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Last updated 11 December 2011
This page is about British bus tickets from the 1950s and 60s,
and shows some bits and pieces from a collection I put together at the time.
I hope it jogs some memories of those days for any visitors who remember
such things.
LONDON TRANSPORT
Around 1958 (like schoolkids sometimes did) I started collecting
bus tickets. Sad, really. Well, it was a cheap occupation. Since I lived
in Croydon at the time, the London Transport examples are the most numerous.
Remarkably, I still have them, and here are a few samples.
All are, of course, pre-decimal currency and most are of the
Bell Punch type, a style which was shortly to be eliminated from London's
streets, unknown to me at the time.
The 1 penny tickets (example in the row below) were the first
to disappear, presumably due to inflation ! Matt Wharmby (of the London Bus
Page) reminds me that schoolkids used to add up the numbers on the top of
each ticket, and a total of 21 was considered lucky !
The next row shows some higher values, but all these were standard
issue on London (red) Central Area buses in the late 1950s. The exception
is the 10d (ten old pence for our younger readers - if any get this far !)
which is actually a Sunday Morning Cheap Single, and had a non-standard and
somewhat garish colour scheme. The 8d ticket is a 'lucky' one ! Matt also
tells me that, in some young circles, the letters at the top were also
significant as 'fortune tellers'. Apparently the letters could be the initials
of the person you were going to marry and, if it was a 'lucky' ticket as
well, you were supposed to give the ticket to the person concerned. Debbie
Underwood - this is your big moment !
The row below (6d to 1/2d), are all from Country Area (green)
buses, which had far more colourful designs, and larger fare numbers. In
fact they were usually for larger fares as well, because folk tended to travel
further on country buses. The 10d ticket is another 'lucky' one...
The little miscellany below contains a variety of London Transport
oddments, starting with the 'Red Rover' ticket. This enabled the holder
to travel anywhere on Central Area buses, trolleybuses and the Underground
for a fixed fee on one day only. 'Child - under 14 years of age' it says,
but I wasn't ! I was out seeking the last Leyland TD single deckers
that day.
Below it is a 3/8d Green Line coach ticket from a 'new-fangled'
Setright machine. The 4d ticket is an Early Morning Single, a cheap rate
for early risers. On the right is a 1/- Underground ticket, marked '3rd Class'
(was there ever a 1st class on the Underground ? Well, Paul Kirkup mailed
me to say that there certainly was on the Metropolitan Railway, the Underground's
predecessor pre-war). Finally, there were often advertisements on the back
of bus tickets, and here are a couple of period pieces.
EASTBOURNE CORPORATION
In 1959 my family moved to Eastbourne, so it was natural that
my collection would include a good selection from that seaside town.
Eastbourne Corporation bus tickets were slightly larger than those
in London, and very colourful.
I was fortunate to have been given a complete set of 'mint'
tickets by the Corporation for something - I can't remember what. Maybe
it was a bribe to stop me hanging around their garage. Anyway, the result
is that most of the tickets below have no 'hole' where the Bell Punch machine
would normally have perforated them.
Smart, aren't they ? Return tickets were all striped,
and had the unusual attribute of showing on them the round-trip route options
for which they were valid. The complete set is shown below, including another
unusual feature in the shape of an 'Exchange Ticket'. This was given
to the passenger (at no charge) in exchange for his return ticket on the
return journey. Does anyone know of this system being used elsewhere
?
Below are some Eastbourne oddments. The Workmen's Returns on
the left had to be issued before 8:30 in the morning. The school tickets
were supplied in booklets (I still have one) if you lived more than a certain
distance from your school. Unused ones were a form of currency among
Eastbourne kids. The ticket on the right is probably the most rare. It
is quite genuine and dates (I think) from the 1930's, or even earlier.
Finally, to complete the set, here is the vast 'Town and Shore'
ticket. For 2 shillings you could travel anywhere around the town as
much as you liked, but only for half a day. It's not easy to imagine a
circumstance in which this was a good deal.
SOUTHERN SELECTION
Brighton Corporation (on the left) used Bell Punch tickets until
around 1960, when they switched to new machines and 'Olley' tickets.
Brighton Hove and District (on the right) used identical Bell Punch
tickets, but switched over to Setright machines (extreme right).
Aldershot and District used thick card tickets, including the
exotic return tickets of which one is shown below. They were validated on
both journeys, once at each end. The mauve single ticket has a dull pink
1/2 (half) printed on it (if you can't see it, you'll have to believe me
!) and was for half pennies. Thus, if you wanted a one penny fare you got
a white ticket stamped 'one', but if you wanted a 'penny halfpenny' fare
(one and a half old pence), you got a mauve ticket stamped 'one'.
Eventually, though, Aldershot went over to Setright machines,
as did many other southern operators. Shown on the right are examples from
Eastbourne, Southdown, Maidstone & District, East Kent, Eastern
National and Eastern Counties.
These tickets may look modern to the 'wrinklies' amongst us,
but remember that they are all pre-decimal currency, and at least 35 years
old.
MIDLANDS SELECTION
The Setright machine was common all over Britain in the early
1960s, and the examples on the left are from Trent, Ribble, East Midland,
and Midland Red, whose tickets were pink on the back. Nottingham avoided
this trend however, as the specimens on the right show.
NORTHERN AND SCOTTISH SELECTION
On the left are examples from Manchester (MCTD). The LCPT (centre,
top) is from Liverpool. Below it is an example from the delightfully-named
Stalybridge, Hyde, Mossley and Dukinfield Joint Transport and Electricity
Board - a collector's item I'm sure. Finally, up to Scotland, and some samples
from Dundee Corporation, and Alexanders. Walter Alexander and Sons had several
divisions and this one, I think, was Fife, which accounts for the '(F.)'
in the name. I was quite pleased to have this one, because it was a bit of
a rarity for a sassenach.
Well, that's a little sample from my collection and I hope you
enjoyed the ride. For those with a deeper interest in the subject,
contact the Transport Ticket
Society.
And here is an
amazing list of all the users of the
TIM ticket machine
and
also the
Setright ticket machine
, and images of the tickets they issued.
For many other topics, have a look at the
Classic Buses menu page.
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