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#1
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Whilst clearing out some cupboards I found three leaflets or brochures
published by London Transport in conjuction with BR. They consist of an A3 sheet, folded to approx 5½" x 3" and are giving details of special travel arrangements for the Olympic Games in 1948, the 1951 Festival of Britain and the 1953 Coronation respectively. Is there a market for this sort of thing ? I also found my (schoolboy) collection of London bus tickets from the 40's and 50's - any market for these ? TIA Barry --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.524 / Virus Database: 321 - Release Date: 06/10/03 |
#2
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Marratxi wrote:
Whilst clearing out some cupboards I found three leaflets or brochures published by London Transport in conjuction with BR. They consist of an A3 sheet, folded to approx 5½" x 3" and are giving details of special travel arrangements for the Olympic Games in 1948, the 1951 Festival of Britain and the 1953 Coronation respectively. Is there a market for this sort of thing ? Worth doing some searches on Ebay (www.ebay.co.uk). A quick look showed a BR/LU Coronation map for sale and several lots of bus tickets, but hardly any bids so far. Others may be able to advise on contacting the specialist traders in this field. I also found my (schoolboy) collection of London bus tickets from the 40's and 50's - any market for these ? (See above) That brings back memories! I was always amazed at the effort that must have gone into printing different tickets for every route listing the fare stages, with a different colour card for every fare, and each one with a unique serial number. --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.524 / Virus Database: 321 - Release Date: 06/10/03 Current AVG database is 325, released 22/10/03. Perhaps you should update more frequently? -- Richard J. (to e-mail me, swap uk and yon in address) |
#3
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In message , Marratxi
writes Whilst clearing out some cupboards I found three leaflets or brochures published by London Transport in conjuction with BR. They consist of an A3 sheet, folded to approx 5½" x 3" and are giving details of special travel arrangements for the Olympic Games in 1948, the 1951 Festival of Britain and the 1953 Coronation respectively. Is there a market for this sort of thing ? I also found my (schoolboy) collection of London bus tickets from the 40's and 50's - any market for these ? In addition to ebay, mentioned by Richard J, you could try Paddington auctions: http://www.paddingtonticketauctions.co.uk/ Items such as the Coronation leaflet are quite common and rarely fetch more than 3-5 pounds, even when in good condition. If you wish to email me with a valid email address I will happily give you a bit more detail about prices of the leaflets (the reply-to address on this message is valid). I don't know anything about bus ticket prices, though. -- Paul Terry |
#4
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"Richard J." wrote in message
... Marratxi wrote: London bus tickets from the 40's and 50's - any market for these ? I was always amazed at the effort that must have gone into printing different tickets for every route listing the fare stages, with a different colour card for every fare, and each one with a unique serial number. I would imagine that all of the different tickets of a particular colour were printed by a single plate on a huge card, and after a stack of huge cards had been printed, they were then cut into stacks of tickets. -- John Rowland - Spamtrapped Transport Plans for the London Area, updated 2001 http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Acro...69/tpftla.html A man's vehicle is a symbol of his manhood. That's why my vehicle's the Piccadilly Line - It's the size of a county and it comes every two and a half minutes |
#5
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In message , John Rowland
writes "Richard J." wrote in message ... Marratxi wrote: London bus tickets from the 40's and 50's - any market for these ? I was always amazed at the effort that must have gone into printing different tickets for every route listing the fare stages, with a different colour card for every fare, and each one with a unique serial number. I would imagine that all of the different tickets of a particular colour were printed by a single plate on a huge card, and after a stack of huge cards had been printed, they were then cut into stacks of tickets. Not sure about bus tickets, but Edmondson-style train tickets were all printed on individual ticket blanks fed from a hopper. The reason being the need to number each ticket individually as it is printed in order to prevent fraud. There's a picture of the original Edmondson ticket press at ... http://www.lancs.ac.uk/users/history...cky/thomas.htm The Waterlow process was similar, although it could use several different colours of ink simultaneously. -- Paul Terry |
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