Thread
:
New Bermondsey station (Surrey Canal Road)
View Single Post
#
62
January 9th 16, 10:30 PM posted to uk.transport.london
Dr J R Stockton[_42_]
external usenet poster
First recorded activity at LondonBanter: Jan 2016
Posts: 12
New Bermondsey station (Surrey Canal Road)
In uk.transport.london message ReGdndQvJ72aCBLLnZ2dnUU78W-
, Fri, 8 Jan 2016 04:52:55,
posted:
In article ,
(Clive Page)
wrote:
On 07/01/2016 23:45, Dr J R Stockton wrote:
A select portion of central Cambridge still used 110 volt
(approximately) lighting in about 1965. I can, if desired, explain
why.
That would be interesting to know.
I went to a shop in Cambridge in 1965 to buy a kettle. I was
surprised to be asked if I wanted it 110 or 230 volt. There must
have been a lot of domestic appliances scrapped at the time of
conversion.
Yet I heard none of this when I arrived in central Cambridge in 1968.
I tried to email John for more details (removing the ".invalid") but it
bounced.
The address that you used in May 2011 still works, but the one implied
in the signature below is possibly preferable.
In, as I unreliably recall, the mid-1920s, Trinity College Cambridge
elected a Fellow, Mr S (no known relation); and in those days College
Fellowships were for life (the practice ceased soon after). He took up
residence in a suite in one of the first staircases on the left as you
enter Trinity, and remained there quietly for decades; well into, or
past, the 1960s. When Trinity first adopted the general use of
electricity, I suppose before WWII, it acquired a 110 volt supply.
A friend of mine lived, as an undergraduate, in a set on that small
staircase in the early/mid 1960s. His rooms may well have been the only
other set on that staircase. He has told me that his rooms were
supplied with 110 volt lighting, and that they were equipped with a
small 110 to 240 volt transformer for his other minor needs.
The reason for the transformer being needed, he has told me, was that,
when that part of Cambridge City was changed from 110 volts to 240
volts, the College chose not to disturb Mr S's electrical arrangements,
and so had had fitted, where the supply entered the staircase, a 240
volt to 110 volt transformer, so that the entire small staircase was
supplied at 110 volts.
Also : I have read, a couple of decades ago, that a retired Fellow of a
College, during the Dinner to celebrate his 100th birthday, gave a
speech of reminiscence. He said, that when he had become a young
Fellow, he had met, at a Dinner, an old Fellow who said that, when he
had become a Fellow, he had met, at a Dinner, an old Fellow who said
that, when he was a new Fellow, he was at a Dinner when the news of
Wellington's victory at Waterloo arrived. One might guess the dates as
about 1815, 1870, 1925, 2000 - quite possible.
--
(c) John Stockton, near London. Mail
Web - FAQish topics, acronyms, and links.
Reply With Quote
Dr J R Stockton[_42_]
View Public Profile
Find all posts by Dr J R Stockton[_42_]