It's July 1995 and once again the weather is kind enough for us to venture down the road to Fleetwood to have a look at the vehicles at the annual Tram Sunday vehicles festival.
This is a reminder of my own first 4-wheeled car. A 1961 Hillman Minx. Mine had the registration 385 TD. I bought it in 1971 at the the age of 17 after a year of embarrassing myself driving old Reliant three-wheelers about. In comparison this was a tank. The Hillman Minx was a tremendously popular car. Built from 1931 it went though a pre-war (WW2) version, a wartime version then a postwar Mk.1 to Mk.VIII before this version designed by Rootes and labelled the Audax design was released in 1956 going through Series.1 to Series.VI before a totally new body design came out in 1967, known as the New Minx - a basic version of the Hillman Hunter.
This is identical to my car, though later series lost the rear fins, to the detriment of the overall look of the car. Series IV never existed but to make up for it Series.III had Series.IIIa - to Series.IIIc. Confusing isn't it...? Anyway, mine had not so much a bench seat, but two large seats that touched together so the handrake came out from under the dash and the gear lever was... no... not on the steering column but it was a bent affair from far forward on the floor which then bent over the front middle seat. Potentially embarrassing if you had two other passengers on the front seat in those days of mini skirts, but then again I never was one for being easily embarrassed! Braking hard was something of a fear-inducing exercise of holding the steering wheel hard enough and stepping on the brake pedal hard enough that you were in a standing position before the car deigned to slow down...
A 1965 Ford Anglia Super 123E as identified by the two-tone paint jobby with surrounding chrome strips on the side flash. This was the top of the range model effectively replacing for good the Ford Prefect.
Like buses - you don't see one for ages and then two turn up together...
The van-bodied version of the earlier Ford Anglia was known as the Ford Thames van. Note the semaphore trafficators behind the driver's side window.
A Morris Commercial J-Type van. Made from 1949 to 1961, this van could carry ten hundredweight (10 cwt) or half a ton. It was one of the first vans to have the cab right at the front of the vehicle with hardly any protruding bonnet. Over 48,000 were made with the Post Office using them extensively. Their vehicles differed slightly from the standard J-Type in that their front and rear wings were made of rubber.
A 1964 Triumph Herald 12/50 convertible. An deluxe version of the Herald 1200. By the time this car came out the Standard-Triumph company had been bought out by Leyland Motors. They gave the 1200 model a cash injection and came up with improved seating, a rubber-covered bumper (I bet you're all going "Wow!" just at that aren't you?) and wooden trim dashboard. Disc brakes were fitted from 1962 as an option. The following year this 12/50 version came out and front disc brakes were fitted as standard. The Herald had a strange engine covering - instead of an opening bonnet, the entire front of the car including wings and headlights etc. lifted from the rear to stand vertically in front of the car. This meant access was only possible from either side of the engine. They were very popular and photos of Heralds even now draw exclaimations of devotion on online websites and pages where they are affectionately known as "Harolds".
A 1935 single-deck half-cab bus owned by the Ribble Vehicle Preservation Trust. Based on a Leyland Tiger chassis, this bus originally had an English Electric 31-seater bus body but after World War II was fitted with a larger engine and a new Burlingham body. It remained in service until 1960 then ownership passed through a few private owners before it was spotted in 1972 masquerading as a garden shed in Fleetwood. It was restored in due course and donated to the Ribble Vehicle Preservation Trust.
BMW Isetta bubble car. These were originally made by an Italian firm Iso - "Isetta" being a derived name from the Italian for "Little Iso". Both 4-wheel and 3-wheel versions were produced but in the UK the 3-wheeled version was more popular because they were classed as a motorbike and could be driven on a motorbike licence and also cost less in road tax. They were made here in a right-hand drive version which caused a small problem in that the engine was also mounted towards the right so counterweights had to be added on the left to cure the tendency to lean or roll over. They were produced from 1957-1962 in the UK, though production in Italy started in 1952.
A loud rumbling noise mingled with the hiss of steam heralds an Aveling & Porter steam roller, from 1912. Named "Betsy" and given the production number: 7632, such vehicles, a regular sight during my early childhood in the 1950s are now only rarely seen on public roads.
There was something familiar about the chap with glasses - it was steeplejack and demolition expert, Fred Dibnah!
Oh, go on... It's Tram Sunday so let's have a look at a tram. Balloon tram 716 on Lord Street. It was sporting a pantograph, rather than long trailing pole to pick up electricity from the overhead wire. These trams were the mainstay of Blackpool's trams, moving people by the hundred from Starr Gate in the south to the Tower, North Pier, Bispham and beyond to Fleetwood Ferry. This type of tram was first delivered to Blackpool in 1934 and were used on regular service until the new light rail tramway system started in 2012. They can still be seen on service as part of the Heritage Fleet. This particular tram though was sold and used as an office and current whereabouts are unknown, presumed scrapped.
1954 Southern National Bristol LS6G coach with bodywork by Eastern Coach Works.
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