
Cumberland Motor Services
1964
Bristol MW6G
ECW B45F
Cumberland 231 (AAO 34B) was a 1964 Bristol MW6G with the standard Eastern Coachworks B45F body. Of
interest is the T-style destination display, which required the front dome to be raised above the
natural roofline of the bus. ECW always managed to make this feature look like a natural part of the
design, whereas some builders used to make this feature look like an "afterthought".
The bus is seen at Seatoller, terminus of service 79 from Keswick. This exceptionally scenic route
followed the Borrowdale Valley, and is nowadays operated by Stagecoach using open top double-deckers.
231 and a sister spent more or less all her life allocated to Keswick Depot, most of this time being
spent on service 79.
Photograph and Copy contributed by Don McKeown
12/02/14 - 18:15
Always thought this was a neat little body on the MW and always preferred the
6Gs. I’m sure Westmorland and Cumberland were better tackled with this engine.
David Oldfield
12/02/14 - 18:35
The 79 was operated jointly with the "Keswick - Borrowdale Bus
service" which consisted of Simpsons and Weightmans - one bus each I think, and for many years
both of them Bedford OB/Duples.
Stephen Ford
13/02/14 - 08:11
Happy days! I regularly travelled on one these workhorses to school.
Cumberland provided 2 x MWs, 1 x FS, and 1 x FLF for the school run from Seascale to Egremont during
the mid 1970s. In addition to the standard MW6G buses there were also a few MW oddities, numbered
222-226. These had been downgraded from coaches or dual-purpose vehicles and at least one of them
still had comfy seats! The MWs were especially suited to working routes that followed narrow winding
roads into the valleys of the Western Lake District, including the 79 from Keswick to Seatoller, the
65 from Cockermouth to Buttermere, and the weekly 11 from Whitehaven into Wasdale. They also
performed well on the less busy southern section of the long coastal route 12 from Whitehaven to
Millom. The tight curve under the low railway bridge at Seascale determined a change of vehicles and
an MW could just squeeze through with an inch on either side. Happily 231 is preserved having been
purchased when it was withdrawn in 1980 by Richard Solyom, a Keswick schoolboy who travelled on it
every day.
Mike Morton
13/02/14 - 10:50
This bus was actually new to Cumberland in 1963 but was kept in store for a
year before it entered service Surprisingly in view of its operating territories sparse population
Cumberland was the most profitable NBC company just before the NBC was dismembered.
Chris Hough
13/02/14 - 13:28
That’s very interesting regarding profitability. There were a number of rural
routes though most of them were in the urban area between the coastal towns and former mining areas:
Egremont, Cleator Moor, Whitehaven, Workington and Maryport plus the busy route from Whitehaven to
Carlisle which still exists as a Stagecoach Gold service. The other factor may have been the large
number of works contracts, especially for Sellafield.
Mike Morton
13/02/14 - 17:30

For a number of years my family had a Hotel in the Borrowdale Valley, (The
Hazelbank Hotel in Rosthwaite), so I know this area very well. The Bristol MWs, now long since gone,
were replaced by the Leyland National, the Mark 2 variety, with out roof pod, if memory serves me
right.
This run up the valley must be one of the nicest in the Country. I have in my
collection a picture of 231 at the Seatoller Terminus in 1979, ready to operate back to Keswick. It
is shown here.
Stephen Howarth
14/02/14 - 07:07
Yes, interesting comments about profitability. Being a bit parochial, I would
have thought Yorkshire Woollen would have been close to the top of the list as regards profitable
companies, indeed, Don Akrigg’s "Colours of West Yorkshire" book described it as "the
BET’s goldmine" and with services into cities such as Leeds, Bradford and Wakefield and large
towns like Halifax and Huddersfield, with numerous smaller ones in-between, one can understand why
it was once a thriving network.
To go back to Cumberland, as a matter of interest, does
anyone know why, after decades of the Seatoller service being numbered 79, Stagecoach changed it to
78 a couple of years back?
Dave Towers
14/02/14 - 17:10
Dave a good point about YWD in the same area YTC must have been profitable too
Cumberland were seen as top dog in the run up to NBC dismemberment when YWD no longer existed as
such being under West Riding management.
Chris Hough
15/02/14 - 06:52
Always thought this was a neat little body on the MW and always preferred the
6Gs. I’m sure Westmorland and Cumberland were better tackled with this engine.
David Oldfield
15/02/14 - 15:29
Chris Hough- the profitability of BET companies like YTC and YWD would be
interesting to know: YWD seemed to suffer acute shortages of working buses, whilst the old YTC
seemed to trundle round potentially crowded routes with a fleet of oldies and goldies- including
oddities taken on from other operators. We don’t seem to have old YTCers on this site? Were these
companies cash cows to finance the conglomerate’s expansion?
Joe
16/02/14 - 07:50
A lovely photo from Don who draws attention to the raising of the roof line to
accommodate the T-style destination. It very much depended on which past of the Tilling empire you
were familiar with as to how unusual this was for down in Essex this was very familiar on Eastern
National’s bus versions.
Indeed when returning to the family’s home in Widnes/Runcorn there
always seemed something odd about Crosville’s examples.
Rob McCaffery
18/02/14 - 08:09
Living Bristol Omnibus territory when I was a boy I remember riding on BOC MWs
frequently to and from school in Wells. There were several allocated to Wells depot. They were
fitted with T-style destination boxes front and rear. Made them look very odd to the Western
National MWs I encountered.
Richard Stubbings
19/02/14 - 15:05
I remember reports in the newspapers (may it even have made television news?)
about Richard buying this bus - it did give me a false-hope that my parents may have somehow
contrived to buy for me a suitable YWD single-decker. I also remember a holiday in Seatoller around
1972, and remember watching these MWs come and go - they seemed very quaint to me back then, usual
single-deck fare around Halifax having BET recessed or twin-curvature screens. Despite my entreaties
we never took the opportunity to ride into Keswick on one . . . and the opportunity to ride on an MW
never subsequently presented itself.
Regarding the profitability of ex-NBC companies, I’m
surprised that Cumberland was top-of-the-list in the run-up to privatisation - did the transfer of
Ribble’s Carlisle-area workings have an influence? In the early 1980s I’m sure that Northern was the
most profitable NBC subsidiary . . . but these things come and go. YTC’s profitability must have
been hit by the decline in the mining industry (less colliery specials, less disposable income for
travel), as must YWDs by the decline of the heavy woollen industry - indeed Arriva’s current network
is just a shadow of that which the NBC inherited in the area. And both YWD and YTC must have
generated a lot of income from the Yorkshire-Blackpool express traffic and other excursion traffic,
which just evaporated through the early 1970s.
Philip Rushworth
19/02/14 - 17:28
He was definitely on the local Border TV news Philip. It gave me false hope
too - I was offered one of Barrow Corporation’s Massey bodied PD2A/27s for £150.00 at around that
time. Even if I had been able to raise the money my parent’s drive wasn’t big enough to park it!
It’s a pity none survived - I always remember the big sliding entrance doors.
Mike Morton
25/02/14 - 16:41
The 79 was renumbered 78 because from c2006 Stagecoach in Cumberland found
itself with two 79s- the other one an ex Western SMT route north of Carlisle which a group
reorganisation had transferred into their hands.
On the profitability point, in 1970 (a
terrible year for the NBC) I remember trade press reports that only Cumberland and Southern Vectis
had turned in a profit. By that time Yorkshire Woollen - and Hebble’s fleets - were in a terrible
state. I remember Decrepit Regent Vs belching out blue smoke and the desperate enthusiasm with which
YWD fell on Sheffield’s C fleet double deckers when the Joint Omnibus Committee was broken up at the
end of 1969. Yorkshire Traction, by contrast, were in a much better state, I think the only second
hand example sin the fleet had come as a result of company takeovers.
Phil Drake
26/02/14 - 07:54
If you look at photographs of the Yorkshire Woollen and Hebble fleet around
1970 you will see that there was no company pride. Bumps and scrapes not repaired and the bad sight
of diesel stains when overfilling. Some of the destination displays were not 100 per cent.
Philip Carlton
25/03/14 - 15:30
Somewhat surprisingly, Colin Shears, who is usually a parochial West Country
enthusiast, mentioned to me that Cumberland used to run Bristol SC4LK’s along Borrowdale. Would this
be the route they were used on?
Peter Cook
26/03/14 - 10:59
The SC4LKs in the Cumberland fleet were known as ‘Sputniks’. According
to Harry Postlethwaite in his excellent Venture publications history of Cumberland, it is alleged
that the first driver to take one out said, on his return. "They should have sent that up in
the Sputnik!". That said they must have found them useful for the lightly loaded rural routes
because the 5 purchased in 1957 and 1959 were supplement by 3 from United Counties and 1 from United
Welsh in 1963 and a further 3 from ENOC a year later. They were used throughout the network from the
web of services on the Solway plain south as far as Millom and inland to places such as Ennerdale
Bridge, and on the 79 from Keswick to Seatoller. Despite this being a scenic route that penetrates
the Lake District fells it follows the valley floor and, unlike parts of the coastal route, has no
stiff climbs. All of these routes were later served by the MWs.
Mike Morton
31/03/14 - 07:12
Great picture.
Can anyone help me with details of routs/timetables
special schools and works services operated by CMS Cumberland Motor Services.?
Alisdair Goodall
02/04/14 - 08:26
Apart from timetables, the best source of information is ‘British Bus
Systems No.1 - Cumberland’ by Harry Postlethwaite, published by TPC in 1983. This was later brought
up to date as ‘Cumberland Motor Services 1921-1996 and published by Venture.
Routes
have inevitably changes over the years, especially following deregulation and take over by
Stagecoach which brought in routes and vehicles operated by Barrow Corporation, and by Ribble in
South Cumbria and Carlisle. Until privatisation the main area of operation was the former county of
Cumberland. The main trunk route was the 30 from Whitehaven to Carlisle via Workington, Maryport and
Wigton which took just over 2 hours with a headway of 30 minutes through much of the day. Other key
longer routes included 12/13 Whitehaven - Egremont - Seascale - Millom, and 34/35 Whitehaven -
Workington Cockermouth - Keswick. There were also town services, and a network of rural routes
including market day only routes such as the Thursdays only 11 from Whitehaven to Wasdale and the 26
to Ennerdale as well as tourist routes such as the 79 Keswick to Seatoller. There was also parcels
traffic and schools and work services. The latter usually carried the destination ‘works’ and
included heavy traffic to Sellafield from various destinations (service 85) and from Workington to
Lillyhall estate for Courtaulds, Heavy Duty Alloys and K-Shoes (service 90). There were also
services to local collieries and iron mines - I often caught a school bus that had just come off the
Beckermet Mine turn on a wet day, its floor red from the iron ore.
There was also the 87 from
Maryport and Workington to the West Cumberland Hospital at Hensingham (Whitehaven).
Mike Morton
30/10/14 - 07:06
Ex Eastern Counties ONV 430 was stabled at Cleator Moor and used on Service 44
from Cleator Moor to Workington via Moresby Parks, Pica, Distington and Harrington for several
years. I clocked up many hours as a passenger on this route in the late 60’s and early 70 and I can
confirm that it struggled with several of the ascents on this route - especially the climbs out of
Harrington if it had to stop at Beckstone Bridge. If I remember rightly it was replaced by a LH (XRM
111J ??) before Cumberland closed the Cleator Moor depot and ran Service 44 from Workington to Pica
with this service being operated by whatever was available - even coaches and DPs found themselves
at Pica.
Smudge
06/02/15 - 06:35
The service 90 actually had the destination "Workmen". One of these
carried on from the Lillyhall industrial estate round the loop road in Distington to form the
Schools service 43 in the 80’s. This was an unusual route as members of the public could use the bus
up to Workington bus station after which it carried on to Workington Grammar School and then on to
Clifton. Standard fare on this route in the early 80’s were MWs LHs and flat front REs with T type
destination blinds. You needed strong arms in those days as they often rostered vehicles with
sticking doors.
Ken Anderson
06/05/15 - 07:22
Nice photos my dad Tommy Thompson was a reguler driver of that vehicle, he was
a Whitehaven driver.
Darren Thompson
09/10/15 - 07:21
Mike Morton. You may remember me from schooldays. Occasionally I remember a
really old single-decker (pre-A reg) turning up as the first bus from Seascale to Egremont. It had
battered green leather seats with high curved backs and the engine was rather noisy, but I really
loved that bus! Do you happen to remember it and if so, do you know what model of bus it was? I hope
it has been preserved.
Karen Caldwell
09/10/15 - 17:19
Hello Karen Lovely to hear from you. That’s an incredible memory and very
accurate too. The first bus that turned up on that school run was usually a standard Bristol MW bus
like 231 above. However, if we were lucky, it would be one from an odd batch of that had formerly
been coaches but had been converted for use as buses. These were also Bristol MWs but they dated
from 1958-1960. They were numbered 222-226 (registrations VAO 390, XAO 600-601, 511-512 BRM) and
some, if not all, were exactly as you describe with those curved leather seats. You can just make
out the seats in the following photo of the last of them: https://www.flickr.com/photos/23207961
Sadly
none have survived though 231, the standard MW in the article, is alive and kicking and regularly
turns up at events all over Cumbria. The buses that followed that first one on the school run were
usually a rear entrance and then a front entrance double decker (Britol Lodekka FS and FLF models).
One of the former 550, which we often caught to school, has also been preserved.
Mike Morton
09/10/15 - 17:22
Karen,
I remember from my visits to Keswick and district in the mid
1960’s that, before Cumberland took over the service, buses to Grange and Seatoller were operated by
the ‘Keswick Borrowdale Bus Services’. According to Neville Mercer’s book "Independent
Operators In North West England", they ceased operating in 1967, and the three Bedford
‘OB’ types still in service then found homes elsewhere. Neville’s book says that two of them
survive.
Pete Davies
01/01/16 - 06:53
With regard the Leyland Nationals most likely the B series these originally
based on short version and simplified heating hence no pod. Introduced about 1977. Cumberland had
some of first examples but many went to Crosville to replace MWs the series 2 Nationals came in
early 80s and had front radiator and available in either length as type A with pod or B type
without
pod.
Howard
02/01/16 - 08:53
The Keswick Borrowdale Bus Services was a wonderful organisation. The
contrast
between the well kept OBs and the intrusion of the new fangled MW was quite something. Although
the
legal capacity of the OBs was considerably less than the MW the practical capacity of the OB was
defined as all those that wanted to go to Keswick! The OBs always managed to keep the customer
happy. If I remember correctly, only the CMS vehicles went to the bus station, the others
terminating at the Moot Hall in central Keswick.
My last trip on this route was on a
Stagecoach open top VRT. I seem to remember it was a whitish mobile advertisement hoarding rather
than the dedicated "Borrowdale Bus". My ever suffering wife recorded the familiar sounds
of the Gardner engine both in motion and idling at Grange. This made an interesting comparison
with
the sound of the Cummins engine of an Olympian effortlessly attacking Dunmail Rise.
The
evil
weather has dealt a severe blow to this area and our thoughts go out to the residents.
Andrew Gosling
02/01/16 - 14:45
Even the OBs couldn’t expand to infinity! I recall waiting for the bus near
Lodore, one summer evening after a long day’s hike. I guess there were a dozen or so waiting. Mr
Weightman’s OB hove into view and everyone stood up expectantly. With a regretful wave from the
driver, the bus sailed past - with an apparently solid mass of humanity inside! Fortunately,
someone
spotted a launch far out on Derwent Water, heading for the landing stage…
Stephen Ford
Vehicle reminder shot for this posting
09/06/17 - 06:21
A great route and responsible in 1954 for my life long bus interest.
Weightmans are not recorded as having an OB, but Askew, Simpson and Youngs, (as well as
Cumberland),
did. Weightman though was latterly associated with Lake Hotel coaches and they did have OB’s.
Weightman sold out to Cumberland in 1958 and the three remaining operators-with OB’s to the
end-formed the Keswick Borrowdale Bus Service that lasted until 1967 when Cumberland then got the
whole route.
Stuart Emmett