John H Luxton Photography

Transport + Industrial + History + Regional

  • Home
  • About
  • What's New
  • Browse
  • Photo Sales & Gifts
  • Info / Blog
  • Search
  • Contact
  • Links
  1. The 35mm Film Archive
  2. Tramways
Follow John H. Luxton Photography on Flickr

Heaton Park Tramway

Heaton Park was originally the private landscape park surrounding Heaton Hall, but was sold to Manchester City Council in 1902 for use as a municipal park. Shortly after the park was bought by the council, a branch of Manchester Corporation Tramways was built 280 yards (260 m) into the park from the existing tramway on Middleton Road. A large waiting shelter was constructed at the end of this branch, and the first tram arrived on 31 May 1903.

By 1934 buses were replacing trams and the stub tramway into the park was disconnected from the main system and covered in tarmac for use by buses.

The Manchester Transport Museum Society (MTMS) was founded as a registered charity in the early 1960s, with the aim of the preservation of documents and artefacts relating to public transport in the Manchester region. An early project of the society was the restoration of Manchester Corporation Tramways 765, which had been found on a farm near Huddersfield. The restoration was carried out partly at the National Tramway Museum at Crich in Derbyshire, and partly at various borrowed workshops around Manchester, and once completed the car ran for a couple of seasons at Crich. However the MTMS had aspirations to operate the car in Manchester, and identified Heaton Park as a possible site.

In the 1970s the society approached the city council with this idea. The initial plan, to construct a tramway from Grand Lodge to Heaton Hall, was considered too expensive, as it would require remedial works to carry it across the railway tunnel. A new scheme was proposed to open up the old Manchester Corporation Tramways spur from Middleton Road to the old tram shelter. The original track was buried under a layer of tarmac which was cleared and the tram shelter restored and modified to form a depot and museum. Work was completed in 1979 and the Heaton Park Tramway was officially opened on March 28, 1980.

Since 1980, the museum tramway has been extended further into the park on three occasions, using track salvaged from elsewhere, and is now some 1 kilometre long. The most recent extension was in 2011 and reaches the boathouse and lake. A new tram depot has been constructed at this terminus. Additionally, major restoration of the original depot and museum complex was completed in 2007.
Read More
  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Manchester Corporation Tramways 765. This car was built in 1914 and is the only remaining electric tramcar from Manchester in regular operation. It was one of a series of unusual single-deck bogie cars of the combination car type, with a central saloon and open smoking compartments at the ends, built for routes with low bridges. The conversion of these routes to buses in 1930 led to most of these cars being sold, and the body of 765 was acquired by a farm near Huddersfield. In 1960 it passed to a group that was to become the Manchester Tramway Museum Society and restoration work started. It has operated at Heaton Park since 1979

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Manchester Corporation Tramways 765. This car was built in 1914 and is the only remaining electric tramcar from Manchester in regular operation. It was one of a series of unusual single-deck bogie cars of the combination car type, with a central saloon and open smoking compartments at the ends, built for routes with low bridges. The conversion of these routes to buses in 1930 led to most of these cars being sold, and the body of 765 was acquired by a farm near Huddersfield. In 1960 it passed to a group that was to become the Manchester Tramway Museum Society and restoration work started. It has operated at Heaton Park since 1979

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Manchester Corporation Tramways 765. This car was built in 1914 and is the only remaining electric tramcar from Manchester in regular operation. It was one of a series of unusual single-deck bogie cars of the combination car type, with a central saloon and open smoking compartments at the ends, built for routes with low bridges. The conversion of these routes to buses in 1930 led to most of these cars being sold, and the body of 765 was acquired by a farm near Huddersfield. In 1960 it passed to a group that was to become the Manchester Tramway Museum Society and restoration work started. It has operated at Heaton Park since 1979

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Manchester Corporation Tramways 765. This car was built in 1914 and is the only remaining electric tramcar from Manchester in regular operation. It was one of a series of unusual single-deck bogie cars of the combination car type, with a central saloon and open smoking compartments at the ends, built for routes with low bridges. The conversion of these routes to buses in 1930 led to most of these cars being sold, and the body of 765 was acquired by a farm near Huddersfield. In 1960 it passed to a group that was to become the Manchester Tramway Museum Society and restoration work started. It has operated at Heaton Park since 1979

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Manchester Corporation Tramways 765. This car was built in 1914 and is the only remaining electric tramcar from Manchester in regular operation. It was one of a series of unusual single-deck bogie cars of the combination car type, with a central saloon and open smoking compartments at the ends, built for routes with low bridges. The conversion of these routes to buses in 1930 led to most of these cars being sold, and the body of 765 was acquired by a farm near Huddersfield. In 1960 it passed to a group that was to become the Manchester Tramway Museum Society and restoration work started. It has operated at Heaton Park since 1979

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Car 765 at the park gates. Manchester Corporation Tramways 765. This car was built in 1914 and is the only remaining electric tramcar from Manchester in regular operation. It was one of a series of unusual single-deck bogie cars of the combination car type, with a central saloon and open smoking compartments at the ends, built for routes with low bridges. The conversion of these routes to buses in 1930 led to most of these cars being sold, and the body of 765 was acquired by a farm near Huddersfield. In 1960 it passed to a group that was to become the Manchester Tramway Museum Society and restoration work started. It has operated at Heaton Park since 1979

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    TRW_269

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Feeder cabinet

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    End of the line where the Heaton Park branch exited the park and joined the main tramway system.

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    View from the gates of Heaton Park.

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    View along the tramway to the park gates. These tracks are the original Manchester Corporation Tramway tracks.

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Cross over near the park gates.

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway depot. Manchester car 765 appears from the later extension to the line created after the opening of the original heritage tramway.

  • Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992

    Hull Corporation 96 outside the depot at Heaton Park. This building was originally a waiting room for tram and later bus passengers before being converted into the depot for the heritage tramways. Hull Corporation Tramways 96 was built as an open top double deck car for Hull Corporation by Hurst Nelson in 1901, this car was totally enclosed about 1930 and cut down to a single deck works car in 1933. After the closure of the Hull tramways it was sold to Leeds Corporation Tramways, where it was used as a store car with the number 6 until the closure of that system in 1959. It was preserved in the Leeds area until it was brought to Manchester and restored as a single-deck passenger car. It has operated at Heaton Park since 1988

  • Photo Sharing
  • About SmugMug
  • Browse Photos
  • Prints & Gifts
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Contact
  • Owner Log In
© 2023 SmugMug, Inc.
    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992
    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992
    Heaton Park Tramway, Manchester - July 1992