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Did Oxford ever have trams?

The City of Oxford and District Tramway Company and its successor the City of Oxford Electric Traction Company operated a horse-drawn passenger tramway service in Oxford between 1881 and 1914. The tramway was unusual for having a track gauge of only 4 feet (1.219 m).



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The advent of personal motor vehicles and the improvements in motorized buses caused the rapid disappearance of the tram from most western and Asian countries by the end of the 1950s (for example the first major UK city to completely abandon its trams was Manchester by January 1949).

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The world's first passenger tram was the Swansea and Mumbles Railway, in Wales, UK. The Mumbles Railway Act was passed by the British Parliament in 1804, and this first horse-drawn passenger tramway started operating in 1807.

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But the trams had become a political football (in Leeds it was Labour that did for them, in Liverpool it was the Conservatives). They were unwanted clutter from the past at a time when operating costs of public transport networks were rising and meeting housing targets was the big priority for investment.

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Between 1992 and 2004, five other English cities saw new tram networks open: Manchester, Nottingham, Sheffield, Croydon and Birmingham. Bristol narrowly lost out due to delays in drawing up plans, rows about where the route should end, and cost overruns in other cities.

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The Roosevelt Island Tram in New York City is perhaps the most iconic tram in North America, as well as one of the oldest.

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The first streetcar in America, developed by John Stephenson, began service in the year 1832. This was the New York and Harlem Railroad's Fourth Avenue Line which ran along the Bowery and Fourth Avenue in New York City.

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In 1860, Birkenhead on the Wirral Peninsula had become the first town in Europe to operate a street tramway.

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During their heyday, London had the largest tram and trolleybus system in the world. The trolleybus superseded the tram, but both were eventually phased out in the 1950s and 1960s by a bus fleet that was cheaper to run.

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NYC started with street level trams and elevated trains. they worked for awhile, but added to the congestion and blocked light. As a result, they were largely removed and only remain in a few places - including the 1/9 which I can see from my living room!

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Together the two are multiplied together to give the drag area. 0.8 x 12 = 9.6 for a double decker bus, compared with 0.3 x 6 = 1.8 for the tram. This, combined with the rolling resistance, means a trams energy expenditure once up to speed is a fraction of that of a double decker bus.

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The KeolisAmey Metrolink tram system is the largest of its kind in the UK. It serves 99 stops across eight different lines along almost 103km of track, with a fleet of 120 modern trams catering for more than 34 million journeys a year.

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The tramway is the first commuter aerial tramway in North America, having opened in 1976. Since then, over 26 million passengers have ridden the tram. Manhattan, New York City, U.S. The tram consists of two cars that run back and forth on two parallel tracks.

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Lyon, France Lyon won the gold for being home to the best performing tram system in large cities across the world.

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The Melbourne tram network is the longest tram system by route length. The New Orleans streetcar system was one of the first in the world and it is the oldest system still in operation.

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There have been two separate generations of trams in London, from 1860 to 1952 and from 2000 to the present.

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