R W Jackson - Leyland Royal Tiger - GVN 952
R W Jackson (Cleveland Coaches), Guisborough
1951
Leyland Royal Tiger PSU1/15
Strachans C41C
Strachans (Successors) was in a bad way in the early 1950s. Many of the vehicles supplied to operators
in the 1946-1949 period had proven less than robust (due to poor quality timber), a fault shared with
bodies produced by Santus and many of the smaller coachbuilders of the time. Nevertheless it was obvious
that the firm would have to offer bodywork for the new underfloor engined coach chassis, and in 1951 the
company produced its first five such bodies, all on Royal Tigers. Four went to Valliant of Ealing as WMT
321-324, and the fifth to Jackson of Guisborough (east of Middlesborough on the inland road to Whitby)
as illustrated here. The "Cleveland Coaches" fleetname came from the Cleveland Hills which
were there for several million years before Ted Heath invented the county of Cleveland!
It wasn’t
a bad design, although one suspects that the front corners owed more than a little to Windover’s
"Kingsway" design. No more of this style were built as Strachans introduced their new
"Strathrae" design in early 1952, and this was then replaced by the better known
"Everest" model in 1954. Does anybody know what happened to GVN 952 after Jackson sold it? And
does anybody have a shot of one of the Valliant machines?
Photograph and Copy contributed by Neville Mercer
25/07/14 - 05:48
The reversed flashes round the front wheelarch give this coach a curious
pushme-pullyou look! Of course full fronts were a new challenge for most coachbuilders at that time.
At least we know the chassis would have been solid and reliable!
Andrew Goodwin
26/07/14 - 06:45
It’s worse than that, Andrew. Adding to your observation is that the way in
which the body flows downwards at the rear as in the front, giving a distinct impression that two
fronts have been glued together! It even seems to have an early Morris Minor front grill fitted!
It’s not quite an ‘Ugly Bus’ contender, but close.
Chris Hebbron
26/07/14 - 06:45
The Aldershot & District Dennis Dominant HOU 900 had similarly styled front and rear wings as built in 1950, but, in the course of its career, the "Tracco" removed these strange embellishments in favour of straightforward, simple wheel arches. On the matter of Strachans quality, it cannot have been as bad as some of the ‘mushroom’ bodybuilders of the forties and fifties, as the Dominant lasted for some fifteen years with A&D, and was apparently sold on for further service, though I am not sure where it went.
Roger Cox
26/07/14 - 06:46
It’s a very impressive looking coach but it could have looked so much better
with deeper windscreens. It’s strange how so many coachbuilders at the time felt the need for the
bottom edge of the screens (on underfloor engined chassis) to curve upwards to the centre and yet
others proved it was quite unnecessary. Perhaps it was a carry over from producing full front
bodywork on front engined chassis.
The side has a decent line to it, the reversed flashes
around the wheelarches do look a bit odd but no doubt another quirk of the time was that the front
end had to match the rear. It certainly looks to be of substantial construction but that was nothing
to go by as far as Strachans were concerned!
Chris Barker
27/07/14 - 06:50
According to available fleet lists, Jacksons were taken over by Saltburn Motor Services in 1957 and their four vehicles included this one. Saltburn operated it until 1962 but there doesn’t appear to be any further details.
Chris Barker
29/05/19 - 05:33
R. W. Jackson
Were taken over by Saltburn Motor Services in 1957 GVN
952 later passed to Moore & Cartwright a building contractor of Norton -on- Tees, Teeside in
September 1964 no trace thereafter.
Alan Coulson
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