Pages

Sunday, June 9, 2019

LEFT INSIDE: North Western Road Car Company Bus Ticket, 1934

I was pleasantly surprised when this bit of pasteboard appeared in the final pages of a 1934 murder mystery I recently finished reading. Because coming across it told me that this book most likely has not been read or opened since this bus ride!

On the left is a photo of both sides of a bus ticket printed by the North Western Road Car Company, a transportation company started in 1923 and originally based in Stockport, England. In its final three decades the company had moved headquarters to Liverpool. From 1923 to 1986 NWRC operated bus services in the counties of Cheshire, Lancashire, West Riding of Yorkshire, Derbyshire and Staffordshire. The bus company’s entire history including its many mergers and acquisitions of other transportation services over its 60+ years is outlined – where else? – on a Wikipedia page here.

In comparing this ticket against dozens of images of similar bus tickets from the North Western Road Co. I discovered that this was the earliest of them all. All I had to do was look at the cheapest fare price (1 penny). On other tickets the lowest fare one could pay was no less than 3 pence. So I’m certain that this ticket dates to the mid-1930s (no earlier than 1934 the book’s publication year) The other tickets I looked at had years on from the World War 2 era.

Close study shows the date this particular ticket was purchased and the fare paid. We know that the ticket was purchased on August 7 (see right side of photo) and I think the 4 punched at the very top indicates 1934. The rider also paid a "Workman" fare meaning, I assume, that he was a daily commuter going to or coming from his place of employment. Reading the fine print instructions reveals that the number above the cut off portion was the fare paid.  This "Workman" fare was 1/2 or 1 shilling, 2 pence.

This particular ticketing system was developed by the Willebrew company. I found several websites devoted to the history of transportation in the UK and the best designed and most informative was Bob Mockford’s site which includes loads of fascinating info in his “Bus Museum” section.

Here is a verbatim section taken from that site describing how the Willebrew ticketing system worked:

The Willebrew machine used pre-printed tickets. Unlike the earlier punches, these tickets had a large number of fare options on each ticket. This meant fewer tickets for the conductor to carry.


Willebrew model #10288
photo from Bob-Mockford.co.uk
The conductor selected the ticket, inserted it into the machine and cut off a section up to the fare paid. This section was retained inside the machine and the remainder handed to the passenger.
The conductor did not know the value of tickets issued. This would be calculated later in the office, preventing the conductor from taking any surplus cash.

The Willebrew is opened by inserting a small screwdriver into a hole in the bottom of the machine, pressing the spring-loaded catch inside and pulling the cover downwards. It is not necessary to completely remove the cover as shown in the photo, in fact it is better not to as holding down the catch while re-inserting the cover is difficult.

Once opened, a clerk in the office would remove the pieces of ticket to calculate the takings.

A review of the book -- The Sealed Room Mystery -- in which I discovered this bit of paper is coming up soon

16 comments:

  1. I was afraid you had permanently retired "Left Inside," but glad to see it making a return. Hopefully, this is not a one-off. I love these scraps of obscure history you keep finding inside old mystery novels.

    I look forward to review of The Sealed Room Mystery!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I have a small pile of objects that I’ve gathered over the past couple of months. There’s just enough to revive “Left Inside” as a regular feature for the rest of the year. I think I’ll do it the first Sunday if the month. So you have six more to look forward to!

      Delete
    2. I do wonder about the ticket. I’m sure North Western didn’t use Willebrew tickets until after the war. I used those blue tickets as a 10d return in the 1950s.

      Delete
    3. You may very well be right. I was surmising about the date based on other tickets I found online. It’s the design and the fares that make me think this is one of the earliest tickets I have no idea what year Willibrew started. That this was found in a book from 1934 led me to believe it was from the 30s. A mere guess on my part.

      Delete
    4. My mother worked as a conductress for the North Western bus company and was based at Northwich bus station from 1943 to 1945 and she used a Willibrew ticket machine. She must have mentioned the name it some point and as a small child I was enchanted by the word and always remembered it.

      Delete
  2. Wonderful find, John; always incredible to see what information can be gleaned from these accidental discoveries.

    And I'm assuming that's a Michael Crombie novel you were reading, which is possibly even more exciting! Very much looking forward to hearing about it, given how I've gained a huge enthusiasm for Ronald of late...

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Yes, it’s the Crombie book. The locked room element shows up only into last three chapters! It’s an odd one to be sure.

      Delete
  3. You definitely did your homework on this one, John!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. “Left Inside” used to be a regular feature years ago. I did one almost every week for four years! A lot of them became very involved. Like a locker room receipt that revealed to me that the University of Chicago know had a small adjunct campus on the grounds of Chicago’s Navy Pier. That was the most involved and heavily researched post until this bus ticket.

      Delete
  4. Fascinating. Thanks so much for your research and sharing. (pats John on back).

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks, Richard. I’m so glad to see you’re still a regular reader and visitor here.

      Delete
  5. Loved this! And not just because the buses ran where I grew up (though a few years earlier...) On the wiki page it talks of services transferred to Crosville, and I used to get Crosville buses from home to town. I must ask my mother if she remembers the North Western Road Car Company.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I would find bus transfers in old books (mostly library books) all the time back when the CTA still issued them. Occasionally an old US bus ticket or train ticket would turn up in an old book I bought. Boring. This vintage bus ticket from England was a very cool find for me. Glad it brought back some memories for you.

      Delete
  6. Blimey, this brings back memories. North Western ran the bus service in Cheshire that I used to take on my way to school each day.

    ReplyDelete