Telford steam tram

The Telford steam tram at the Telford Steam Railway of the Telford Horsehay Steam Trust, runs on a 2 ft (610 mm) narrow gauge track. This follows a short circular route, part of which runs near to the lake known as Horsehay Pool. Prior to the completion of the circle after arriving near the loco shed, it paused very briefly before returning, coach first, to the starting point near the entrance.

Telford steam tram
LocaleHorsehay, Shropshire, England
Commercial operations
Original gauge2 ft (610 mm)
Preserved operations
Operated byTelford Horsehay Steam Trust
Stations2
Preserved gauge2 ft (610 mm)
Commercial history
Opened9 April 1980
Closedmid-1980s (at Telford Town Park)
Mid-1980sTram steams for the 1st time in preservation

The tram was built by Alan Keef Ltd in 1979 for the Telford Development Corporation and the coach, which is contemporary, was presumably built by Alan Keef Ltd too. The tram and coach originally ran in Telford Town Park alongside Randlay Pool, on the trackbed of the former Coalport Branch Line, on the Telford Town Tramway which was opened by the Reverend W. Awdry, who named the tram Thomas, on 9 April 1980[1][2] but did not last very long there. The tram moved to its present site in the mid-1980s.

Steam trams were at one time a fairly familiar sight, as in the last years of the 19th century and the early years of the 20th century, they were used in several towns and cities in the UK. Most were eventually replaced by electric trams. The steam tram at the Telford Steam Railway, in one of the very few working examples, and quite possibly the only narrow gauge one in the UK.[3]

References

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