London Transport - Daimler CWA6 - GXV 785 - D 54
Photograph by ‘unknown’ if you took this photo please go to the copyright page.
London Transport
1945
Daimler CWA6
Brush H5?R
An Austin 12/4 Low Loader taxi fronts this Regent Street evocative scene. Many of these were
commandeered by the London Fire Brigade to haul portable pumps during the Blitz, a task for which they
were greatly under-powered!
The bus to the left is STL 2345 of November 1937, an AEC Regent I
chassis with LT-designed Park Royal bodywork, which was withdrawn from service on 13th March 1951. Note
the downstairs rear window is now in two parts, a common modification when glass was in short supply
during the war.
The centre bus is D 54, a Merton-based Daimler CWA6 chassis with Brush utility
bodywork delivered in Spring 1945 and withdrawn on 7th September 1953, one of 100 to be sold to Belfast
Corporation and re-bodied with an attractive Harkness body. It lasted until 1970.
The bus on the
far right is STL 2077, delivered May 1937 and withdrawn on 22nd March 1950.
There is another STL
in front of it on the right edge of the photo, in post-war livery.
Were it not for the Daimler,
this could easily be a pre-war scene!
Photograph and Copy contributed by Chris Hebbron
———
20/03/11 - 15:51
A wonderful picture, taken at a time of great hope and unity when everyone was
pulling together in the recovery from The War. In front of STL 2345 (rather nice run of consecutive
digits) is a suitably humble new RT which seems to say "I’ll keep out of the way and let the
old ‘uns have their day in this picture."
The Daimler is interestingly on a short
working of service 88 to Clapham Common - the normal southern terminus of this route being the
lovely rustic sounding "Mitcham - Cricketers" - I can smell the new mown pitch and the
cucumber sandwiches already.
Chris Youhill
———
23/03/11 - 17:35
It was interesting that, of all the utility buses London Transport possessed,
only the Daimlers penetrated into the very heart of London and you can’t get more central than
Piccadilly Circus!
The Cricketers Arms was a very attractive pub which overlooked a cricket
green which had its own cricket pavilion, too. It was an little oasis of green in an otherwise
built-up area. Sadly, the pub closed last year.
Not too far away was another bus blind
terminus Mitcham Fair Green, where an annual fair took place every year. Again, a more rural event
taking place in a built-up area, but sadly, since 1996, just a memory.
Chris Hebbron
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