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Merton
Garage centenary event
Sunday 17 November 2013
Page last updated 9 October
2013
Event page retained for
reference
The London General Omnibus Co Ltd opened Merton Garage on 20
November 1913. One of its first routes was the 88, which
started on 18 December 1913 as Mitcham to Oxford Circus via Clapham
Common, extended west to Acton Green 1914, south to Belmont
1924. The route is now operated by London General (part of
the Go-Ahead group), from Clapham Common to Camden Town via Oxford
Circus. The route was worked (wholly or partly) by Merton
Garage for most of its first 50 years.
The centenary will be celebrated by
Go-Ahead London General, in conjunction with the London Bus Museum,
with a garage open day on Sunday 17 November.
Merton Garage's lowbridge
utility Daimler D130 pauses in North Cheam on its way from Morden
to South Wimbledon in 1948.
Photo © Alan
Cross
The garage open day will be raising
funds for nominated local charity Merton Mencap. The day will
include a bus display and stalls in a segregated part of the
garage, guided garage tours, bus wash rides, and a free historic
bus service 100 to Wimbledon. The event runs from
1030 to 1630. Other than the tours, the public will not be
admitted to the operational part of the garage, and visitors should
be aware that this is a busy working garage and should ensure they
keep clear of moving vehicles.
The route 100 timetable is contained
in London General's leaflet here. The route
will run from Merton Garage via Wimbledon Station to Wimbledon
Village and cover the Wimbledon Tennis Special bus route.
RM2107 pulls out from Merton
Garage to run the long 88 via Mitcham and central London to Acton
Green. After handing over the main part of route 88 to
Stockwell in 1958, Merton returned to the route on Sundays only
from 1981 to 1986. The date is 10 May 1981, a couple of weeks
after the new operation.
Photo © John Parkin
RTL1531 is seen at Tooting
Amen Corner, in the days when the 88 reached its
southern-most point at Banstead Hospital.
Photo courtesy Ian
Armstrong/Bob Turner collection
It had been hoped to mark the centenary of route 88 with a
special operation, but that has not proved to be possible.
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An evocative reminder of the variety of buses
that had been swept away by the mid-
50s - Merton's roofbox STL2007 on the
118 to Raynes Park, Holloway's ST424 on the
4A to Finsbury Park and
Merton's D180 on a 5A short to South Wimbledon, lined
up
at Clapham Common Old Town on 12 Feb
49. The 5 A (a North Cheam route) later
became the 189 as part of the tram
replacement programme.
Photo © Alan Cross
Route 200 has been
operated by Merton Garage since the route started in 1930
(then
numbered route 103), except for a couple
of brief periods post-privatisation. In
December 1952, the route was converted from Q
to RF operation by the allocation of
seven brand new RFs, including RF356 seen
when new at the stand by Wimbledon
Police Station.
Photo © Jim Andress
The last 88 to Banstead Hospital, seen at the
terminus on Sunday 30 Dec 73, was
operated by Stockwell's RM1919.
Photo © Bob Turner
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