Wolverton and Stony Stratford Tramway


The Wolverton and Stony Stratford Tramway was a narrow gauge street tramway between Wolverton railway station, the London and North Western Railway's Wolverton railway works, Stony Stratford in Buckinghamshire, and onwards via Old Stratford to Deanshanger in Northamptonshire.

History

The tramway opened in 1887. A extension opened in 1888 to Deanshanger to the west of Stony Stratford, but the tramway company quickly ran into financial trouble and declared bankruptcy in 1889. The line was purchased by a syndicate of Bedford businessmen, which reopened the Wolverton to Stony Stratford section in 1891. The Deanshanger extension never re-opened.
In the early 1920s the line was taken over by the LNWR, which purchased a new Bagnall tram locomotive. After the LNWR merged into the London Midland and Scottish Railway the line was closed, in 1926.
The line was unusual for a British street tramway in being entirely worked by steam locomotives; it was the last steam street tramway in Great Britain.

Locomotives

BuilderTypeDateNotes
Krauss0-4-0 tram1886
Green0-4-0 tram
Brush0-4-0 tram
W.G. Bagnall0-4-0ST1922

Memorabilia

One of the carriages is on display at the Milton Keynes Museum on Stacey Hill with a variety of memorabilia.