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Did You Ever Catch an Adelaide Trolleybus?

Can you recall the trolley buses around the city streets? Particularly in Rundle and Hindley Streets, which were always so busy but so narrow, and continuously packed with people, bikes, cars and trolley buses.

Our trolleybus system was part of public transport around Adelaide for roughly 30 years from the 1930s to the late 1950s.

Photo by Doug Colquhoun from Wikimedia Commons. The trolleybus system was part of public transport around Adelaide for roughly 30 years

Photo by Doug Colquhoun from Wikimedia Commons. The trolleybus system was part of public transport around Adelaide for roughly 30 years

During the Great Depression, Adelaide’s Municipal Tramways Trust (MTT) needed to expand services, but finances prevented laying new tracks. A decision was made to trial trolleybuses, and a converted petrol bus began running experimentally on the Payneham and Paradise lines. The trial was a success, and a permanent system was opened in 1937.

This new system began operations with a fleet of double-decker trolleybuses running to Tusmore. Extensions to Port Adelaide, Semaphore and Largs Bay were opened in 1938.

You might remember that the drivers of these buses had to use a variety of ‘tools’ to ensure that the trolley poles of their buses took the correct wires especially where routes diverged. Some of those tools were such things as a ‘trolleyboom’, a long stick which was kept on the side of the bus and was used to turn buses around.

Another device was a ‘frog’. This is when the conductor would get off the bus, go to a nearby pole and pull a wire connected to a set of points. This could be a bit hazardous for the conductor because of the heavy traffic, as he’d have to run after his bus to catch it after it had passed through the Frog.

There was also the ‘automatic frog’ which operators were nervous using, as they could easily lose their poles through a slight error in judgement.

Photo by Henk Graalman© from Flickr photo sharing. Used on the trolleybus services to Tusmore, Port Adelaide, Semaphore and Largs. In service from 1937 to June 1957. Displayed in Victoria Square during the 100 years on transit in Adelaide celebrations.

Photo by Henk Graalman© from Flickr photo sharing. Used on the trolleybus services to Tusmore, Port Adelaide, Semaphore and Largs.
In service from 1937 to June 1957. Displayed in Victoria Square during the 100 years on transit in Adelaide celebrations.

In a recent post about trolleybuses on the ARW Facebook page, Trevor Martin Bowen remembered riding on the Trolley bus. “I remember boarding the bus in Hindley Street. My father also drove the trolley buses, He tells the story of how he brought the over-head wires down at Botanic roundabout one evening because he didn’t lift his foot off the power as he was supposed to (those were the days when the drivers would hurry back to the depot to knock off to get to the Hackney Hotel before 6pm closing). Needless to say that dad wasn’t popular for causing the hold-up that night.”

Colin Alfred Chessman thought trolleybuses were fantastic. “Very quiet and smooth and good to ride in. They also had very fast acceleration. We used to get a double decker sometimes and stand right at the front on the top deck and watch the world whiz by from the Port into the city. Can’t remember how long it took. I just remember it being good fun. I guess I would have been eleven or twelve.”

And Col Penney recalled “They used to have a turn loop off Hindley Street, that they turned left at ‘Star Grocery’ to Light Square, where the bus did a “U” turn, stopped, pulled the poles down, then used gravity to turn right to go back on to Hindley Street, once again pulling up to allow the conductor to reconnect the poles back to live wires.”

I often catch the bus to and from work in the city these days and I sometimes ponder about the reaction that commuters of today would have to trolleybus transport with its regular stops and starts, poles coming off wires and conductors losing sticks during peak hour traffic.

Maybe, just maybe, they might enjoy the experience.

4 Responses to Did You Ever Catch an Adelaide Trolleybus?

  1. marjorie brown November 10, 2014 at 3:05 pm #

    The trolley bus passed where I lived at 288 Hindley Street at Grays Estate so I was very familiar with them. The wires were attached to our two storey building which still stands today. At the end of the war when we were sent home from school I bought lots of streamers and joyfully threw them over the buses as they came past our balcony. They were so quiet and as a child I thought their tyres were just so-oh big!

  2. Neil Dwiar November 27, 2014 at 9:21 pm #

    Remember walking over to Port Road with my Nan and Pop to catch the trolleybus down to a bustling Port Adelaide, watching the big ships turn around at the end of Commercial Road, and from memory the buses used to run every 5 minutes or so. Great fun sitting in the front row pretending to drive the bus.

  3. Neil H Usher July 1, 2016 at 1:47 pm #

    During the 1950’s I would spend school holidays in Adelaide & used to love getting on a single or double decker trolley bus & going into the city from Rose Park. The buses left the Tusmore / Beaumont terminus and went through the city to Port Adelaide, Largs Bay & Semaphore. I have always been fascinated with the trolley buses and have been out to the Tramways Trust museum at Saint Kilda on more than one occasion when in Adelaide.

  4. Gerry Savill April 10, 2019 at 7:48 pm #

    In my mid to late teens, I used to regularly travel on the trolley bus to and from Woodville Rd and the City via Port Rd.. On the return journey I recall watching out for the big “M” neon sign at Mitchell.s Garage which let me know I was almost home. I used to love looking down from the top deck of the trolley bus and would invariably let a single decker go by and wait for the next double decker. The wait wasn’t very long, the frequency of the service if I remember correctly was about six or seven minutes in the peak, a frequency not matched by any public transport service in Adelaide today, sixty years later. . .

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