The Accrington Corporation Steam Tramways Company was a joint venture between
the Corporation and a private concern, under the Accrington Corporation Tramways
Act of 1882.
Construction began in 1884 with three routes radiating from the Market Place.
The first ran to the Commercial Hotel in Church, via Blackburn Road, travelling
past the Town Hall and the tram depot in Ellison Street. The second route
terminated at the 'Load of Mischief' in Clayton-le-Moors and ran via Whalley
Road. The third route ran to Baxenden Station on the boundary with Haslingden,
along Abbey Street and Manchester Road. The infrastructure and depot
were owned by the Corporation and leased to the company for a period of 21 years.
On the 5th April 1886 public services began on the section between Church
(where a connection with the track of the Blackburn
Corporation Tramways Company was made in 1887, although through running
never took place) and
Clayton-le-Moors, via the Market Place, with the Baxenden route opening on the
12th June. Extensions to this section were made on 27th August 1887 to the
Commercial Hotel in the centre of Haslingden, and finally on to the
Haslingden/Rawtenstall boundary at Lockgate and into Queens Square in
Rawtenstall in November. These sections of track were owned by
Haslingden and Rawtenstall Corporations respectively but leased to the company, again for a period of 21
years. The final section of the tramway from Lockgate into
Queens Square, Rawtenstall had originally been sanctioned as the
Rossendale Valley extension of the Manchester, Bury, Rochdale & Oldham Steam
Tramway Company's line from Rochdale through Bacup and into Rawtenstall, but the
MBRO system never progressed beyond Whitworth, a few miles short of Bacup. At
Queen's Square, the Accrington system connected with the Rossendale Valley
Tramway Company's route into Bacup, but through running was never agreed,
preventing travel on what would have been the longest continuous steam tram
journey in the United Kingdom (from Whitehall in Darwen to Bacup - a distance of
some 21 miles).
The initial rolling stock consisted of 9 (Nos. 1-9),
Thomas Green tram locos and a trailer fleet of 10 (Nos. 1-10) enclosed bogie
double-deckers from Falcon, supplemented by more locos and trailers over the
next few years. No record of the livery is known.
In 1907, that part of the system within its boundary was purchased by Accrington Corporation for the sum of
£2,227, although the Company continued to operate the steam trams whilst
electrification of the system proceeded. The last section to be electrified was
that to Baxenden, which opened on 1st January 1908 and, although it is not known when the last
steam tram actually ran on the Accrington system, it was probably on (or just
before) 31st December 1907.
Eight of the locos and seven of the trailer cars subsequently saw service on
the Baxenden to Lockgate section, which was owned by Haslingden Corporation, who
operated a steam service until the track between these two points was
electrified later in 1908.
FLEET SUMMARY
Locos
Year
Fleet No.
Manufacturer
1885
1-9
Green
1886
10-14
Green
1890
15-16
Green
1894
17
Green
1898
18, 6
Green
1901
19-22
Green
Nos. 19-22 ex-Blackburn Corporation (fleet numbers
unknown but Blackburn had 14 (Nos. 1-14), new 1887-1888).
Trailer Cars
Year
Fleet No.
Type
Manufacturer
Seating
1886
1-10
Double-deck
enclosed
bogie
Falcon
30/30
1887
11-14
Double-deck
enclosed
bogie
Ashbury
30/30
1891
15-17
Double-deck
enclosed
bogie
Lancaster
30/30
1901
18?-20?
Double-deck
enclosed
bogie?
Ashbury/Falcon?
30/30?
Unknown trailers were ex-Blackburn (a single double-deck
enclosed bogie trailer, seating 30/30, built by Ashbury (one of 12 such trailers
built in 1887 or 1888; fleet number unknown), and ex-Burnley (probably 2 Falcon
trailers; Nos.
?, new ?, total quantity uncertain).
In compiling this history reference has been
made to the following sources;
The Directory of British Tramways (Keith Turner, PSL 1996); Trams in the North
West (Peter Hesketh, Ian Allan 1995); Olive Green & Ivory (Duncan Holden, website
2002); Hyndburn & Rossendale 75 Years of Municipal Operation (Peter Deegan,
Omnibus Society 1982); Accrington's Public Transport 1886-1986 (Robert Rush,
Landy 2000).