In the years leading up
to the first world war -
before the establishment
of rural bus services -
travelling into Newark
for most people meant
using the local carriers
cart.
These slow, horse-drawn
vehicles acted not only
as the main means of
passenger transport but
also (and more
importantly) as a
delivery service for
village produce to be
sold at market - such as
eggs, butter and
vegetables.
As motor vehicles began
to prove themselves more
effective, however, the
dominance of the
mainstay of rural
mobility began to wane.
In the village of
Elston, for instance,
the local miller,
William Gash, acquired a
secondhand
Beeston-Humber truck
which he began to use
for transporting corn,
bags of coal, and
various other goods to
and from market in
Newark.
By 1921 he had
introduced a new
dimension to his service
by fixing two wooden
benches across the
platform of the lorry
allowing ten or so
villagers to ride into
town along with their
goods (albeit completely
exposed to the
elements).
Gash's bus service was
born and from these
humble beginnings there
grew a business which,
over the next 50 years,
developed an invaluable
network of services
connecting many small
village communities with
Newark and Nottingham.
Another locally based
bus company which was
founded in this
immediate post-first
world war era - and one
which is still very much
in evidence today - was
Wright and Sons (now
Travel Wright) on
Lincoln Road.
Like Gash's, Wright's
(founded 1826) began
life providing much
valued village services
into Newark and their
main area of operation
lying to the north and
west of the town -
Ossington, Laxton and
Ollerton.
Both Wright's and Gash's
are names which continue
to be well known in
Newark (in spite of the
latter having ceased
trading fully ten years
ago), but how many
people, I wonder, can
remember the names of
any other local bus
companies which started
up at around this time?
Is there anyone now who
can recall such names as
the Trent Motor Traction
Co, The Grove Motor Co,
Underwoods, C. Cave and
Son or Silver Queen
(pictured).
In those pioneering days
when many soldiers felt
that the driving skills
they had gained in the
first world war could be
turned to good effect,
the number of new
applications for motor
omnibus licences
increased dramatically.
In Newark, by the mid
Twenties, the watch
committee of the town
council was receiving as
many as four new
applications a month -
Robert White of
Parliament Street,
Newark, to operate a
14-seater single-deck
omnibus between Newark
and Farndon; Mr L.
Spence for permission to
run a service into
Newark from North
Clifton; Mr R. Bray to
run services between
Sleaford and Newark; Mr
J. Hollingsworth to run
services from Coddington
to Newark: and from
Charles Scott of
Carlton-le-Moorland to
operate a 14-seater
through Newark on
Saturdays only - the
list goes on and on, and
although most of the
names have long since
disappeared, at the time
the sheer volume of bus
traffic converging on
Newark became a major
cause for concern -
particularly as there
was no effective
co-ordination over
timetables or where each
company should pick up
or set down.
In the early years many
of these fledgling bus
services established
their own makeshift bus
stations in pub yards
continuing the tradition
established by the
carrier carts and,
indeed, the stage
coaches before them.
The yard of the
Saracen's Head off the
Market Place, for
instance, was used by a
number of operators
including Gash's and Mr
George Moyes' service to
Foston (est. 1925).
Next door at the Clinton
Arms the Newark form of
Baxter's provided bus
services to meet every
train at the towns two
railway stations while
the Robin Hood on
Lombard Street was
(among many others) the
pick-up point for the
Newark to Farndon
Service run by Mr Robert
White (inaugurated
December 1923).
As the number of bus
operators increased,
however, these yards
became ever more crowded
and alternative roadside
stopping places had to
be introduced.
Church Walk on
Appletongate was one of
the most sought-after
pickup points with the
Grove Motor Co.
utilising it for its
'shopper' services from
Hawtonville and Gilstrap
Estate.
Further down
Appletongate the bus
companies vied with one
another to secure a
pitch outside the newly
opened Palace Theatre,
while elsewhere streets
which lay immediately
adjacent to the main
shopping area became
greatly prized -
Baldertongate,
Castlegate and Beaumond
Cross.
Most favoured of all,
however, was Beastmarket
Hill where the
prevalence of buses
belonging to such
operators as the Trent
Motor Traction Co or C.
Cave and Sons began to
cause serious congestion
to other traffic
attempting to enter the
town.
The problem was finally
addressed in May 1928
when the watch committee
authorised part of the
Town Wharf to be
levelled as a new bus
stopping place.
It was not until
December 1932 that the
town acquired its first
purpose-built bus
station beside the Robin
Hood Hotel followed, in
1964, by the opening of
the present bus station
on Lombard Street.
The great heyday of the
single bus operator
persisted until the end
of the Twenties when
some of the more
successful concerns
began to extend their
influence and buy out
smaller businesses.
The well known
Nottingham firm of
Barton Bros, acquired
its first licence to run
services into Newark
(via Southwell) in June
1925 and three years
later Silver Queen
(pictured) succumbed to
a takeover from
Lincolnshire Roadcar - a
company which, of
course, continues to
supply many of Newark's
bus services to this
day.
ABOVE: A Silver
Queen bus stops off in
Bassingham on its run
from Lincoln to Newark
sometime in the late
Twenties. Standing
beside the vehicle is
driver Bob Kirk.