ECW-bodied Bristol LS6Gs and MW6Gs built in the mid to late 1950s.
So, as can be seen, this was a fascinating collection representing examples of the most common vehicles available to
operators during the immediate post-war period, all looking attractive in their blue and cream colour scheme. But it
is the AEC Regals that are the subject of this page.
The Regals shown below are listed in order of date of manufacture (or acquisition), rather than fleet number, and we
therefore start with what were actually the oldest vehicles in the whole fleet by 1960, two remaining Regals from a
1936 batch of ten; and we end with a batch of 12 buses bought from Mansfield District as late as 1960.
As with my other lists, the mistakes are bound to creep in, and some relevant information may be missing so, in order
to make it as accurate a reference as possible, I would of course welcome any additions or corrections.
FLEET LIST
==========
AEC REGAL 1 - 156 - 165 (Total 10)
Built in May/June 1936
Chassis: AEC Regal 662 with petrol engines, refitted with 7.7 litre oil engines in 1949.
Body: Stylish Weymann 32-seat front-entrance coach bodies with recessed door and roof luggage pannier, converted
to 35-seat bus configuration in 1949.
Notes: Part of a batch of ten bought in 1936. Four were impressed for military service in the early part of World War
II and their fleet numbers used again in 1947, the remaining six being converted to oil engines and bus seating in
1949. Of these six, four were retired in 1959, and the final two lasted for another year or so.
Built in April 1938
Chassis: AEC Regal O662 with diesel engine.
Body: Weymann 35-seat front-entrance dual-purpose body
Notes: Dave Farrier mailed me to say that the chassis of 126 bus survived, having been running for Malta Bus Service
since about 1955 with a Debono rebody. Dave was the person who identified it in 1991. He gained access to the police
records and traced its logbook, which provided the O662 chassis number. A quick phone call to Mike Fenton confirmed
the identity. He has photos of it in green livery and yellow livery.
Mike Penn confirmed it was still active in Malta in October 2003, re-registered as FBY 647, but that registration was
re-issued to another vehicle shortly afterwards, so it may have been withdrawn and scrapped.
Photo by Derek Brown shows 172 at Alfreton Depot in the 1960s while being used as a snowplough.
Built in April 1938
Chassis: AEC Regal O662 with diesel engine
Body: Weymann 32-seat front-entrance dual-purpose body
AEC REGAL - 13 - 133 (not consecutive) (Total 20)
Built Jan/Feb 1939
Chassis: AEC Regal O662 with diesel engines
Body: Weymann dual-purpose front-entrance 35-seat body
AEC REGAL - 41 - 44 (Total 4)
Nigel Lemon kindly sent me this picture of No.41 after its retirement from Midland General service. He describes
it as; "JRB 127 [AEC Regal/Duple] when operated by the People's College of Further Education, Nottingham on a wet day in
February 1966. My long-term memory suggests that the roof rack seemed to contain canoe-related things whilst the side 'route
boards' carried the words of the institution where it was, the said People's College of Further Education."
But Bob Luger was able to provide more information. He wrote; "What a surprise to see JRB 127 on your website.
Never mind carrying canoes, this bus took me and several others to Moscow in 1965. Despite a cracked wheel in London,
and a cracked cylinder head in Frankfurt, and a crash in Poland, we had a memorable trip bearing in mind that Khrushchev
was still in charge! The whole trip took 3 weeks. By the end of the journey we had discarded the bonnet and radiator
grille in an attempt to keep the engine cool. Late for the return ferry we coasted in neutral down hills to try and
squeeze more than 45 mph."
Built in 1946-47
Chassis: AEC Regal
Body: Duple 35-seat front-entrance dual-purpose bodies
AEC REGAL - 174 - 185 (Total 12)
No.175 (KRR 255) had previously been Mansfield District No.9, and is seen here probably at Langley Mill in
the early-mid 1960s. Photo by kind permission of John Law.
Built in 1949-50 for Mansfield District, but acquired by Midland General in 1960.
Chassis: AEC Regal III 9621E with 9.6 litre diesel engines
Body: Weymann 35-seat front-entrance dual-purpose (bus or coach) bodies
Notes: Originally ordered by Mansfield District these 12 buses served in Mansfield for ten years as part of a batch of
24 in that fleet. Their acquisition by Midland General then gave them another lease of life, and one example has
survived into preservation. The withdrawal from service of Nos.175 and 176 in 1967 marked the end of halfcab single
decker operation by Midland General.
TOTAL 63 ( with 2 Survivors - 126 as a possible chassis, and 175 complete )
==============================================================
For many other buses, have a look at all the other profiles on the Classic Buses menu page.
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AEC REGAL 1 - 53 - 127 (not consecutive) (Total 10)
AEC REGAL 1 - 151 - 173 (not consecutive) (Total 7)