CITY OF OXFORD AEC REGALS
SOME QUICK LINKS WITHIN THIS WEBSITE; Home Email Events Diary Halfcab list THE TRANSPORT HOBBY SHOP Links Small-Ads B.B.P.G. Classic Irish Buses
OR CLICK HERE FOR THE COMPLETE WEBSITE MENU
Visit the Classic Buses Website "Transport Hobby Shop", with its vast stock of BUS, RAILWAY, TRUCK, SHIP, STEAM, CAR, MOTORCYCLE, TRACTOR & FARM, AIRCRAFT and MILITARY VEHICLE BOOKS, MODELS and DVDs.
Over 15,000 hand-picked products available online - the biggest on the Internet !
(and please click on the "powered by Amazon" logo {top left of the store pages} if you want anything else from Amazon. Thank you.)
Last updated 26 August 2009
This brain-scrambling colour scheme welcomes you to the City of Oxford Motor Services in our album of buses from the past. Oxford was always a good customer for the AEC Regal, and we examine their acquisitions from the 1930s to the 1950s.
AEC Regal III No 727 (OJO 727) seen on a special visit to the Willowbrook coachwork factory in 1975. Photo kindly supplied by Phil Norris.
The City of Oxford Motor Services has a noble history, being directly descended from a horse bus operation in the city from 1880, and the introduction of motor buses in 1913. From the late 1920s City of Oxford became almost exclusively associated with AEC products and, for example, in 1960 the fleet was entirely made up of AEC Regents, Regals and Reliances. So faithful were Oxford to the Regal, that eleven separate orders were placed during the 1930s.
In the 1950s and 60s the service had two liveries, one of which is supposed to be represented by the colour scheme on this page. Buses were red, with lining in a blue/green/grey colour (sometimes described as duck-egg blue, and sometimes as duck-egg green !), black wheels and wings and maroon roofs, while the coaches were cream with maroon roofs, wheels and lining. Oxford had a reputation for keeping their vehicles in a smart condition.
Two of the Regals survive, and details are given below. Photographs are shown of both vehicles, which can be found at the Oxford Bus Museum. They are both in first class order, and congratulations are due to the guys that brought them back to such a fine condition. The Oxford Bus Museum Trust is at Long Hanborough, Oxfordshire, next to the railway station.
The fleet list below is arranged in order of the year of delivery, which often bears little relationship to the fleet number. In fact, some of the pre-war allocated fleet numbers bordered on the incomprehensible at times, and I hope this list will attempt to unravel the mysteries of the system. As might be expected from this page, I have stopped recording deliveries at the point in 1952 when a batch of underfloor-engined Regal IV coaches were delivered, because this page only covers the halfcabs.
This photo was kindly supplied by David Beardmore and shows No.703 (NJO 703) at Showbus, Duxford in September 1996. This is the only one of the 1949 batch of Regals to survive. Retired in 1959 it was sold as staff transport to an engineering firm. In 1967 it was then purchased by a preservation group for the princely sum of £50. Later its ownership was transferred to the Oxford Bus Museum.
For more information about Oxford Buses visit the Oxford & Chilterns Bus Page . Many thanks to David Root for all his help in getting the facts straight, and to Martin Shaw for additional details.
As always, I'm sure mistakes have crept 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 I - 171-176 (Total 5)
Delivered in 1931
Chassis: AEC Regal I, O662
Body: Park Royal C28F
AEC REGAL 4 - GC41-46 (Total 6)
An interesting wartime picture of GC44 (JO 5035) at Oxford's Gloucester Green Bus Station. Note the white paint on the front mudguards, although it is doubtful how effective this was as a warning of approach in the blackout ! The 1932 Weymann body is a classic style of the period, although the cab had been rebuilt after an accident in Feb 1944, and had a modified cab door and adjacent window, visible in the photo. Perhaps glass was in short supply, so part of the door and window were panelled in. Photo in April 1945 by RHG Simpson. Additional notes by Martin Shaw.
Delivered in July 1932
Chassis: AEC Regal 4, 5.1 litre engine
Body: Weymann B32F
Notes: Originally numbered just 41-46.
AEC REGAL 4 - 56-61 (Total 6)
Delivered in August 1933
Chassis: AEC Regal 4, 5.1 litre engine
Body: Weymann B32F
AEC REGAL II - J177-182 (Total 6)
Delivered in 1935
Chassis: AEC Regal II O662, A171 engine (7.7 litre).
Body: Park Royal B32F
Another wartime picture, this time of J180 (BFC 36), also at Gloucester Green bus station. Note the rear luggage roof rack, 'blackout' masks over the headlamps and, just visible above the nearside headlamp, the stalk on the front wing to help the driver judge the width of his vehicle. This was a useful feature, but not common, although those familiar with the London Transport 'GS' Guy Specials will recall that they too had these fitted. (Photo taken in June 1944 by RHG Simpson, acquired via the East Pennine Transport Group, Huddersfield)
AEC REGAL - J74-89 (not consecutive) (Total 6)
Delivered in May-June 1935
Chassis: AEC Regal O662, A171 engine (7.7 litre).
Body: Weymann B32F
AEC REGAL I - J12-159 (not consecutive) (Total 9)
Delivered in 1936
Chassis: AEC Regal I O662, A171 engine (7.7 litre).
Body: Park Royal B32F
Notes: All gone by 1957.
Yet again we have a wartime picture (or at least the white blackout flashes on the front mudguards are still in evidence), also at Gloucester Green bus station. Regal J12 (CFC 778 was new in 1936 and withdrawn in 1950. The photographer is unknown but the picture is from the Chris Stanley collection.
AEC REGAL I - J1-J111 (not consecutive) (Total 15)
And another wartime picture, this time showing EFC 292 (originally numbered J104, seen here as JD104, later becoming just 104) standing in the sun at Oxford's Gloucester Green bus station opposite The Welsh Pony Hotel in George Street, with "Thame" on the destination blind. Photo taken May 1944 by RHG Simpson.
Delivered in May 1937
Chassis: AEC Regal O662, A171 engine (7.7 litre).
Body: Weymann 32-seat front-entrance bus bodies with roof luggage pannier (106-111 were DP32F).
Notes: This series originally had the prefix 'J' before the fleet number. This was later altered to 'JD' ('D' standing for 'Direct Injection'), although the dual-purpose vehicles (106-111) were 'JA'; finally the prefix was disused from 1946. All this batch had been sold by 1957.
AEC REGAL I - J7-J115 (not consecutive) (Total 4)
Delivered in June 1938
Chassis: AEC Regal I, O662, A171 engine (7.7 litre).
Body: Weymann 32-seat front-entrance bus bodies.
Notes: All gone by 1957.
AEC REGAL - EA/EB 63-66 (Total 4)
Yet another wartime picture. EA63 (HFC 410) with 'blackout' headlamp masks and white paint on the wings and dumb irons, about to depart for Bedford. Photo, probably taken in 1942, by kind permission of the Omnibus Society, No.77.1359.
Martin Shaw adds; "HFC 410 was also at Gloucester Green bus station, but on the bit that coaches used, ie South Midland and United Counties, etc. This bus is on the Bedford service which had been taken over from G O Gammond (Blue Bus Service) of Bedford, jointly with Eastern National in January 1942. Eastern National operated the Bedford area until 1952 when it all went to United Counties."
Delivered in April/May 1939
Chassis: AEC Regal I, O662
Body: Weymann B32F (63 and 64 were Dual Purpose).
Notes: All sold by 1957. Dave Farrier mailed me to say that EB66 (HFC 413) went to Malta and became "Y-0349" with a new locally-built body by Barbara. Dave identified it there in 1991, but its eventual fate is not known. He has a photo of it in green livery.
AEC REGAL - EB 47-149 (not consecutive) (Total 5)
Yet another wartime picture, probably taken in 1942, this time of EB148 (JFC 779) at Reading railway station, heading back into Oxford on route 34. Curiously it wears its fleet number on a board mounted in slots in the front passenger saloon window. As the ubiquitous serviceman departs to the right, a bowler-hatted gentleman disembarks with briefcase and brolly. Oxford was fortunate that this bus was virtually new at the time; a very small number of Regals were supplied to customers in 1940 but no more were to appear until the end of hostilities. Photo by kind permission of the Omnibus Society, No.77.1358.
Delivered in March 1940
Chassis: AEC Regal O662
Body: Weymann B32F
Notes: All gone by 1957.
AEC REGAL III - 601-606 (Total 6)
Delivered in 1948
Chassis: AEC Regal III 9621A, 9.6 litre engines and crash gearboxes.
Body: Modified Duple 'A' style 32-seat front-entrance coach bodies.
Notes: According to my records, I saw all of these in 1962 except No.605. Probably this would have been at Victoria Coach Station, as the whole batch were on loan to Black & White Motorways for the summer of 1962.
Another great Roger Hardy photo, taken around 1961. This is No.602 (MWL 995) near Digbeth Coach Station, Birmingham.
AEC REGAL III - 701-720 (Total 20)
Delivered 1949/50
Chassis: AEC Regal III 9621A, 9.6 litre engine and 'crash' gearboxes.
Body: Willowbrook 32-seat front-entrance buses. Entrances had recessed, automatic doors at the top of the steps. (701-710 were dual-purpose).
This is Oxford AEC Regal III No.716 (NJO 716) built in 1949. Its sister No.703 (NJO 703) is shown at the top of the page, and has been preserved by The Oxford Museum. The photo was taken by Roger Hardy in Gloucester Green Bus Station, on what was known as "The Patch", in (he thinks) 1961. If so, this would probably be nearing the very end of its life with C.O.M.S., as the whole batch had been withdrawn by the end of 1962.
AEC REGAL III - 721-729 (Total 9)
Delivered in 1950
Chassis: AEC Regal III 9621A, 9.6 litre engine and 'crash' gearbox.
Body: Willowbrook Dual-purpose 32-seat front-entrance bodies.
Notes: These were the last halfcab Regals purchased, and were virtually identical to the previous delivery. The most visible difference was that the automatic doors were at the foot of the steps, rather than recessed at the top. The entire batch was sold in 1963, but all went on to other operators and continued to earn a living. One has survived to the present day, as shown below;
This photo was kindly supplied by David Beardmore and shows No.727 (OJO 727) from the 1950 delivery (the only survivor from the batch), which is preserved at Islip by Graham Wareham. It is seen here at Sandtoft in July 1992.
TOTAL 103 ( with 3 Survivors, EB66, 703 & 727 )
====================================================
For many other buses, have a look at all the other profiles on the Classic Buses menu page.
To the Classic Buses Home Page
Home Email Events Diary Photo album Halfcab list COMPLETE WEBSITE MENU THE TRANSPORT HOBBY SHOP Links Small-Ads B.B.P.G. Classic Irish Buses