Aviation Specials – June 2018

(ff) #1

74 The London Bus


T


he Mayor of
London has a
duty to develop
and implement
policies for the
promotion and encouragement
of safe, integrated, efficient and
economic transport to, from and
within Greater London.
The area in question is that
of the Greater London Council,
which existed from 1965 to


  1. It covered the whole
    County of London and most of
    Middlesex, plus parts of Essex,
    Kent and Surrey, a small part of
    Hertfordshire and the county
    boroughs of Croydon and East
    and West Ham. Its area was
    marginally smaller than that of


the Metropolitan Police district
The original intention was that
it would have covered a larger
area. A Royal Commission set up
in 1957 intended that it would
also include Sunbury-on-Thames,
Staines and Potters Bar in
Middlesex, Chigwell in Essex and
Caterham, Weybridge, Epsom
and Ewell in Surrey. London
Transport, as it existed from
1933 to 1969, took in all that
and more.
By far the largest of the
bus companies that London
Transport acquired at its
formation, the London General
Omnibus Company, had reached
operating agreements by the
1920s with other companies in

the metropolis that fell short of
outright ownership.
And by 1922, it had also
made arrangements with three
operators based outside London


  • East Surrey Traction, the
    National Omnibus & Transport
    Company and Thames Valley
    Traction – to govern the
    provision of bus services between
    London and its immediate
    hinterland. General took over the
    East Surrey company in 1929,
    renamed it London General
    Country Services three years
    later and acquired National’s
    operations in Hertfordshire.
    The first attempt to really
    define ‘London’ for the purposes
    of bus operations was the


Beyond London


ABOVE: A notable
cross-border
red bus service
surviving from
London Transport
days is the 81,
today connecting
Hounslow and
Slough by way of the
Bath Road to the
immediate north of
Heathrow Airport.
RATP-owned
London United
provides it, using
Alexander Dennis
Enviro400H hybrid
double-deckers like
ADE42.


A hard border


There used to be dozens of bus services crossing the invisible boundary that


separates Greater London from the surrounding counties. Most have disappeared


over the past five decades although a handful remain

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