London Buses

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Stock Code
A9103.0
A9103
The bright red double-decker bus has become an icon of London. But its origins go back nearly 200 years to a single deck vehicle, which was painted green and drawn by three horses. This was George Shillibeer's Omnibus, a name meaning 'for all' in Latin, which he first put on the streets in 1829. A more compact design of horse bus with an open top deck soon evolved and dominated the streets of London throughout the 19th century. A reliable motor bus, the B type, first appeared in 1910, and had replaced all the city's horse buses by 1914. A succession of ever-improving buses followed, most of them designed and built for London by the Associated Equipment Company (AEC). They acquired covered top decks, pneumatic tyres and comfortable cushion seating. The final design for London Transport was the classic Routemaster, introduced in the late 1950s and not finally retired from normal service until 2005. By this time London's modern buses were essentially almost identical to buses everywhere else.
More Information
Stock Code A9103.0
Author Green O
ISBN13 9781445691039
Format Softback
Height(mm) 234
Width(mm) 165
Page Count 64
Pictures 80
Publication Date 5 Sep 2019
Publisher AMBERLEY PUBLISHING
Publication Status Available
Record last updated 06/07/2022