British Trolleybus Systems - Lancashire, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Northern England: An Historic Overview
Peter Waller
British Trolleybus Systems - Lancashire, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Northern England: An Historic Overview
Peter Waller
Although there had been experiments with the use of a new form of transport - the ‘trackless tram’ (better known as the trolleybus) - during the first decade of the 20th century, it was in June 1911 that Bradford and Leeds became the country’s pioneering operators of trolleybuses. Some of the earliest operators were in Lancashire, northern England and Scotland; indeed Scotland can lay claim to having both the first system in Britain to close - Dundee in 1914 - and the last to open - Glasgow in 1949. This volume - one of four that examines the history of all trolleybus operators in the British Isles - focuses on Lancashire, Northern England, Scotland and Northern Ireland. AUTHOR: Peter Waller is a life long, transport enthusiast and historian, a founder of the Online Transport Archive which preserves transport photographic archives. He has written many books on tramways, buses and railways over the years and this volume on British Trolleybus Systems is his latest. He was for many years the senior commissioning editor for Ian Allan Publishing and is an authority on many aspects of transport history.
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