London Transport Board
Formation | 1 January 1963 (Transport Act 1962) |
---|---|
Extinction | 31 December 1969 (Transport (London) Act 1969) |
Type | Public body |
Purpose | Transport authority |
Headquarters | 55 Broadway, Westminster, London SW1 |
Region served | Greater London and within 30 miles (48 km) of Charing Cross |
Main organ | London Transport |
Parent organisation | National Government |
The London Transport Board was the organisation responsible for public transport (except main-line trains) in London, UK, and its environs from 1963 to 1969. In common with all London transport authorities from 1933 to 2000, the public name and operational brand of the organisation was London Transport.
History
The organisation was created on 1 January 1963 by the Transport Act 1962 and replaced the London Transport Executive (LTE) upon the dissolution of the British Transport Commission. It was an independent statutory undertaking reporting directly to the Minister of Transport, whose responsibilities were similar to those of the LTE, but with the addition of some railway lines previously the responsibility of British Railways. The first Chairman was A.B.B. Valentine, who had been the Chairman of the LTE.[1][2]
The London Transport Board was responsible for the London Underground and for bus and coach services within the London Passenger Transport Area, an area with a radius of about 30 miles from Charing Cross established when the London Passenger Transport Board was formed in 1933.
Service were generally maintained and not cut as elsewhere in the country, as train services were under the Beeching Axe. The board was responsible for the Bus Reshaping Plan in 1966, a comprehensive programme of changes to bus services.
By 1970 the roads in London had become so congested that the Greater London Development Plan included in its scope policy to reduce dependence on the car. On 1 January 1970 responsibility for public transport within Greater London passed to the Greater London Council (GLC) under the Transport (London) Act 1969, with the London Transport brand retained by the GLC. Bus services outside the GLC area and Green Line Coaches were passed to a new company, London Country Bus Services, formed on 1 January 1970 as a subsidiary of the National Bus Company.[3][4]
See also
- Sir Alexander Valentine - Chairman, 1962 to 1965
- Sir Maurice Holmes - Chairman, 1965 to 1969
Notes
- ↑ Day & Reed 2008, p. 163.
- ↑ Cooke 1964, p. 739.
- ↑ Day & Reed 2008, p. 172.
- ↑ Witton 1978, pp. 12,26.
References
- Cooke, B.W.C., ed. (September 1964). "The Why and the Wherefore: London Transport Board". Railway Magazine (Westminster: Tothill Press) 110 (761).
- Day, John R.; Reed, John (2008) [1963]. The Story of London's Underground (10th ed.). Harrow: Capital Transport. ISBN 978-1-85414-316-7.
- Witton, A.M. (February 1978). Telfer, R.L.; Witton, A.M., eds. Fleetbook 15: Buses of Greater London. Manchester: A.M. Witton. ISBN 0-86047-151-9.
Preceded by London Transport Executive |
London public transport authority 1963–1969 |
Succeeded by London Transport Executive (GLC) |