| Cambridge Street Tramways | |||
|---|---|---|---|
Horse-drawn tram,c. 1880 toc. 1890 | |||
| Operation | |||
| Locale | Cambridge,England | ||
| Open | 28 October 1880 | ||
| Close | 18 February 1914 | ||
| Status | Closed | ||
| Infrastructure | |||
| Track gauge | 4 ft (1,219 mm) | ||
| Propulsion system | Horse | ||
| Depot(s) | Junction ofEast Road and Dover Street | ||
| Statistics | |||
| Route length | 2.67 miles (4.30 km) | ||
| |||
Cambridge Street Tramways operated ahorse-drawn tramway service inCambridge,England, between 1880 and 1914.[1]

When railways reached Cambridge in the 1840s, the main station was built around 1 mile (1.6 km) from the city centre, as a result of sustained opposition from the university authorities. A means was, therefore, necessary to transport passengers from the station to the city, and two rival schemes for a horse tramway were proposed. Of these, it was the Cambridge Street Tramways Company which was authorised to proceed.[2]
The tramways were built with a rail gauge of4 ft (1,219 mm), and the first section to open linkedCambridge railway station to Cambridge Post Office, then located next toSt Andrew the Great's Church inSidney Street, running along Station Road, Hills Road, and Regent Street.[2] The tramway was inspected by Major GeneralCharles Scrope Hutchinson from theBoard of Trade[3] and opened for public use on 28 October 1880. A branch fromMarket Hill to the junction of Hills Road and Regent Street, running along Trumpington Street and Lensfield Road, followed in November 1880, and shortly afterwards, this was extended along Gonville Place toEast Road. The routes crossed at Hyde Park Corner, next to the church ofOur Lady and the English Martyrs, but were always worked as two separate lines. The system was mainly single track, with a short section of double track in Hills Road.[2][4][5]
Other lines proposed along Newmarket Road,Maid’s Causeway, andEmmanuel Road were not constructed. The depot, at the junction ofEast Road and Dover Street,[4] is now a pub named "The Tram Depot".
In the early 1910s,British Electric Traction, a private company that owned several tramway systems, took an interest in the Cambridge system but were unable to suggest an acceptable solution for electrifying them. Since 1908, the trams had suffered from competition as a result of the formation of the Ortona Bus Service. British Electric Traction took the decision in early 1914 to abandon the trams and invest in the Ortona Motor Company. The tramway system closed on 18 February 1914, and the company was wound up in that month after the corporation sued for failing to pay their rates.[6] The assets of the company were put up for sale and included 24 active draught horses, 6 double-deck tramcars and 2 single-deck cars and equipment and machinery from the stables.[7]
The tramway operated a fleet of eight cars. When it first opened, there were two double-deck vehicles, numbered 1 and 4, and two single-deck vehicles numbered 2 and 3. The latter two both had an upper deck added at some point. Two more single-deck cars had been obtained by 1892, which were numbered 5 and 6, while in 1894 number 7, a double-deck car manufactured by Starbuck, joined the fleet. The final vehicle was car number 8, a double-deck car obtained in 1909. When the system closed, all eight vehicles were sold by auction and found various uses.[2]Tram number 7 became a workshop extension to a bungalow in Ely. It survived long enough to be acquired for preservation by theIpswich Transport Museum in 2003 and has been restored aided by a grant from theHeritage Lottery Fund. Restoration revealed that it had been built by theStarbuck Car and Wagon Company ofBirkenhead around 1880, initially for theBath Tramways Company, where it operated until around 1884. It was then purchased by theBradford and Shelf Tramway Company, where it was probably used as a trailer to a steam tram, although details are sketchy, before moving to the Cambridge system in 1894.[8][9]