NOSTALGIA: Portsmouth park where trams converged
Having left Portsmouth Road from just outside the Portsbridge Hotel, the tram ran for 100 yards before taking a bend to the right to pass over the railway line via an iron bridge. The route then headed through Cosham and over Portsdown Hill to Horndean.
In May 1932 a reserve track opened. It ran from Portsbridge through the junction of Northern Road and Portsmouth Road and the old lines to Cosham station fell into disuse.
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Hide AdOn the right, car 95 trundles by on route 8 on its way south through Portsea Island.
Thanks to Martin Petch author of Portsmouth Tramways (Middleton Press), for use of the photograph.
The second picture shows the scene today from outside the Portsbridge. A park covers the former tramway and unless there were photographs to show how it once was no-one would have a clue a tramway once existed.
With the coming of more comfortable and faster buses Horndean Light Railway was abandoned on January 9, 1935.
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Hide Ad•Former Fratton train driver John Hartfree has celebrated his 94th birthday. More than a dozen former colleagues helped him celebrate at The Parchment Makers, Havant. They came from Salisbury, Alton, Bentley, Guildford, Woking and this area.
John was more than pleased to be joined by George Michie, 77, from Woking, who began his career with John as a fireman in the 1950s. In all, more than 600 years of railway experience sat down to enjoy the afternoon.
During the war John, who lives at Bedhampton, joined the navy and worked on minesweepers in the North Sea, one of the most dangerous occupations in the navy at the time.
At the end of the war he started on the railway at Fratton but transferred to Guildford for a driver’s job. He later transferred back to Fratton.
In the photograph John is in blue in the centre and Mr Michie is at the back, third from the right.