Museum of London  
Home / Places / WC1

The Postcodes Project   London's neighbourhood stories
Home Places Places Write story Recommend
 

WC1 Bloomsbury, Holborn, Kings Cross, St Pancras



Poster advertising 'London's Tramways'

Hop on a tram


This 1929 poster advertises tramway services to the British Museum in Bloomsbury. With its chariot driven by four horses and its reference to the British Museum, the poster shows how transport companies adopted tourist attractions to encourage people to use public transport in London.

Trams go electric

Trams had operated in London since the mid-19th century. In 1901, they switched from being drawn by horses to electricity. To begin with, only the tram routes out to the suburbs converted to electricity. However, the London United Tramways (LUT) rapidly created electrified tram routes throughout the city. By 1930, electric trams had spread to the West End.

Rise and fall

For many years travelling by tram was very popular. But as people began to use buses and the underground more and more, trams within central London ceased to be economic. They were abandoned by the early 1950s.


Museum number 84.1/472

Related objects


 


Our zoomable map of London requires Flash 6 or later, which you can download from here: http://www.macromedia.com/go/getflash

If you prefer to browse without Flash, you can also get to all our content using our list of places.


Adjacent postcodes


Prison doors from Newgate Prison
EC1
Grave slab
EC4
'The Waterhouse' by Wenceslaus Hollar
N1
'Mornington Crescent' by Spencer Frederick Gore
NW1
Stella Emmanuel
W1
Brooch mould
WC2


  Stories from WC1  
 
There are no stories for this area yet. Why not
write one?


Level A conformance icon, W3C-WAI Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0   National Grid for Learning logo