Categories
News

What lured me to London…

What lured me to London...

August 2015 marks the 50th anniversary of my first ever visit to London, in the company of my parents and aged 15. I had been champing at the bit for a long time before then. It was the red buses that were the original lure. I can trace my first stirrings to when I was six years old, when my father returned home after several weeks away, working at what was then London Airport in Hounslow. He brought a little goody bag of gifts – the contents included a Corgi Toys Ford Consul, a Matchbox die-cast excavator, a Gamages catalogue, and some London Transport bus maps. I spent many hours poring over these maps and tracing the bus routes. From photographs, I became aware of the RT family that were the backbone of these routes, supplemented by the 6-wheeled trolleybuses. All looked very handsome and impressive. I just had to be there to see and sample for myself.

By August 1965, the trolleybuses had gone, but the RT family was still predominant. I remember us sampling the 105 and 88 bus routes during our far-too-brief five-day pioneering visit. The 88 was still in the hands of the Leyland RTLs, which gave me a soft spot for the breed.

Thanks to the Classic London Bus Society and its re-enactment of former LT bus routes, I was able to reacquaint myself with the RTL type, most recently on this run to unfamiliar corners of south east London. Here, the London Bus Museum’s RTL139 (KGK803) poses for a photostop at Brockwell Park. Ensignbus stalwart Bob Stanger is at the wheel.

Posted by st_asaph on 2015-04-17 16:10:58

Tagged: , rtl , london_transport , ensignbus , london_bus_museum , rtl139 , kgk803 , double_decker , brockwell_park , tclbs , classic_london_bus_society , 7rt

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *