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#1
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Hello everybody,
do you know how much was a ticket for the London underground in the early '60s? I found that a bus ticket for one stop was one and a half penny, and a three-pence for about three or four stops in suburbs such as Edgware or Stanmore. Is it right? Any help appreciated, thanks, Filippo |
#2
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On Jun 9, 9:33*am, nessuno2001 wrote:
Hello everybody, do you know how much was a ticket for the London underground in the early '60s? I found that a bus ticket for one stop was one and a half penny, and a three-pence for about three or four stops in suburbs such as Edgware or Stanmore. Is it right? When I started work on Regent St in 1969 the Waterloo to Piccadilly Circus fare was 3d. That would be just over 1p in currency or USD0.02. It cost twice as much to go from Waterloo to Oxford Circus, i.e. 6d of 2.5 new pence. That would be USD0.05 nowadays. Soon after I started work there was a fare increase that doubled the Waterloo to Piccadilly cost. Needless to say that I find the present day London fare to be extortionate. |
#3
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On Jun 9, 8:50 pm, 1506 wrote:
On Jun 9, 9:33 am, nessuno2001 wrote: Hello everybody, do you know how much was a ticket for the London underground in the early '60s? In preparation for decimalisation in 1971, London Transport moved all fares to be multiples of 6d, which had an exact conversion at 2.5p. And they were one of the last organisations to make widespread use of the half (new) penny before its abolition. In doing this, they were one of the few large organisations to be completely transparent about decimalisation. Most took the opportunity to introduce a hidden price increase, even other nationalised transport bodies. Scottish Omnibuses increased the fare from my home town to the nearest city from 2s 3d (just over 11p) to 13p. John |
#4
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1506 wrote:
On Jun 9, 9:33 am, nessuno2001 wrote: do you know how much was a ticket for the London underground in the early '60s? I found that a bus ticket for one stop was one and a half penny, and a three-pence for about three or four stops in suburbs such as Edgware or Stanmore. Is it right? When I started work on Regent St in 1969 the Waterloo to Piccadilly Circus fare was 3d. That would be just over 1p in currency or USD0.02. It cost twice as much to go from Waterloo to Oxford Circus, i.e. 6d of 2.5 new pence. That would be USD0.05 nowadays. Soon after I started work there was a fare increase that doubled the Waterloo to Piccadilly cost. So that's 2.5p at a time when a postage stamp for a letter was about the same. Needless to say that I find the present day London fare to be extortionate. By the postage prices index we should be paying less than 50p for a short hop. Hmm. How much would it have been from Waterloo to Earl's Court? After all, you can get that far for a minimum Z1 fare now. Colin McKenzie -- No-one has ever proved that cycle helmets make cycling any safer at the population level, and anyway cycling is about as safe per mile as walking. Make an informed choice - visit www.cyclehelmets.org. |
#5
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In message
, "John @ home" writes On Jun 9, 8:50 pm, 1506 wrote: On Jun 9, 9:33 am, nessuno2001 wrote: Hello everybody, do you know how much was a ticket for the London underground in the early '60s? In preparation for decimalisation in 1971, London Transport moved all fares to be multiples of 6d, which had an exact conversion at 2.5p. And they were one of the last organisations to make widespread use of the half (new) penny before its abolition. In doing this, they were one of the few large organisations to be completely transparent about decimalisation. Most took the opportunity to introduce a hidden price increase, even other nationalised transport bodies. Scottish Omnibuses increased the fare from my home town to the nearest city from 2s 3d (just over 11p) to 13p. Indeed they did. I have a copy of a Bristol Omnibus leaflet advertising Day Tickets at: "7/- (40p from February 1971)". -- Ian Jelf, MITG Birmingham, UK Registered Blue Badge Tourist Guide for London and the Heart of England http://www.bluebadge.demon.co.uk |
#6
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On Mon, 9 Jun 2008 12:50:58 -0700 (PDT), 1506
wrote: On Jun 9, 9:33*am, nessuno2001 wrote: Hello everybody, do you know how much was a ticket for the London underground in the early '60s? I found that a bus ticket for one stop was one and a half penny, and a three-pence for about three or four stops in suburbs such as Edgware or Stanmore. Is it right? You paid by the mile not the number of stops. When I started work on Regent St in 1969 the Waterloo to Piccadilly Circus fare was 3d. That would be just over 1p in currency or USD0.02. It cost twice as much to go from Waterloo to Oxford Circus, i.e. 6d of 2.5 new pence. That would be USD0.05 nowadays. Soon after I started work there was a fare increase that doubled the Waterloo to Piccadilly cost. Needless to say that I find the present day London fare to be extortionate. |
#7
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![]() "John @ home" wrote In preparation for decimalisation in 1971, London Transport moved all fares to be multiples of 6d, which had an exact conversion at 2.5p. British Rail did the same, one exception being platform tickets which were 4d, IIRC, before decimalisation, and became 2p on decimalisation. BR went decimal a day earlier than the national D-day, so for the price of an Oxford platform ticket (the last time I've ever bought one) I had in my hand the change for a shilling of a 1p and a 2p coin a day before most people could get hold of them. Peter |
#8
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John @ home wrote:
On Jun 9, 8:50 pm, 1506 wrote: On Jun 9, 9:33 am, nessuno2001 wrote: Hello everybody, do you know how much was a ticket for the London underground in the early '60s? In preparation for decimalisation in 1971, London Transport moved all fares to be multiples of 6d, which had an exact conversion at 2.5p. And they were one of the last organisations to make widespread use of the half (new) penny before its abolition. In doing this, they were one of the few large organisations to be completely transparent about decimalisation. Most took the opportunity to introduce a hidden price increase, even other nationalised transport bodies. Scottish Omnibuses increased the fare from my home town to the nearest city from 2s 3d (just over 11p) to 13p. John The day before the switch, the price of most beer was 3/- per pint. The day of the switch, it was the equivalent price of 15p. The day after it was 16p, a swingeing rise at the time, though it pales into insignificance today. -- Corporate society looks after everything. All it asks of anyone, all it has ever asked of anyone, is that they do not interfere with management decisions. -From “Rollerball” |
#9
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On 9 Jun, 20:50, 1506 wrote:
On Jun 9, 9:33*am, nessuno2001 wrote: Hello everybody, do you know how much was a ticket for the London underground in the early '60s? I found that a bus ticket for one stop was one and a half penny, and a three-pence for about three or four stops in suburbs such as Edgware or Stanmore. Is it right? Dunno about the underground but in 1958, Bristol - Darlington, £2-0-0d return. (Forces rates). |
#10
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Peter Masson wrote:
BR went decimal a day earlier than the national D-day, so for the price of an Oxford platform ticket (the last time I've ever bought one) I had in my hand the change for a shilling of a 1p and a 2p coin a day before most people could get hold of them. Example coinage was on sale for a couple of years before it could be spent. A plastic wallet labelled "Britain's First Decimal Coins". Anyone could get a set. -- http://gallery120232.fotopic.net/p9683781.html (150 138 at Stalybridge, 26 Feb 2001) |
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