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Dundee and District Tramways

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Status
  
Closed

Depot(s)
  
South Road, Dundee

Close
  
1899

Propulsion system(s)
  
Horse and Steam

Open
  
1877

Locale
  
Dundee

Dundee and District Tramways httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Track gauge
  
1,435 mm (4 ft 8 ⁄2 in)

Dundee and District Tramways operated a tramway service in Dundee between 1877 and 1899.

Contents

History

The Dundee and District Tramways Company introduced horse-drawn tramways in Dundee in 1877. The company was forced to hire vehicles from other companies to allow services to start. 1A and 2A came from Edinburgh Street Tramways and 3A, 4A and 5A were hired from Glasgow Tramway and Omnibus Company.

By June 1885 the company was experimenting with steam cars from Thomas Green & Son in a green and white livery.

Unusually, the tram lines were publicly built and owned, although initially leased by police commissionaires to private companies.

The depot of 1879 was located on South Road, and was designed by the Scottish architect, James Maclaren.

Closure

All routes came under direct municipal control in 1899, which allowed the city to adopt overhead electric lines to power the trams. Between 1899 and 1902 the tramways were fully electrified, and operated from then on by Dundee Corporation Tramways.

Steam tram trailer car 21 survived and is now housed at the National Tramway Museum

References

Dundee and District Tramways Wikipedia


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