This is an extract from D.H Lawrence the early years 1885-1912 by John Worthen published by Cambridge University Press
THE FAMILY OF D.H. LAWRENCE IN SHEERNESS
“In 1858 George Beardsall was taken on as a fitter at Sheerness Dockyard on the Isle of Sheppey, Kent, their first son George was born in Sheerness in 1859. Lydia (Lawrence’s mother) was born in 1851. In Sheerness the family lived in Marine Town. It appears they tended to live rather beyond their means: they had pretensions which their actual income of around £90.00 a year could barely support. How it may be asked could a hired dockyard worker with a wife and five children earning 5s8d a day afford to live in the smartest and newest of Sheerness’s five towns.(My underlining) The answer is that they could not. But with an instinct for choosing the right place George had taken the family to the very edge of Marine Town, to an unpaved cul de sac of tiny two up two down cottages. The house was no more that nine feet wide. Here the Beardsall family of two adults and five children somehow managed to house a lodger as well. They must have been desperate for his rent. To add to their overcrowding and to their financial difficulties two more children, Mary Ann and Ada were born in Sheerness in 1862 and 1868……..Lydia Beardsall would have liked to be a teacher. She had worked unsuccessfully as a pupil- teacher in Sheerness when she was 13; she apparently tried to start a school there, and seems to have taught a little later (unqualified, apart from her time as a pupil-teacher) in a Dame’s school”
Sheerness & District Power & Traction Co. Ltd.
1903-1917
Constructed under the Sheerness & District Light Railway Order of 1903 to the narrow 3ft 6ins gauge, this short 2½-mile tramway situated on the Isle of Sheppey was initially planned to be a much grander system. Objections were raised by the Sheppey Light Railway, whose lines the tramway would have had to cross to reach the proposed termini at Minster and Queensborough, and as a result these were never built.The system as constructed consisted of three single-track routes radiating from a central terminus at the Clock Tower; to the South Eastern and Chatham Railway’s Dockyard station, along High Street and past the SECR’s town station; to Marine Parade; and along High Street to the Sheerness East station of the Sheppey Light Railway (where the power station and tram shed were situated).The system opened on the 9th April 1903 with 12 (Nos. 1-12) double-deck open-top cars from Brush in a chocolate and cream livery. The number of cars was soon found to be too large for the truncated system and four were sold.The overhead had been installed by the Berlin firm of Siemens and Halske and the cars were equipped with Siemens bow collectors (unique on British tramways). This, in part, was responsible for the early demise of the system (the first electric tramway in Britain to close), when German spares became unavailable during Word War I.Although the system had been offered for sale to Sheerness UDC and Sheerness RDC, both declined to purchase it and on the 7th July 1917 the tramway finally closed.
FLEET SUMMARY
|
Fleet No. |
Type |
Trucks |
Builder |
Seating |
|
1-12 |
Double-deck Open-top 4-wheel |
Brush A |
Brush |
28/22 |
Nos. 1-12 had reversed stairs.
Nos. 1-8 sold to Darlington Corporation in 1917 (six were re-numbered 19-24 and two were used for spares).
Nos. 9-12 sold to City of Birmingham Tramways Co. Ltd. in 1904 (re-numbered 189-192).