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How the Trojans put Croydon on the Map
Car
enthusiasts in Croydon are being urged to get in quick and snap up the last
copies of a booklet cataloguing the borough's history of car manufacturing.
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Booklet
first published
in
1985 |
A
batch of 200 copies of the publication Croydon Cars has recently been
discovered at Croydon Clock tower.
The
booklet was first published in 1985, the year which celebrated the
centenary of the motorcar, and explores the part that Croydon played in
its history and development.
Croydon
Cars looks at 23 different makes, more than 70 different models and
stories of success and failure. It also looks at motoring incidents and
events which have happened in or passed through Croydon.
The
book's author, Bob Stearn, says in the booklet: "The first London
to Brighton run spluttered its way through the borough on 14th November
1896, as if to mark the beginning of a new era of road usage, Croydon
switched on its first electric street lamp that evening."
Then
called the Emancipation Run, the event was staged to celebrate the
Locomotives on Highways Act, freeing the motorist from the restrictive
four miles an hour speed limit. |
Earlier
that year in August, Croydon resident Bridget Driscoll became the first ever
person in the country to be killed by a motorcar, in this case a show vehicle on
display at Crystal Palace.
Croydon
also has the dubious honour of being the location of the first ever fatal car
accident, when motorist Henry Lindfield lost his life in Russell Hill, Purley,
in February 1898.
Mr
Lindfield had been travelling with his son when his car crashed and he became
stuck between the car and a tree. He was taken to Croydon General Hospital where
he had his leg amputated but he died the next morning.
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The
first person to own a car in Croydon is thought to be a Mr D P Roberts,
a chemist and dealer in photographic and optical goods, who bought his
car in October 1898 to deliver goods from his business at 120 North End,
now the location of Marks and Spencer. According to the book, the first
car to be manufactured in Croydon was the 1902 Bradbury voiturette.
Prior
to this, old coach makers built bodies for cars and engineering firms
also made modifications to existing machinery but, according to the
book, Bradbury Bros has the distinction of being Croydon's first car
manufacturer because they designed, built and marketed their own car
rather than modifying someone else's.
Hot
on the heels of the Bradbury came six further Croydon cars over the next
three years, the Firefly, the Imperial, the Emerald, the General, the
Weller and the Brotherhood. These vehicles, which were once the pride of
Croydon, now remain largely forgotten.
The
book examines the contribution Croydon made to the motoring industry
highlighting the many types of vehicles manufactured in the borough.
This includes the iconic Trojan car, arguably one creation which has
become synonymous with Croydon. |

The
Iconic Trojan Car |
Copies
of Croydon Cars, published by Stearn Publishing, are available from the Tourist
Information Centre at Croydon Clocktower, Katharine Street, priced £2.
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