Wednesday, 23 January 2019

Buster is back!


Just before Christmas I was sent a copy of Nottingham City Transport's new published Activity Book, available from its Travel Centre on South Parade in the Market Square.

If this for kids then they are brighter than me, but we live in different times and learning now is so much different from the 1940s and 50s.

What I so happy about is the resurrection of Buster but before I tell you a little here are a couple of pages from the NCT Activity Book.


Buster first appeared in the early-1980s as NCT logo. Here he is on the cover of a map from 1983 (my favourite NCT map, a little battered now). He was everywhere on the map. I thought Buster a great logo and communication tool.



When I created my first 35 History Bus Guide and Map in early-2014 I resurrected Buster with the intention of using him as my mouthpiece but Nottingham City Transport were a little unsure despite my enthusiasm, so I didn't use him and now ids the first time my handywork is appearing in the public domain. I created this logo 5 years ago and I hoping now that Buster can appear on my next map and History Bus leaflets later this year.

Do you like Buster? I hope so. Please let me know.


Tuesday, 22 January 2019

A story about 35 ghouls for the City Council....

A Nottingham City Transport 28 bus a little lost on Derby Road across from the Savoy Cinema in Lenton but all is not what it seems. It's September 2013 and driver didn't know he was showing the wrong display on a 36 bus. The clue is in the colour. 28s are pink. No one mentioned the wrong display to the driver. He had come all the way from Chilwell without anyone saying a word. It does say 'Victoria Centre'. I couldn't bring myself to tell him, so I just got on like everyone else but only after I took the pic.

This post has been lifted from the City Council website:

📖 Transport tales 📖

Do you enjoy a wild walk to work? 
Or maybe you met your beau on the bus or true love on the tram? 
Maybe you just love your commute and want to shout about it!
We are looking for some keen Nottinghamians to write short blogs (up to 400 words) about their experiences of travel and transport in the city. 
We'll then share some of the best in future newsletters and online.
If you'd like to share your transport tale, we'd love to hear from you. For more info drop us an email

Here is my tale:

Ghouls like to travel by Nottingham City Transport's Orange 35 buses because it passes so many graveyards. The dead in the cemeteries along its route hate Halloween, especially those who reside in the General Cemetery by Canning Circus, because their corpses have been sucked dry for over 150 years. Dug up by feverish hands, the gravediggers go back year after year to re-bury the dead. Why not get off at Canning Circus and walk through the cemetery to Shakespeare Street and the Victoria Centre, where the 35 terminates, and walk among the leaning tombstones, uneven and sunken graves. What you see is no accident — it is the work of ghouls and the eternal gravediggers who keep them company. Before the coming of the 35 bus Ghouls waited ages for so many buses that some of the dead in our cemeteries were actually left in peace but not any more and it's all thanks to the 35 bus. Not many know that. Take my advice when your time comes and avoid being buried close to the 35 bus route. It is no coincidence that Batman's ancestral home is Wollaton Hall. It is there between Halloweens that Ghouls rest dreaming of feasts to come!


Fallen gravestones and crosses — just two of hundreds you can see along the 35 bus route if you dare to search them out...



This story has been written to entertain and to make a point. Most cemeteries and churchyards are lucky if they get the grass cut. Other maintenance work is minimal. Cemeteries remind us of our own mortality and that as short as we may think our lives are, they are long compared to many who lived just a few decades ago.

Monday, 21 January 2019

Remembering the day I saw my name on a 35 bus

Reading yesterday's post my wife Susan pointed out that I had not done a post about the day I had a Nottingham City Transport 35 bus named after me, so here's what I remember of it, nearly three months later.

It was a cold, damp, overcast October day in Wollaton Park, where Susan and I turned up for what we thought was the official launch of the 35 branded 'History Bus'. A few were already out on the road. Little did I know until I saw it that this one was special — it had my name on it!

Click on the pics to enlarge. Susan took all these pics (you can see the official NCT pic on their website).



Well, here I am kneeling down beside my name. It was some moment. What there isn't a pic showing is Susan and Anthony Carver-Smith, NCT's Public Relations Manager, who was behind the 35 History Bus Guide and the whole branding exercise, helping a 74 year old to stand up!


Here's one of Anthony and me holding the just launched 35 History Bus guide.


I also got to sit in the driver's seat. As a child growing up in Wembley my ambition was to be a bus driver, but in those days you had to be 23 years old before you could get a Public Service Vehicle (PSV) driving licence and on leaving school at 15 I got a job which took my life in a different direction but I remained a bus user, having started travelling on the 83 London Transport bus (still running) between Wembley and Kingsbury on my own from the age of four. At first my Nanna or an aunt would put me on the bus and another aunt would be waiting for me at the bus stop beside the parish church in Kingsbury.

By the time I started school aged 5 I was a seasoned bus passenger, able to go on a 79 to visit my mother, who lived in another part of Kingsbury housekeeping for a lovely family doctor, originally from Poland, who had adopted the surname 'Sheldon'. The things you remember with fondness once you start writing never ceases to amaze me!


The blue sky in this pic says a lot about my memory of the day — there is nothing 'overcast' about it, but Susan confirms it was cold and it was damp. The professional photographer and his assistant had to use large light reflectors, as this pic shows, so perhaps it was not as bright as it looks, given how modern hi-tech digital cameras do so mucg for us when we take a pic.



I rather like this one of me, sitting in the driver's seat, talking to the photographer.

I did actually get to drive a bus in 1982, in West Berlin of all places, whilst attending a week long international airports conference and exhibition in my then capacity as Chair of East Midlands Airport in the company of my good friend Dermot Arthur, who was on the EMA Committee as well as being a Nottingham city councillor and Chair of the council's City Transport Committee, just before Maggie Thatcher and her crew began their attack on all kinds of municipal ownership and enterprise. Thanks to folk like Dermot, the City has held on to NCT but EMA was sold off and, at first, privatised but eventually, I'm glad to say, EMA found it's way back into municipal ownership (it is now owned by Manchester Airport — which is owned by a collection of Greater Manchester councils).

In Berlin, Dermot and I were, at first, transported everywhere in a large Mercedes saloon with 4 police motorbike outriders. It took a few days to persuade Berlin officials to give us public transport passes instead, which enabled us to explore the city (and visit East Berlin) on our own. It was a memorable week. 


Closer to home, Susan created this Nottingham bus doorstop in the early-1980s whilst I was a Nottinghamshire county councillor (for the Cinderhil, Highbury Vale, Old Basford, Stockhill area). It took her a couple of years and has the bus route number on the back and the nearside. Back in the late-70s and early-80s Nottingham buses had gone one man operation and the technology didn't exist to change route nos. and destination displays automatically, so they disappeared. It was something I opposed at the time and campaigned against. I'm sad to say, despite being a life-long trade unionist since the age if 15, it was the drivers' trade union which opposed drivers doing what had once been the o;d conductors' job. In the end, technology overtook the objections and bus displays are the best they ever been in Nottingham, so it is a story with a happy ending!

Sunday, 20 January 2019

Another 35 bus named. I'm in such good company!

One of the things I love about Nottingham City Transport (NCT) is its engagement with the communities it serves and how it finds the remarkable in everyday people.

Yesterday NCT named a 35 History Bus after Kenneth Alan Taylor, whose 35th Nottingham Playhouse Pantomime - Robin Hood and the Babes in the Wood - has been sponsored by NCT. 





Kenneth Alan Taylor joins twenty-six other people to have had buses named after them by NCT (Click here to see a list of names) including me, I'm proud to say. Looking at the list I love the fact that it celebrates achievement and tenacity across all classes and groups and I love it for that.

Commenting on  having a bus named after him, Kenneth said, “I am so thrilled by this honour. Other people may get OBE's etc. but how many get a bus named after them. Many thanks to Nottingham City Transport.”

An Orange Line 35 bus – the same number of pantomimes Kenneth has written and directed at Nottingham Playhouse – now proudly displays “Kenneth Alan Taylor” on the front along with an internal panel citing his achievements. The 35 bus passes Nottingham Playhouse as well as University Park Campus, where Kenneth was awarded an Honorary Doctor of Letters by the University of Nottingham in 2011.

Anthony Carver-Smith, NCT Marketing Manager added, “As proud Playhouse Panto sponsors, NCT couldn’t miss the opportunity to recognise the milestone of the 35th pantomime written and directed by Kenneth. The arts play such an important role in enabling people to express and enjoy themselves and we look forward to continuing our partnership with Nottingham Playhouse to maximise the opportunities for people in our city to enjoy great performances in the years to come”.

As well as writing and directing Playhouse Panto for the last 35 years, Kenneth was Artistic Director of Nottingham Playhouse for seven years. His theatre and television credits are vast, including The Cherry Orchard, The Father, Noises Off on stage and Coronation Street, Emmerdale and Cold Feet on screen. He received the MTA award for Best Supporting Actor in The Price (Octagon Theatre Bolton).

A full list of Nottingham City Transport named buses is online at www.nctx.co.uk/busnames and tickets for Kenneth’s 36th Playhouse Panto – Sleeping Beauty – are on sale now, with Easyrider cardholders able to enjoy a 10% discount off prices on selected shows.