Author Archives: Bob Goodenough

Motoring and Transport in the Forties

On Thursday 12th February the History Society listened to Michael Bartlett who enthusiastically told us about what it was like to travel on the roads in the forties.

Buses where his initial interest.  As a boy, living in Morden in the forties, he could observe all the different types and makes of bus then being used by London Transport. The Bus Stop was right outside his house.

His passion about forties motoring was enhanced by the acquisition of every copy of the weekly magazine Autocar produced during the decade. A collection he still retains to this day.

Studying these Autocar Magazines led him to prepare his fascinating story. Some highlights of which are reflected below.

All vehicles to be used after dark had to have white flashes painted on the mudguards and along their sides. The blackout made it difficult to see clearly at night and so any aid to vision was some small help. Headlights had to be shrouded, which meant that drivers fumbled their way forward often ending in the ditch or buried into roadworks. It was said that there were more casualties on the road than Hitler inflicted on us with his bombs.

As petrol rationing took effect public transport was stretched to the limit with overloaded buses providing an essential service in getting people to and from work. Long distance journeys were curtailed and coaches such as those used on the Greenline service were converted into emergency ambulances.

Private motoring was still possible but shortages of rubber for tyres and lead for batteries together with petrol rationing severely restricted movement. Vehicles travelling around coastal areas required a permit and identity. The Homeguard checked these at roadblocks.

Increasingly vehicles were taken off the road and immobilised.  The Police received the immobilising part for safe keeping during the conflict. If your vehicle was for essential use you had to immobilise it when parked. Otherwise the Police or Homeguard would do it for you, by letting all the tyres down.

Every attempt was done to confuse the invader by removing signposts and displaying coded destination blinds on buses. Unless you were familiar with your route and destination this practice inevitably caused confusion amongst the indigenous population.

As petrol became even scarcer other methods of fuel were introduced. It was not uncommon to see gasbags on top of cars filled with town gas as a fuel.  Many vehicles towed a special trailer, which generated producer gas from coke.

After the war things didn’t get any better in spite of the desire to get motoring again. New cars were in very short supply due to lack of materials. Many cars immobilised during the war were never sore the light of day. Ex-service vehicles were now redundant; but to acquire one wrapped you in endless red tape to the point that people just didn’t bother. Eventually these vehicles were sold at auction.

By the end of the forties Public Transport was in its heyday, but it wouldn’t be long before the private car held sway.

Malcolm Kindell

Local Oxfordshire talks – February 2015

Information provided by the OLHA (www.olha.org.uk)

5th – City of Oxford Society of Model Engineers – Donald Gray “The Restoration of Wheatley Mill”. COSME Club House, Cutteslowe Park, Oxford, 8:00pm.

5th– Eynsham – Steve Lord “Bonnie Prince Charlie”. Church Hall, Thames Street, 7:30pm.

9th – Chipping Norton – Simon Wenham “The History of Salters Steamers in Oxford”. Methodist Church, West Street, 7:30pm.

9th – Goring & Streatley – Tony Hadland “The History of the Bicycle”. Goring Village Hall, 2:30pm.

9th – Radley – Members’ interests. School Hall, 7:30pm.

10th – Marcham – Tim Healey “Sex, Drink & Death in 17th Century Oxfordshire”. Marcham church, 7:45pm.

12th – Banbury – David Stuttard “The Romans Who Shaped Britain”. Banbury Museum, Spiceball Park Road, 7:30pm.

12th – Didcot – Martin Way “The Agincourt Archer”. Northbourne Centre, Church Street, 7:30pm.

12th – Wootton & Dry Sandford –  Michael Bartlett “Motoring and Transport in the Forties”. Community Centre, Lamborough Hill, Wootton, 7.30pm.

13th – Charlbury – Martin Greenwood “The Role of the Country Carrier”. Memorial Hall, Browns Lane, 8:00pm.

16th – Adderbury – Valerie Burton “Witney Blankets”. Methodist Chapel, Chapel Lane, 7:30pm.

16th – Bicester – Pat Snelson “Bricks & Building Materials in Bicester’s Buildings”. Clifton Centre, Ashdene Road, 7:30pm.

16th – Enstone – Evening of poetry, prose and music with the theme of the history of courtship. Buffet dinner to be included. Venue tbc (contact 01608 677246, carolawt@gmail.com), 7:30pm.

17th – Clanfield & Bampton – Bill King “The River Thames at War”. Carter Institute, Clanfield, 7:30pm.

17th – Cowley – Roger Gelder and George Ross “The Search for Oxford’s Medieval Wall”. Temple Cowley United Reformed Church, Temple Road, 8:00pm.

17th – Iffley – Alastair Lack “Oxford in The Civil War”. Church Hall, Church Way, 7:30pm.

18th – Bloxham – Shaun Morley “The Oxfordshire Swing Riots of 1830”. Jubilee Hall, off Brickle Lane, 7:30pm.

19th – Abingdon – Mark Cornwall “Traitors and Treason in the Great War”. Northcourt Centre, Northcourt Road, 7:45 pm.

19th– Eynsham – Graham  Bannell “Personal  Perspectives  on the Revitalisation of Older Buildings”. Church Hall, Thames Street, 7:30pm.

20th– Finstock – Andrew Sargent “The Prehistory of the Upper Thames”. Village Hall, 8:00 pm.

23rd – Oxfordshire Family History Society – Tony Hadland “From Trevithick to Barnes Wallis: Tracing a Family of Cornish Engineers, from Camborne to Brooklands, via the Sewers of London”. Exeter Hall, Oxford Road, Kidlington, 8:00pm.

24th – Hanney – Caroline Jackson “Found in an Oxfordshire Manor House, the Diaries of General Primrose 1819-1892”. War Memorial Hall, East Hanney, 8:00pm.

24th – Kidlington – Alastair Lack “A Light Hearted Look at the History of Oxford University”. St John Ambulance Hall, High Street, 7:50pm.

25th – Dorchester – Kemble Croft “All the World’s a Stage: the History of our Theatres from Shakespeare’s Stratford to West End Musicals”. Village Hall, 7:30pm.

26th – Aston – Dan Spencer “Metal Detecting in Aston”. Fellowship Centre, Cote Road, 7:30pm.

26th – Appleton with Eaton – Julie Ann Godson “The Water Gypsy: How a Thames Fishergirl Became a Viscountess”. Community Hall, 2:00pm. TBC.

The Coming of the Railway to Oxford

For our first meeting in 2015 we welcomed back Liz Woolley who gave us an excellent talk on “How the Coming of the Railway Changed Oxford”. She described the background development of the railways in Britain and how Oxford joined the network. The railway in Oxford then had profound effects on the landscape, the nature of trade and the population level, all of which were described with the aid of well chosen illustrations.

From early beginnings with the Liverpool to Manchester line in 1830 the number of route miles increased to 6000 in1851 and peaked at around 20,000 in 1914. Brunel’s Great Western Railway reached Steventon in 1838 but not until 1843 was a Bill approved to build a branch line to Oxford. The University objected to the original plan for a line through Iffley village but also on moral grounds, not wishing the undergraduates to have easy access to the fleshpots of London. The route finally accepted terminated at a station at Grandpont, South West of Folly Bridge. There was opposition to this route also, particularly on the siting of a bridge to carry the Abingdon Road over the railway. John Towle, who owned the nearby Paper Mill hastily built a small house of wood and paper on the route, some say to claim compensation. This house was enlarged over many years and stood on a site opposite the Redbridge Waste site. It was demolished in 1998.

In 1851 the rival (standard gauge) railway LNWR, later LMS, came to Oxford and built a station at the site of the present Said Business School. This station was closed in1951 and moved to the Buckinghamshire Railway Centre at Quainton near Aylesbury in 1999. In 1852 the Grandpont station was closed and a new station built on the current site on Botley Road. In the 1880’s a housing development was built on the old site. In 1886 a spur was built to the Gas Works and the elegant bridge over the river still exists. Another relic of the old railway, the swingbridge over Sheepwash Channel, also still exists and preservation work is planned to prevent further deterioration. In 1908 a number of Halts were introduced for a steam carriage but this service was soon superceded by road transport.

The railways led to big reductions in Coach and Canal traffic but led to large increases elsewhere. Brewing, furniture removals, the Jam Factory, cattle pens and rather surprisingly, temperance hotels all appeared in the proximity of the stations. Between 1841 and1901 the population of Oxford doubled and new suburbs were built, often to house railway workers e.g. Osney Island, New Hinksey and Cripley Road. Tourism grew and became more commercialised with new hotels including the Randolph being constructed to replace some of the coaching inns which had earlier closed.

Our next meeting is on Thursday February 12th when Mark Davies will talk about “Motoring and Transport in the Forties”. Visitors (£3) are most welcome.