An earlier article looked at some early experimental road vehicles
run in the Greenwich area in the 1820s. Future articles will look at
manufacturers - particularly Joshua Beale and Frank Hills - and some more
experiments. In the early 1830s there
were attempts to run omnibus services in several parts of the country - some
long distance on the long haul coach routes to places like Bath, and some
shorter suburban services. Greenwich was a popular destination for these - both
as a stop on the Dover Road and as a town near enough London to almost count as
a suburb. Greenwich was also was handily
near the premises of several engine builders and had a number engineering works
in the town itself.,
One of the most successful
builders whose carriages made long regular runs was Goldsworthy Gurney.
He seems to have had no connection with Kent but some of his carriages were
adapted for a proposed run to Greenwich.
He had built a carriage in 1826 which was about 20 feet long and would
take six inside passengers and fifteen outside. It will be seen that these were on the same principle as a stage coach and designed for carrying
passengers on service routes - not as individual private transport.
Gurney's carriages were being used in the Gloucestershire area by
Sir Charles Dance. The service
encountered a great deal of opposition from both stage coach proprietors and the
Turnpike Trusts. A Parliamentary
Committee examined the subject of steam carriage services and found in favour,
but a Steam Carriage Bill could not be got through the House of Lords. It must, however, have seened likely that
suburban services were a better possibility.
In 1831 Dance went to the engineering firm of Maudslay, Sons and
Field, then based at Waterloo - they
later moved a site on Greenwich
Marsh where they built ships. Dance asked Maudslay to make Gurney's
carriage more powerful and this was done. During the autumn of 1833 this rebuilt vehicle made a number of
test runs from Maudslay's works in
Waterloo. With a party of fifteen observers on board they went to places
like Merstham on the Brighton Road and
visited Beulah Spa and some other spas
in the Sydenham area .
In October 1833 Dance's new carriage ran for a fortnight between
Waterloo Bridge and Greenwich. It was
always said that it was not intended
that this should be a proper public transport service so ordinary people were
deterred from using it by the price of tickets - 'half a crown for tickets each
way'. That was the end of this brief omnibus service which did not
continue and there seems to be no record of what happened to the carriage. The service must have failed for reasons
which were not made public.
A year or so later another omnibus service ran between London to
Greenwich using coaches built by John Scott Russell. Russell was Scottish and these carriages had
been designed and built by him in Edinburgh. They had been used for a service
between Glasgow and Paisley but in the summer of 1834 one of the carriages had
overturned. It was later said that this
was because the turnpike trustees in Glasgow had put extra thick layers of
stone on the road to stop his carriages running. As a result five passengers
were killed and the Scottish Courts forbade him to run the carriages again in
Scotland. So, unable to use them in
Scotland, Russell sent two of the carriages by ship to London for use
in trips to Greenwich.
For this service on these, rather compromised, carriages the fares
were kept cheap. The vehicles had to haul a tender full of coke along the road
behind them and pick up water at places along the way as they went. Scott Russell himself came to London to live
in 1838. He was to become an important ship builder - he designed the Great
Eastern - and he eventually lived in
Sydenham. It does not seem to have
persisted with the omnibus service to Greenwich and after an attempt to sell
the carriages no more was heard of them.
There were probably several inventors trying to design steam road carriages. In 1834 Francis
Maceroni - more of him later - gave a list of
steam carriage builders whose vehicles ' would not move at all'. This is just a list of names without details
and many have not yet been traced. One
who may have a Greenwich connection was
'Mr. Joyce' . William Joyce owned an engineering company at the Kent
Ironworks in Greenwich where he designed and made a successful steam engine.
Kent Ironworks was situated on the first site on the right after crossing
today's Creek Bridge from Deptford.
Joyce probably started in work in Greenwich in 1841 when he acquired
part of an old gas works site but whether he is the Mr. Joyce mentioned by
Maceroni and whether this abortive steam car was made in Greenwich is not
known. Kent Ironworks would later
produce a more successful steam road vehicle as we will see.
The most successful of the steam carriage builders of the 1830s was
Walter Hancock who designed and made vehicles in Stratford, east London. Hancock was one of a most interesting family
- his brother, Thomas, has been called
'the foremost rubber technologist in England' and was a partner of the,
better known, Mr. Charles Mackintosh.
Another brother, Charles, was responsible for the first use of gutta
percha which was to revolutionise Thameside cable manufacture. Walter Hancock was happy to advertise his
brother's products by his 'flexible tubing' to suck up water for his steam road
vehicles
Walter Hancock was the only one of the early road vehicle inventors
who designed a locomotive which could go through crowded London streets on busy
days. Some of his coaches were run in an
omnibus service to Greenwich - but accounts of what happened are often
confusing and contradictory.
Hancock's coaches all had identifying names - one was even called 'Autopsy'. A coach called 'Era' is shown in illustrations, dating from 1832, and advertising a service between London and Greenwich. Era was built by Hancock for a body called the London and Greenwich Steam Carriage Company. It appears that separate companies had been set up to run omnibus routes - one of them, for instance, was the London and Paddington Steam Carriage Company. These companies, ostensibly different, all seem to have had most of the same people behind them. The London and Greenwich Steam Carriage was not a Greenwich based company but a body set up in London which wanted to run an omnibus service to Greenwich.
The engineer of the London and Greenwich Steam Carriage company was
D. Redmund, was based in City Road, Islington and there are conflicting
accounts of exactly what happened. Redmund
is said to have ordered a different bus - called Enterprise - for
Greenwich from Hancock. When
Enterprise arrived Redmund took it to
pieces and noted down all the dimensions. He then began to build another bus himself
- called Alpha - which was an
almost complete copy of Enterprise. The vehicle ran some test runs but never
seems to have gone into service.
Potential passengers, worried about a boiler explosion, were assured
that ' the only parts of the boiler which can be dreaded are the sides - but
good ties will keep them together' and,
as for the rest of the boiler 'its power of doing mischief is not worth
notice'.
The drawing of 'Era' shows a comfortable looking vehicle with a
driver at the front and the engine completely shielded from the passengers.
There is a grand crest on the side of the coach which perhaps meant to imply
some sort of aristocratic patronage.
Hancock made a number of very successful steam omnibuses some which
on service routes for some time. However he seems to have made little money and
gave up work in the late 1830s. It is to
be hoped that 'Era' did see some service on the road to Greenwich but it is
more likely that she never got beyond the stage of running trials. In 1832 the line which was to become the
London and Greenwich Railway had already been surveyed and, when complete, may
well have provided competition which Era could not have met.
By the end of the 1830s steam road transport was a reality. Kentish
roads had already seen some experimental vehicles and attempts to run public
services. The first years of the next
decade would see attempts to make vehicles in Greenwich and witness their first
trials around Kent.
This article has been compiled from a variety of sources, in
particular local newspapers and the trade press of the day. There is a considerable literature about
steam road carriages, I have drawn particularly on William Fletcher's Steam
on Common Roads. (1891) Walter Hancock wrote his own biography but
all accounts conflict on details of events.
Mary Mills
1 comment:
Walter Hancock was a true Steam Carriage genius and carried 12600 fare paying passengers over a continuous 6 month period on routes through the streets of London in 1833.
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