|
Red RF routes
Route 71
Page last updated 8 February 2018
A Sundays-only OMO conversion of an RT route, the 71 lost its
RFs (to BLs) before losing its RTs (to RMs).
RF314 displays the wrong
blind to Kingston, having terminated at Leatherhead Garage - which
tells us that this is not the famous last journey of RF314 in
1979, but a regular Sunday. Note the second foglight - a
legacy of staff bus operation, as for RF486.
Photo © DC
Wilkinson, Peter Gomm collection
Dates of RF operation
3 Jan 71 to 19 Sep 76
(total 5 years 9 months, all OMO)
Destinations
KINGSTON STATION and LEATHERHEAD
LT Garage (Sun 3 Jan 71 to 5 Mar
72)
RICHMOND Dee Road and
LEATHERHEAD LT Garage (Sun 12 Mar 72 to 19
Sep 76)
Route operated Monday to Saturday by RTs
RF Garages
K Kingston
Reason for single-deck operation
Only RFs were available at Kingston for OMO operation.
The traditional 71 - RT3232 (later to become
famous) in Kingston's one-way system passes Norbiton's BL54 on the
264. For those who wish an earlier
RT shot (during the period when the 71 replaced the Saturday TD
shorts to Sunbury on the 216), the famous
trolleybus RT1611 appears in Michael Dryhurst's
picture here.
Photo © Andrew
Colebourne
Route history
Introduced as the first new route in 1950, the 71 was up
to 1990 a double-deck route covering the back roads between
Kingston and Richmond, with a range of extensions either end at
different times. For most of that period, the 65 covered the
main road, extending on southwards to the Country Area garage at
Leatherhead. Both were (in the main) RT routes.
On 30 Nov 68, the southern section of the 65 from Kingston to
Leatherhead was switched to the 71, which gained a Sunday service
(over that section only) for the first time since 1958. Just
over two years later, on 3 Jan 71, one-man operation was
introduced on Sundays, using Kingston's RFs.
A nostalgic shot of the
Leatherhead Garage forecourt in September 1976. Kingston's
RF404 was withdrawn that month. Behind is a London Country SM
and an RT apparently still available for work on the 406.
There is another fine photo by John of RF404, climbing Bridge
Street, Leatherhead, here. Note the blind
always showed Richmond Lower Mortlake Road, whereas the
timetable refers to Richmond Dee Road.
Photo
© John Parkin
The Sunday service was extended on 12 Mar 72 over
the full length of the route, providing Sunday buses to the Ham
Estate and the Tudor Estate for the first time. However, the
Sunday route through the Ham Estate differed from the weekday
route, with two different versions in 1972. Initially, the
northern part of the Ham Estate was unserved, with the Sunday route
running via Ham Common North. This changed on 29 Oct 72, when
Riverside Drive to the north of the wekday route received a
Sunday-only service.
RFs ran down to the Leatherhead London Country garage
until 26 Sep 76, when Kingston's first BLs had arrived to run
the 216 and replaced RFs on the
71. It was found that BLs could make the turn into Ham Street,
so the Sunday route was changed to follow the weekday routing
from May 1977.
As a postscript to RF operation, the last appearance of
an RF on the 71 was the Sunday before the end of RF operation at
Kingston, 24 Mar 79, when driver John Boylett managed to convinced
the garage engineers to swap a BL for an RF, which did a round trip
Kingston - Leatherhead - Richmond and back to Kingston. This
last RF on the 71 was RF314. That day was also the last
of Sunday operation for a while, when the Sunday service and
part of the weekday service was replaced by BL-operated
265. BLs reappeared on Sunday in 1980 when the 265 was
withdrawn.
The
weekday RTs lasted until March 1978, just over a year before their
final run on the 62, with Routemasters
operating a truncated route (Leatherhead was no longer served after
March 1979) until 1985. The route still operates with
double-deckers, now only from Kingston to Chessington Zoo (sorry,
'World of Adventures'), and via Copt Gilders Estate, with the
Leatherhead section (and the Leatherhead to Dorking southern leg of
the old 470) now covered by the 465 and
most of the Ham section by the 371.
RF route in detail, with timing points
KINGSTON STATION, (southbound) Clarence Street, Fairfield
West, Fairfield South, (northbound) Hawks Road, Albert Road, London
Road, Clarence Street, Wood Street; Villiers Road, Lingfield
Avenue, Beaufort Road, Claremont Road, Surbiton Station, Victoria Road, Upper
Brighton Road, Hook Road, Hook
Ace of Spades, Hook Road Chessington, Leatherhead
Road, Chessington Zoo,
Leatherhead Road, Malden Rushett, Leatherhead Road, Kingston Road Oxshott Road, Bull
Hill, North Street; (southbound only) High Street, The Crescent,
Church Street; Bridge Street, Guildford Road, LEATHERHEAD LT
Garage (Suns, 3 Jan 71 to 5 Mar 72)
RICHMOND Dee Road, Sheendale Road (return via
Victoria Villas), Lower Mortlake Road, Kew Road, Richmond Station, The Quadrant;
(southbound) Eton Street, Paradise Road, Red Lion Street,
(northbound) George Street; Hill Street, Petersham Road,
Petersham Dysart
Arms, Ham Common North Side; Ham Estate: Lock
Road, Broughton Ave, Dukes Ave; Ham Hawker Siddeley Works, Tudor
Estate: Tudor Drive, Park Road, Kings
Road Park Road, Kings Road; Richmond
Road, Kingston
Granada (southbound) Clarence Street, Fairfield
West, Fairfield South, Kingston
Station (northbound) Hawks Road, Albert Road,
London Road, Clarence Street, Wood Street; Villiers Road, Lingfield
Avenue, Beaufort Road, Claremont Road, Surbiton Station, Victoria Road, Upper
Brighton Road, Hook Road, Hook
Ace of Spades, Hook Road Chessington, Leatherhead
Road, Chessington Zoo,
Leatherhead Road, Malden Rushett, Leatherhead Road, Kingston Road Oxshott Road, Bull
Hill, North Street; (southbound only) High Street, The Crescent,
Church Street; Bridge Street, Guildford Road, LEATHERHEAD LT
Garage (Suns, 12 Mar 72 to 22 Oct 72)
RICHMOND Dee Road, Sheendale Road (return via
Victoria Villas), Lower Mortlake Road, Kew Road, Richmond Station, The Quadrant;
(southbound) Eton Street, Paradise Road, Red Lion Street,
(northbound) George St; Hill Street, Petersham Road,
Petersham Dysart
Arms, Sandy Lane, Ham Estate: Ham Street, Riverside
Drive (N section), Ashburnham Road (W section), Broughton
Ave, Dukes Ave; Ham Hawker
Siddeley Works, Tudor Estate: Tudor Drive, Park Road,
Kings Road Park Road,
Kings Road; Richmond Road, Kingston Granada (southbound)
Clarence Street, Fairfield West, Fairfield South, Kingston Station (northbound)
Hawks Road, Albert Road, London Road, Clarence Street, Wood Street;
Villiers Road, Lingfield Avenue, Beaufort Road, Claremont Road,
Surbiton Station, Victoria
Road, Upper Brighton Road, Hook Road, Hook Ace of Spades, Hook Road
Chessington, Leatherhead Road, Chessington Zoo, Leatherhead Road, Malden
Rushett, Leatherhead Road, Kingston
Road Oxshott Road, Bull Hill, North Street;
(southbound only) High Street, The Crescent, Church Street; Bridge
Street, Guildford Road, LEATHERHEAD LT Garage (Suns, 29
Oct 72 to 19 Sep 76)
1972 bus map © London
Transport
Frequency
Year |
Mon-Fri |
Sat |
Sun |
1971 |
[RT] |
[RT] |
60 mins * |
1976 |
[RT] |
[RT] |
60 mins |
* Kingston - Chessington, 30 mins (Sunday afternoons)
Kingston to Leatherhead took about 40 minutes, Richmond
to Leatherhead about 72 minutes.
RF allocation
PVR 1971 (Jan): Mon-Fri [15 RT], Sat [10 RT], Sun 4
PVR 1972 (Mar): Mon-Fri [14 RT], Sat [8 RT],
Sun 3
Memories
Ian Hogben's stories of driving the 71 and other Kingston routes
are on the 216 page.
Re-creation
See details of Hounslow road run, 11
February 2018, for the full Richmond to Leatherhead
re-creation. RF486 also operated the 71 between Leatherhead
and Kingston at the Leatherhead Running Day in 2010.
Chessington Zoo (as was) in
2010. RF486 and Transdev's Polish Scania SP66 await departure
for Kingston.
Photo © Peter Osborn
|
|