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Great Northern Railway buses (by Shane Conway)

Page last updated on 19 August 2024


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Dublin United Transport Great Northern Railway Great Southern Railway Irish Omnibus Company

The history of the Great Northern Railway can be traced back to almost the dawn of Irish railways, when in 1839, the Ulster Railway commenced the building of the Belfast to Dublin line at its northern end. By 1844 the Dublin and Drogheda Railway Company had completed its line from Dublin to Drogheda. In between those two was subsequently built the Dublin and Belfast Junction Railway, oddly named in that it neither was a junction, nor did it serve either of the cities in its title. The final link was the bridging of the River Boyne at Drogheda, which occurred in 1855. The Irish North Western Railway operated a line from Dundalk to Enniskillen, while each company had branch lines to serve other towns in their areas, including Howth, Navan, Kells and Oldcastle (D. and D. R.); Bundoran, Cavan and Cootehill (I. N. W. R.); Castlewellan, Newcastle and Banbridge (U. R.). A further line, from Portadown to Derry via Omagh was also laid, and this network was to form the Great Northern as and from April 1st 1876. Two further branch lines were opened by the G. N. R., to Ardee in 1896, and to Drogheda cement factory in 1938.

Diversification from steam hauled trains began in 1883, with a further branch being opened from the I. N. W. R. line to serve Fintona in Co. Tyrone. This one mile line was serviced by a horse drawn double deck tram-car. A second tramway was opened in 1901, this time connecting Sutton and Howth stations on the Howth branch, but taking the scenic route around the Hill of Howth overlooking Dublin Bay. This used electric traction, thus giving the G. N. R. a third form of motive power. These trams were designed to allow the open top deck to be easily dismantled, so that they could be towed along the main line to and from Dundalk Works when overhaul was required.

Towards the end of the 1920s, the G. N. R.'s thoughts turned to the internal combustion engine, both for rail and road applications. Initially the railcars were built for the narrow gauge County Donegal Railways, and then later for the G. N. R. themselves. A new livery of Oxford blue and cream was adopted for the bus fleet and railcars, this being applied also to the horse tram and most of the Howth tram fleet. The truck fleet was in blue only. Other rolling stock was painted in varnished teak, with steam passenger locos being painted a lighter shade of blue to the road fleet, whereas freight locomotives were in black.

On January 28th 1929, the first G.N.R. bus service commenced between Drogheda railway station and West Street in the town centre. Being a railway company at heart, there were no bus drivers employed, instead the job title was motorman. A total of nine other bus companies were taken over by the G.N.R. in the same year, and along with purchases of new buses, the fleet rose to 64 by the end of the year. The following year saw a further 42 buses enter service, of which 16 were second-hand. The other 26 were Leyland Tigers and Lions, many of which remained in service until after World War 2.

In the following few years, the fleet expansion followed much the same pattern, with a notable exception being the purchase of six Leylands from Ribble Motor Services in 1931, the first and only time that used buses were imported by the company. The formation of the Northern Ireland Road Transport Board in 1935 involved the take-over of all the G.N.R.'s bus services north of the border (except for cross border routes) and 50 buses as well. With this in mind, the G.N.R. took the opportunity to transfer older or non-standard buses into Northern Ireland, and thus retain a more standardised fleet of Leylands and AECs. Because the company still had its rail network intact, it thereafter registered one bus from each general batch in Belfast, the others being done in either Dundalk or Dublin.

1937 was a turning point in the story, as that year saw two important developments. Two AEC Regent double deckers were placed in service on the Dublin to Howth route, and 21 new single deckers were designed and built in Dundalk, with an eventual total of 96 such buses being produced from 1937 to 1952. In the make do and mend practises of the G.N.R. bus era, nine of the 1941 batch were rebodied in 1949/1950, with their old bodies then being re-used to rebody some of the 1937 batch. One bus, 327, also received a chassis rebuild at the same time, and thus got a new chassis number and registration. The GNR-Gardner chassis numbers showed the date of build and fleet number, a very ingenious system.

Four more Regents were added in 1939, preceeded with a further 19 GNR-Gardners in 1938, and thirteen more in 1941. No further new buses were bought until the arrival of another Regent in 1946, followed by three more deckers and twelve Gardners in 1947. 1948 saw the largest ever influx of new buses, comprising 30 AEC Regal IIIs and seventeen more Regents. At this point it was felt that some rural routes had a requirement for double-deckers, so within a few years some were fitted with platform doors. They appeared on routes such as Drogheda to Clogher; Drogheda to Laytown, Dundalk to Newry and one was also scheduled for the Sligo to Ballyshannon service. These moves brought the rare sight of double deck buses working scheduled services across international land borders. Of the few companies worldwide who did such a thing, two were in Ireland, Lough Swilly being the other one.

The following years saw a gradual decline in the company's fortunes. The 47 new buses of 1948 was never to be repeated, with the final 31 Gardners being built over the following four years, plus four Leyland Royal Tigers arriving in 1952. 1953 saw the company being replaced by the Great Northern Railway Board, with five representatives from each of the Dublin and Belfast governments. 20 AEC railcars had entered service in 1950, followed by 24 further examples in 1957. Various other lightly used rail services were being operated by adapted ex road buses.

A further dozen Regents entered service in 1953, and the last new vehicles were the 33 AEC Regal IV buses and coaches delivered from 1954 to 1956. A fire in Dundalk works in September 1955 claimed a pair of two year old Regents and one Gardner, and in 1956 five ex CIE Leyland Titans were acquired and placed in service, with a sixth bus acquired for spare parts.

September 30th 1958 was the last day of the G. N. R. as a separate entity. The entire road fleet passed to C.I.E, along with the surviving rail network in the Republic. Curiously, both the last bus and train to leave Dublin on the last night of the G.N.R. had become the property of C.I.E. before their journeys were completed. The rest of the system was taken over by the Ulster Transport Authority. It took several more years before the G.N.R. fleet was to finally disappear, by then of course repainted into its new owner's colours. At least some of the Dundalk based Regents (and maybe other buses and garages too) were repainted into C.I.E.'s two tone green, but the colours were applied in the same layout as the blue and cream had been, rather than the standard C.I.E. style. Some buses remained in G.N.R. blue and cream until 1961, and as such were repainted into the C.I.E. red and cream or blue and cream. Apart from the surviving buses detailed below, several examples of their railway vehicles also were preserved, including four of the Howth trams, one of which is in the Crich Tramway Museum and another in the United States.

Any allocations shown below relate to the G.N.R. period only, i.e. up to the end of September 1958. Allocations of those buses after the C.I.E. takeover are listed on the C.I.E. 1956 to 1961 page.


Fleet list

1929


1930


1931


1932

Note: The above four Leyland Tigers were jointly owned by the G. N. R. and the L. M. S. Northern Counties Committee, and numbered in the N. C. C. fleet, until 1935, when the N. C. C. share was acquired by the G. N. R.


1933


1934


1935


1936


1937


1938


1939


1941


1945


1946


1947


1948

One of 30 Park Royal bodied AEC Regal IIIs bought new in 1948; these 39 seaters were the largest capacity s/d buses in the G. N. R. until 1952 when the Royal Tigers arrived. Most of these Regals had the cut back canopy over the nearside front, which must have made rear view vision a bit difficult to say the least. (Photo by R.H.G. Simpson.)

Preserved Regent 438 seen returning from the I. T. T. rally in 1987, at the customs post between Dundalk and Newry. This bus spent most of its life on the service between those two towns, only the Dublin destination display and the Nissan Sunny car behind the bus belying the fact that the photo wasn't taken in the 1950s. The customs station was subsequently closed and demolished when EU border restrictions were eased.


1949


1950


1951


1952

225 was one of the four Saunders Roe bodied Royal Tigers, new in 1952 and passing to C. I. E. in 1958. These were the only centre entrance buses ever in the G. N. R. or C. I. E. fleets. (Photo by R. H. G. Simpson)

GNR-Gardner 399 dates from 1952 and was among the last new half-cab buses placed in service by the G. N. R. This bus design gave the company excellent service from 1937 onwards. (Photo by Robert Grieves.)


1953

Great Northern Regent 303 is seen in the company's Dublin garage at Abercorn Road, which is off Sheriff Street in Dublin 1. Photo by R.Grieves.


1954

Seen in the County Sligo village of Grange is Regal IV number 271. It was the only one of the type to be registered in Belfast; the other 32 were done in either Dundalk or Dublin. The bus retains GNR livery and its rear entrance, but the picture may date from after the take-over by CIE. (Photo by Robert Grieves.)


1955

Seen on a wet day in Dundalk in the early to mid 1960s is C. I. E.'s AU338. The entrance has been shifted to the front end, but the side destination has been left in its original position. Photo by Alastair Douglas.


1956

Total fleet owned = 462 with 11 survivors (7, 110, 274, 324, 345, 387, 389, 390, 396, 427 and 438).


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