Dublin tramways was a system of trams in Dublin, Ireland, which commenced line-laying in 1871, and began service in 1872, following trials in the mid-1860s.[1] Established by a number of companies, the majority of the system was eventually operated by forms of the Dublin United Tramways Company (DUTC), dominated for many years by William Martin Murphy. Most of the services ran within the city centre and near suburbs, with the majority of major suburbs served (and many of the remainder handled by mainline rail). Additionally, there were two longer-range services, one reaching the "excursion" destination of Poulaphouca Falls, and two services concerning Howth.
At its peak, with over 60 miles (97 km) of active line, the system was heavily used, profitable and advanced in technology and passenger facilities, with near-full electrification complete from 1901. Heavy usage lasted from the late 19th century into the 1920s. The tram system was also central to the Dublin Lockout, which caused major distress within the city.
Elements of the system went out of service from the mid-1920s, in part overtaken by the bus.[2] The decline of the trams accelerated in the 1940s and the last trams ran on 9 July 1949 in Dublin city[3] and in 1959 on Howth Head, near Dublin.[4]
History
Background and legislation
The tram concept arrived in Ireland in the early years of railway development, and the first related projects concerned attempts to link major city train stations with a light railway. The legislation on this topic was the model for the first of the Irish Tramways Acts (which differed somewhat from those of England and Wales, or Scotland), the Tramways (Ireland) Act 1860 (23 & 24 Vict. c. 152). One feature of this law was that each establishment of a tramway operation required approvals including those of the Irish Privy Council, and an act of the Imperial Parliament, onerous and expensive provisions. This and other provisions argued to be impractical led to modification by the Tramways (Ireland) Amendment Act 1861 (24 & 25 Vict. c. 102).
The next relevant legislation was the special act, the Dublin Tramways Act 1871 (34 & 35 Vict. c. lxxxviii), setting up the first company to actually deliver service, and the associated similarly named act of 1872, finalising initial routes and other rules. In parallel the main legislation was modified by the Tramways (Ireland) Amendment Act 1871 (34 & 35 Vict. c. 114). A further Dublin Tramways Act 1876 (39 & 40 Vict. c. 65) followed, and the Tramways (Ireland) Amendment Act 1881 (44 & 45 Vict. c. 17), provided for the formation of tramway ventures by way of simplified procedures. In the meantime, the Relief of Distress (Ireland) Act 1880 (43 Vict. c. 4) allowed for local authority support of tramway ventures (previously some provisions existed for such support for railways only).
From 1889, a new focus came to legislation on this topic, beginning with the Light Railways (Ireland) Act 1889 (52 & 53 Vict. c. 66), also known as "Balfour's Act", which aimed to encourage tram-like or light rail systems in poorer areas, and increased the potential for government to support such projects. With more guarantees from local authorities, more light rail systems were developed, with Dublin's extensive network just part of a total of 581 miles (935 km) by 1906.
Formation
The first Dublin trams were horse-drawn. In the early years, there were several operators, including (with the abbreviations by which they were often known):
The Dublin Tramways Company (DTC), which acquired the rights of the City of Dublin Tramways Co. and the Rathmines omnibuses, and started laying lines in 1871, commencing service to Terenure on 1 February 1872; notably, in the run-up to launch and for some time after, there were concerted objections[5] to the placing of rails in or on the road, with fears about carriage accidents (a similar process occurred later when steam trams were proposed), and some of these objections were continued during[6] and after construction
The North Dublin Street Tramways Company (NDST), formed 1875, with a line from Nelson's Pillar to Drumcondra commencing in 1877[7]
By 1880, with many of the major districts of Dublin being served by the above three tram companies, William Martin Murphy, a founding shareholder of the Dublin Central Tramways Company, founded the Dublin United Tramways Company (DUTC) in January 1881, with himself as manager, and his father-in-law as chairman, and arranged the merger of the three companies, uniting 32 "route miles" under DUTC control.[4][8]
The Dublin Southern Districts Tramways Company (DSDTC), formed 1878
The Blackrock and Kingstown Tramway (BKT), formed 1883[4]
In 1878, the DSDTC was acquired by the Imperial Tramways Company, who in 1893 secured an Act of Parliament allowing them to purchase the BKT, and to use electrical and mechanical power.[9] In mid-1896, the combined operation of these two companies, including the recently acquired legal authority to use electricity, was sold to the British Thomson-Houston Company, which almost immediately in turn sold it to the DUTC.[10]
Electrification and peak operation
Discussions towards electrification began in the late 1890s, but this was opposed by Dublin Corporation, among others. An American panel also opposed the overhead line in densely populated areas.[11]
The Dublin United Tramways Company, with the acquisition of the Dublin Southern Tramways, which had earlier the same year started the first electrical tram line in Ireland, reversed long-standing policy favouring horse-drawn trams, and, having reorganised as the Dublin United Tramways Company (1896) Ltd., proceeded with a rapid electrification. As part of a deal with Dublin Corporation, the DUTC agreed to pay them £500 per route mile for 40 years and a minimum of £10,000 per year when the system was fully electrified.[11] Also included as part of the deal, the DUTC agreed not to charge more than one penny from the Pillar to any city boundary less than 1.5 miles (2.4 km) away.[11]
By January 1901, the entire city system,[12] which covered about 60 miles (97 km) to 66 miles (106 km),[13] was electrified[14] and the system has 280 trams, including a special Directors tram that was used by William Martin Murphy among others to inspect the system.[15] In 1911 the system had 330 trams.[16]
At its peak, the system was known as technically innovative and was described in 1904 as "one of the most impressive in the world",[1] so that representatives of other cities from around the world came to inspect it and its electric operation.[15]
The DUTC opened its first bus route in 1925, progressively replacing the trams until the closure of their last route, the No. 8 to Dalkey, on 10 July 1949. According to the then Minister for JusticeSeán Mac Eoin, "A force of 60 guards, including 2 superintendents, 1 inspector, 8 sergeants and 3 motor-cyclists[,] were placed on duty over the route," but they were unable to protect the last tram from damage by souvenir hunters.[19]
Following the Transport Act 1944, control of the DUTC was vested in the newly formed Córas Iompair Éireann (CIÉ).[20] At the time the DUTC had 113 trams remaining.[21]
The Hill of Howth Tramway was transferred to CIÉ in 1958 and closed on 31 May 1959. It was the last tram to run in Ireland until the Luas tram system opened in 2004.[22]
Reasons for decline
A number of factors combined in the decline of Dublin's tram system. The advent of buses and large-scale competition meant that buses often ran the same routes as the trams and would jump in front to "grab" customers, and buses were able to move into Dublin's expanding hinterland more quickly and at less cost than the trams,[2] and the belief that trams were outdated and old technology,[4] leading to declining use.[2] Meanwhile, the DUTC's takeover of many bus operators left the DUTC with a large number of buses, which were used and expanded to areas of Dublin with no tram service, and buses eventually became the DUTC's core business. There was a belief that buses were cheaper to run than trams[23] and that the system was in a poor state of repair.[24][25] Britain's 1930 Royal Commission on Transport similarly actively advised against trams and for their replacement with buses.[4]
After closure
After closure, the system was still being discussed in the Dáil until at least 1960 when the issue of removal of the old tram tracks was raised.[26]
Lines and companies
The original tram-related legislation identified proposed lines by number, with a detailed route description, but these numbers were not widely used.
Dublin United Tramways Company
In 1910, there were seventeen Dublin United Tramways Company (DUTC) routes, each identified with a different symbol (since 1903), and named for their terminus stations. Route numbers replaced the symbols from 1918, rising from 1 at Ringsend to 30 for Dollymount (and 31 for Howth, shared with another company) in a circuit around the city. Both the original routes and their numbers were the basis of some of the later bus routes and numbers.
The Dublin region had six other tram companies in the early 20th century, two operating back-to-back lines to Lucan and Leixlip, and two similarly in the direction of Blessington and Poulaphouca. The remaining two operated lines relating to Howth, one circuiting Howth Head and one connecting the DUTC system to Howth village and harbour. The Lucan and Leixlip lines were absorbed by the DUTC in 1927, and the coastal service to Howth was part-DUTC for many years.
The Clontarf and Hill of Howth Tramroad (C&HoHT), incorporated by a Private Local Act, having considered both a coastal route and one via Raheny, had a single line, from Dollymount to Howth Harbour, which opened on 26 July 1900. It operated as an extension of the DUTC lines and shared operation with the DUTC, providing a route from Nelson's Pillar to Howth. It remained legally independent until closure, being wound up on 1 July 1941,[29] but was operationally integrated with the DUTC, at least from the second decade of the century.
Dublin and Blessington Steam Tramway
The Dublin and Blessington Steam Tramway (DBST), (1888–1932), which ran from Terenure to Blessington, at a length of 15.5 miles (24.9 km) and with a total journey time of 1 hour and 25 minutes.[30][31] Although the DBST connected with the DUTC system at Terenure, through-running was not allowed, as Dublin Corporation prohibited the operation of steam trams within the city.
The line was actually one of the first proposed in Ireland, as the Dublin and Baltinglass Tramway, but the costs of setting up operation under the early legislation were deemed prohibitive, and it was only after its promoters obtained the Dublin Tramways Act, 1881 (c. 17 of that year) that work really started.
Dublin and Wicklow county councils guaranteed this line, Kildare however, despite usage from the direction of Harristown (and Kilcullen and Ballymore Eustace) refused to be involved. It came under the administration of the Dublin County Surveyor in 1916, after years of profitable operation ended in 1914, and later under a committee of management. The potential inclusion of the line into the new Great Southern Railways entity was debated in the Dáil in 1924, but the government successfully opposed the idea. The DBST was closed by the Dublin and Blessington Steam Tramway (Abandonment) Act, 1932, after years of being a burden on ratepayers, especially in the much more sparsely populated Wicklow.
The Dublin and Lucan Steam Tramway (DLST), authorised by an Order in Council under the Tramways Act, which commenced in 1880, opened, mostly on a roadside reservation, to Chapelizod in June 1881, Palmerstown in November 1881, and to Lucan in 1883.[32]
In 1900, under a new Order in Council, the DLST was electrified and regauged from 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge to 3 ft 6 in (1,067 mm) and renamed the Dublin and Lucan Electric Railway Company (D&LER).
Legally a railway, it was taken over and supported by the government during World War I under the Defence of the Realm Act (DORA). However, this ended in 1921 and facing increasing competition from the Tower Bus Co., the D&LER's financial position deteriorated.
In 1925, after their failure to be amalgamated into the GSR under the Railways Act 1924, the line was closed, going into liquidation. Following discussions, and enabled by two acts of the Irish Free State, the D&LER was bought up by the DUTC. The lines were regauged to Dublin's 5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm)[33] only as far as Lucan, a new line was fitted in Chapelizod, and it reopened as a DUTC route in 1928.
Extensions beyond Lucan
Lucan and Leixlip Steam Tramway
The Lucan, Leixlip and Celbridge Steam Tramway Company was established to build lines from the Lucan terminus to Leixlip and Celbridge (branching off just outside Leixlip). The Lucan and Leixlip Steam Tramway (L&LST) extension was built, and operated between 1890 and 1898.[34] After it went into liquidation, its assets were sold at auction on 1 August 1899, including around 6,160 yards (5,630 m) of rails, two bogie passenger carriages, two other passenger carriages, two goods wagons, a locomotive engine, a water ram in the River Liffey and much other material[35]
Lucan and Leixlip Electric Railway
A new line was laid close to the original steam line, over a decade later, under an Order in Council, the Lucan and Leixlip Electric Railway Order, 1910, by a completely new company. Despite the name, this does not seem to have followed the full distance to Leixlip but rather only the 0.5 miles (0.80 km) to the Spa Hotel at Doddsborough. This was opened as an electric line in 1910, and was leased to the (D&LER) in August 1911.
When the DUTC bought up the insolvent D&LER, they also purchased the L&LER from its shareholders, and although required to refit and reopen it in like manner, following objections from Dublin County Council the extension beyond Lucan was not reopened.[36]
Interconnection of the Lucan / Leixlip and city trams
While not originally connected, the Dublin terminus of the Lucan line was 12 yards from the Park Gate terminus of the DUTC lines, on Conyngham Road, and the two were connected after the purchase by the DUTC.
Operated by the Great Northern Railway (GNR), the Hill of Howth Tramway comprised a single route, from Sutton railway station to Howth railway station over Howth Head by way of the Summit. The tramway was opened under the Great Northern Railway (Ireland) Act of 1897 (and the Tramways Acts), the first line segment, from Sutton to the Summit, on 17 July 1901, the remainder to Howth on 1 August 1901.
Industrial services
Guinness Brewery tramways
The Guinness Brewery tramways was a system of industrial tramways that operated on and around the site of St. James's Gate Brewery[37] Two different gauges were used; a narrow gauge tramway and a broad gauge line. Neither were for public use.
The narrow gauge tramway
The narrow gauge tramway operated on and around the site of St. James's Gate Brewery.[37] The system was laid between 1873 and 1879 and had a gauge of 1 ft 10 in (559 mm).[37] The tramway had direct access to the Liffey via a specially constructed quay and made use of a spiral tunnel to overcome a height difference on the brewery site. The tunnel cost £3,000 and construction spanned 1877–1878[38]
The broad gauge tramway
The broad gauge tramway connected the brewery with the goods yards of Heuston Station. The system began circa 1880, had a gauge of 5 ft 3 in (1,600 mm)[39] and was horse drawn but they were replaced by the narrow gauge tramway's locomotives on a special haulage wagon.[37] The broad gauge system closed on 15 May 1965.
Dublin tramways in literature
Dublin tramways, routes, tracks and the DUTC are mentioned several times in Ulysses by James Joyce[40]
Today
Around the city it is still possible to see buildings associated with the system such as the Blackrock Depot (later the Mazda Europa Centre, now demolished), Dartry Depot, Clonskeagh Depot, Donnybrook Depot (now part of Donnybrook Bus Garage), Dalkey Yard (some track still in-situ), the Sandymount Depot, the Marlborough Street Depot which still features the lettering DUTC[41] or the Power House in Ringsend,[42] and other reminders of the system also exist. Meanwhile some trams are preserved in the National Museum of Ireland and the National Transport Museum of Ireland (at Howth Castle)[43] and at the National Tramway Museum in the UK.[44] A modern tram system, Luas, opened in 2004.
Former horse tram, No. 80, converted to electric, Sackville St., ca. 1900
The Leixlip extension, 1892
The route 16 tram (left) & the route 15 tram (centre) at Terenure Cross, c. 1900. The line in the foreground connected with the D&BST's Terenure depot. It was used at night to transfer goods between the two systems.
^ ab"The last Tram to Dalkey". Archived from the original on 12 October 2008. Retrieved 29 July 2008. The happening in question was the departure of the No. 8 tram from Nelson's Pillar for its last journey to the terminus in Castle Street, Dalkey
^Dublin, The Irish Times, 30 January 1871, page 5: "Opposition to Tramways in Dublin" – begins "The Citizen's (sic) opposition Committee held its meeting..."
^Dublin, The Irish Times, 14 December 1871, page 5: "Before the Dublin Tramways Company..."
^ abDublin: South Dublin County Council,[1]Archived 10 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved 1 August 2008
^ abCork, Ireland, 1998: Bielenberg, Andy "Entrepreneurship, Power and Public Opinion in Ireland; The Career of William Martin Murphy", in Chronicon 2, no. 6: 1–35, ISSN 1393-5259
^Dublin, The Irish Times, 5 May 1893, page 6, "The Dublin Southern Tramways Bill"
^Dublin: The Irish Times, 10 August 1896, "Purchase of the Dublin Electric Trams" (statement by Mr George White)
^Murphy allowed some skilled workers to be in unions but had a major objection to "unskilled" workers organising – cf Bielenberg above.
^"Dublin, 1913—Strike and Lockout". Archived from the original on 16 April 2008. Retrieved 1 August 2008. The strike began. Tram workers deserted their vehicles in protest when William Martin Murphy forbade employees of his Tramways Company to be members of the Irish Transport and General Workers Union.
^"Ceisteanna—Questions: Dublin-Dalkey Last Tram Scenes". Dáil Éireann. 19 July 1949. Archived from the original on 9 June 2011. Retrieved 31 July 2008. A force of 60 guards, including 2 superintendents, 1 inspector, 8 sergeants and 3 motor-cyclists were placed on duty over the route.
^"Córas Iompair Éireann (CIÉ)". Archived from the original on 21 August 2008. Retrieved 13 August 2008. When CIÉ was formed it had 618 serviceable buses and 113 trams. Every tram and 364 buses came from DUTC and the other 254 from GSR
^"Closing of Tram Routes". Archived from the original on 9 June 2011. Retrieved 31 July 2008. a plan to replace electric trams by buses, although the former are admittedly cheaper to run
^"Dublin-Dalkey Tram Service". Archived from the original on 9 June 2011. Retrieved 31 July 2008. I am informed by Córas Iompair Éireann that, having regard to the condition of the cars, track, cables and overhead wires, it would be impracticable to operate the existing fleet of trams for an indefinite future period.
^"Dublin Tram Lines". Retrieved 31 July 2008. Mr. Brady asked the Minister for Local Government and Public Health if he is aware of the dangerous condition of tram lines in many places, owing to the failure of the Dublin United Tramway Company to keep their tram lines level with road surface, and whether he will use his powers to have this matter remedied.