I'm guessing that this image is late 1940s / early 1950s, but what interested me is the now long gone London Transport wayfinder post in the middle of the junction.
Tags (All lower case. Use " " for multiple word tags): manor house tavern
Albums: Historical Images of Manor House / Woodberry Down
Confirm Hammersmith Bridge. Timetable shows end-to-end run of 3 hours.
.....and here's is more from Stephen about the tracks you mention, John.
An interesting photo, Hugh.
My ‘Measham Register of Motor Index Letters and Numbers’ (price 7/6d) says that CXX was first registered in May 1936 by London County Council.
Is it possible that the photo is just pre-war?
Though the 714 is mentioned here:
http://www.greenline.co.uk/history1/green-line-history--photo-gallery/
The coach is an AEC Q - Type
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AEC_Q-type
(The Mowlem van is no help – the company was formed in 1822!)
In 1999 I had the privilege of playing a season of cricket for Ripley Cricket Club and they had their 250th anniversary. I would have loved this bus route to still have been in operation as my Saturday mornings were spent in my car on the M25 from Stroud Green. 3 hours was a bad trip but then, I wouldn't have come from Enfield.
Roy : according to Google ( again ) it was only after 1947 when Green Line came out of wartime hibernation that the 700 series of route numbers were allocated. So the photo is post war.
Looking at the picture via the 'View Full Size' option makes the destinations on the 'fingers' a bit
clearer.
Eastbound -- Tottenham Epping Southend [I think, rather obscured]
Southbound -- Newington Green The City The East End
Westbound -- Camden Town The West End Shepherds Bush
Northbound -- Cambridge Ro [ad?] Wood Green [not visible]
Cambridge Road - accessing the Great Cambridge Road via Westbury Avenue at Turnpike Lane perhaps.
John D said, "...it was only after 1947 when Green Line came out of wartime hibernation that the 700 series of route numbers were allocated..."
Yes, John D, thanks for that. As a kid who lived just around the corner I don't remember that in the middle of the road. Time plays tricks.
When they took up the tram tracks the road surface was made up of wood blocks laid grain uppermost and the surface tarred. It was a good smooth surface, much better that those bumpy granite cobbles/setts. When they ripped them up my dad got his wheelbarrow out and stocked up our log-pile for the open fire, which was our only form of heating. They burned a treat!
"...VE WIT...." I wonder what that says on the barrier?
Roy, it looks like "...IVE WIT..." Probably "..LIVE WITH..."?
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