Serious proposals to build a light railway linking Stony Stratford with Wolverton station began to be considered in 1882, mainly due to the growth of the Wolverton Works during the previous decade, and establishment of the adjacent McCorquodale printing works in 1878.[4] The resulting 2-mile-54-chain (2.68 mi; 4.30 km) tramway opened on 17 May 1887,[2] and was reported to have carried more than 21,000 passengers in its first month of operation.[5] In March 1888, a contract to deliver goods on behalf of the LNWR was signed,[4] and on 21 May of the same year, a 2-mile-long (3.2 km) extension to Deanshanger (west of Stony Stratford) was opened, mainly with the intention of carrying goods traffic.[4][6]
Despite its apparent success, the company quickly ran into financial difficulties and at an Extraordinary general meeting of shareholders held in Wolverton on 4 November 1889, an amendment to accept voluntary liquidation was passed.[2][7] Subsequently, a syndicate of Bedford businessmen led by Herbert Leon purchased the line, which reopened the section between Wolverton and Stony Stratford on 20 November 1891.[2][8] The Deanshanger extension, however, was to remain permanently closed.
The tramway struggled on as an independent concern, but by 1919 was in an increasingly derelict state and once again in danger of closure. Fearing that the only means of transport for much of its Wolverton workforce would soon disappear, the LNWR stepped in and purchased the line,[9] not only undertaking renovations of the permanent way and rolling stock, but even acquiring a new Bagnallsaddle tank locomotive. After the passing of the Railways Act 1921, responsibility for the line passed to the London, Midland and Scottish Railway in 1923. On 4 May 1926, the staff allocated to keep the tramway running on the first day of the General Strike failed to report for duty and the line never carried passengers again.[2]
Locomotives and rolling stock
The line's original rolling stock consisted of 5 double-deck passenger cars, built by the Midland Railway Carriage and Wagon Company in Shrewsbury. Whilst similar in appearance to urban counterparts of the period, 3 of these were the largest tramcars in Britain at the time, being 44 feet (13.4 m) in length with seating for 100 persons. The other cars could carry 80 and 50 passengers, of which the smaller (most probably intended for use at quiet times of day) was the only to have upholstered seats.
Motive power was provided initially by two Krauss0-4-0 tram locomotives, although on opening day the very first passengers were pulled by horse from Wolverton to Stony Stratford (where one of the locomotives took over for the return journey). With their large canopies and conspicuous oil lamps these engines were unmistakably continental in design, thus the tramway very quickly became known as "the little German", after their country of origin.[2]
One of the carriages (significantly larger than an AEC Routemaster double-decker bus) is on display at the Milton Keynes Museum on Stacey Hill (southern edge of Wolverton) with a variety of memorabilia.
^ abSimpson, Frank D. (1982). The Wolverton and Stony Stratford Steam Trams. Bromley: The Omnibus Society. ISBN0901307424.
^ abcdefgEdwards, Allan (1989). "The Stony Stratford Tramway". BackTrack. Vol. 3, no. 1. Penryn: Atlantic Transport Publishers. pp. 16–20. ISSN0955-5382.
^Whitcombe, H. A. (1937). "History of the Steam Tram". Journal of the Institution of Locomotive Engineers. 27 (137): 327–400.
^ abcLee, Charles E. (1952). "The Wolverton & Stony Stratford Tramway". The Railway Magazine. Vol. 98, no. 616. London: Tothill Press. pp. 547–553. ISSN0033-8923.