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Last 3 years of the city's trams


Dyke

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That's exactly what I thought, westmoors, but it seems that the rail furthest from the camera cannot be seen very well in the photo. So I downloaded the image and worked on the brightness/contrast with Photoshop. The rail is there, albeit faint, and I've indicated it with arrows on this part of the photo.Yes - an interesting point! My guess is that this was a special run during "Last Tram Week" in 1960. Trams stopped running to Brightside in 1958 though the tracks might still have been there. No 536 (the last Sheffield tram to be scrapped at T.W. Ward's) looks very clean, and the notices in the windows might have something to do with the "last tram" commemoration.

 

High hillsbro and westmoors,

 

I thought the rail may be a layby, but with the aid of Picture Sheffield's zoom facility and my 'high tec' magnifying glass which I inherited from my dear mother, I also saw the elusive rail.

 

I also assumed that it was very likely a ''Last Tram Week'' special. My memory tells me that I used the tram to travel along Savile Street East to Firth Park until closure in 1960. Was the track still in fact operational to the Upwell Street turn off Brightside Lane and to Firth Park then??

 

Re the ''missing'' boom. Using the afforementioned technics, I believe the boom is in fact there, just to the left of the big chimney immediately behind the first window frame on the tram side. It appears to be vertical just when the camera shutter clicked, and will in fact be sloping away and the trolley seems to be following the overhead wire across.

Any good?? :)

Edited by PeterR
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... It appears to be vertical just when the camera shutter clicked, and will in fact be sloping away and the trolley seems to be following the overhead wire across. Any good?? :)
Yes - spot on! The usual loop of wire near the end of the boom can just be seen in the photo. But my goodness - it's a long time since I enjoyed a glass of "Golden Mead Ale"...:)
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Hi Peter - the title of the photo u00152 is "Tram No. 536, Savile Street" (as far as I know, Carlisle Street didn't have trams). It looks like the junction of Savile Street East and Carwood Road, where there was a crossover - here's a map. Apart from their use at a terminus, crossovers were sometimes positioned so that if a tram ended its journey early it could return to the city centre. I remember there was a crossover in Middlewood Road adjacent to the park, which could be used by trams on the Middlewood route that didn't need to go further than Leppings Lane.

 

Thanks Hillbro. I must have must have walked over that crossover countless times as a kid and never noticed it and your explanation satisfied my curiosty

Maps with tram tracks and crossovers too. whatever next?

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