Dublin United Transport Company

Dublin United Transport Company
DUTC
Private
Industry Public transport
Predecessor The Dublin Tramways Company
The North Dublin Street Tramways Company
The Dublin Central Tramways Company
Successor Córas Iompair Éireann
Founded 1891
Defunct 1 January 1945
Headquarters Dublin, Ireland
Area served
Dublin, Ireland
The routes in 1910

The Dublin United Transport Company (DUTC) operated trams and buses in Dublin, Ireland until 1945. Following legislation in the Oireachtas, the Transport Act, 1944, the DUTC and the Great Southern Railways were vested in the newly formed Córas Iompair Éireann on 1 January 1945.

History

Formation

The DUTC was formed by the merging of several of Dublin's existing tram operators in 1891, that is:

Expansion and electrification

Electric trams, Dame Street, 1910

Dublin's first electric trams were run between Haddington Road and Dalkey in 1896, initially by the Dublin Southern Tramways Company, but soon incorporated into the DUTC,[1] as it purchased from the Imperial Tramways Company and integrated that company, itself comprising:

The DUTC subsequently changed its name to the Dublin United Tramways Company (1896) Limited, and later again changed the "Tramways" part of its name to "Transport" in 1941, reflecting the increasing use of buses and a reduction of the tram fleet.

Straight on or left or right to Westmoreland Street only, with a busy O'Connell Bridge in the 1930s with double decker trams.

The DUTC's logo (sometimes known as "the Flying Snail") was adopted as the logo of CIÉ and continued to be painted on the sides of Ireland's buses and trains until the 1960s.[2]

The company's Sandymount depot was on Gilford Road.

Other tram companies in Dublin

Main article: Dublin tramways

The Hill of Howth Tramway (which closed in 1959) was never part of the DUTC, instead being operated by the Great Northern Railway (Ireland) prior to that company's incorporation into CIÉ (and the UTA) in 1958.

Rail Gauge

Unlike the 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) gauge being used by the Luas tram system (opened in 2004), the DUTC trams used the 5 ft 2 316 in (1,580 mm) gauge.

See also

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, February 19, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.