Sheffield Corporation No. 74
Appearances can often be deceptive and the field of tramcar preservation is no exception, Sheffield 74 being a case in point. Thanks to the skill and ingenuity of the workshop team at Crich, this image of Edwardian elegance looks for all the world as if it has miraculously survived intact and unblemished for over a century; but the truth is far more complicated, remarkable and, for some, perhaps, even a little controversial.
Sheffield 74 was originally built as an open-topped tram by the Electric Railway and Carriage Company based in Preston in 1900. The very first electric tramcars had only been delivered to Sheffield the previous year and by 1904 the Corporation’s Nether Edge workshops were already producing their own tramcars to a broadly similar open-topped design. Similar looking cars also operated in Bristol, Hull and Glasgow but all these early designs pre-dated by a couple of years the era of standard ‘off-the-peg’ vehicles that were later offered by established tramcar manufacturers such as Brush and Dick, Kerr.
Specification
- Type of tram
- Electric double deck 4-wheeled uncanopied tram with short top cover (originally open-topped).
- Livery
- Prussian blue and cream
- Seating capacity
- 51 (22 downstairs; 29 upstairs)
- Date built
- 1900
- Manufacturer of body
- Electric Railway and Carriage Co
- Manufacturer of truck
- Peckham Cantilever (originally Brill 21E)
- Gauge
- 4’ 8½”
- Motor
- GE52 2 x 27 hp
- Controller
- BTH B18
- Current collector
- Trolley pole
- Modification
1909 short top cover added; sold to Gateshead in 1922 after which it was extensively rebuilt and given the number 33, acquiring conventional-looking canopies and top cover. It also ‘inherited’ the trucks and electrical equipment that had previously belonged to the original Gateshead 33, which was scrapped in 1923
- Withdrawn from service
Withdrawn from service in Sheffield and sold to Gateshead in 1922; final withdrawal in 1951
- Subsequent history
Lower deck of 74 sold and converted into a garden shed; acquired by the TMS in 1990.
- Restoration history
Early 1990s united with top cover of ex-Sheffield 1904 tram 218 and a truck from ex-Leeds tower car no. 2 (formerly belonging to tram 110).
- Current status
- Restored to operational condition and commissioned for service during the current season.
- Date started operating at Crich
- 1995. Has operated in 26 seasons, most recently in 2023..
- Total mileage covered at Crich
- 17,071
- Current location
- Depots
- 1900 – 1922Operational on original tramway
- 1922 – 1951Operational on a different tramway
- 1951 – 1990Lower deck converted into garden shed
- 1990 – 1995Undergoing restoration
- 1995 –Operational at Crich