Royal Blue Coach Services

Royal Blue Coach Services

Royal Blue Coach Services ran coaches in the south and west of England from 1880 until 1986.

Origins

The Royal Blue business was started in 1880 by Thomas Elliott in Bournemouth. The business, at first known as Royal Blue and Branksome Mews, included the hire of every kind of horse-drawn vehicle, as well as coach building, saddlery and blacksmithing. Elliott soon started a four-in-hand stagecoach service to connect Bournemouth to the railway at Holmsley. That service became redundant when the railway was extended to Bournemouth in 1888, but by then Elliott had started running Royal Blue excursions by charabanc and coach around Bournemouth and the New Forest. Elliott was joined by his brothers, who continued the business when Thomas died in 1911.

Early motor coach services

In 1913 Royal Blue purchased its first motor charabanc, and motors rapidly replaced the horses. In 1919 the Elliott Brothers took advantage of a railway strike to start a motor coach service from Bournemouth to London. The service was so successful that the service was increased to twice a week during 1920 and twice daily during 1921. By 1926 Royal Blue was operating 72 coaches.

Until 1928 the express coach service only carried passengers to and from London and Bournemouth, not intermediate points. In 1928 Royal Blue obtained licences to pick up and set down en route, and started services from Bournemouth and London to many more cities, including Birmingham, Bristol and Plymouth. By 1930 Royal Blue was operating 11 routes, an expansion prompted by the expected passage of the 1930 Road Traffic Act, which was to regulate competition for passenger road transport.

The Road Traffic Act led coach operators to eliminate competition in two ways: by buying competitors and by reaching agreements with competitors to share services and pool revenues. Royal Blue did both. It acquired competitors in Plymouth (Traveller Coaches) and Portsmouth (Olympic Services), and made co-ordination agreements with Southdown and East Kent (between Margate and Bournemouth), Greyhound Motors (between London and Bristol), Western National (between London and Plymouth) and Southern National (between London and Paignton). In 1934 Royal Blue was one of the founders of Associated Motorways, which co-ordinated coach routes of six operators.

At the end of 1934 Elliot Brothers sold the Royal Blue business to Western National and Southern National, by then controlled by the Tilling Group. The new owners continued the process of acquiring competitors and expanding the route network, particularly in Devon and Cornwall. The change of control also meant that Royal Blue switched to Bristol for its new coaches - the Tilling Group also controlled the Bristol bus factory.

The Second World War brought black-out night driving, fuel shortages and bomb damage to Royal Blue garages. Royal Blue was forced to cease operations from October 1942 to Easter 1946.

Nationalisation

In 1947 the Tilling Group sold its bus operations (including Western National and Southern National) to the British Transport Commission, so that Royal Blue became government owned. State control did little to hinder the expansion of Royal Blue services. Fuel shortages meant that in the early post-war years even those who owned cars hesitated to use them for long journeys, and few people went on holiday abroad, so there was a strong demand for long-distance coach travel. The Beeching cuts of the early 1960's generated more traffic for Royal Blue, and traffic peaked in 1965, with well over 1.5 million passenger journeys.

Royal Blue's owners, Western National and Southern National, were transferred in 1962 to the new state-owned Transport Holding Company, and again in 1969 to the new National Bus Company.

In 1972 the National Bus Company formed National Travel, which became National Express, to run long-distance coach services. The following year the operations of Royal Blue were franchised to National Express. Western National continued to own the Royal Blue coaches, but was required to adopt the National Express brand white livery, somewhat inappropriate for Royal Blue. The Royal Blue name was retained.

Unlike many local bus services, Royal Blue's coach services continued to make profits. The spread of the UK's motorway network in the 1970's cut journey times dramatically, and coach travel had a significant cost advantage over rail travel.

Privatisation

Under the new Thatcher government, express coach services were deregulated by the Transport Act 1980, six years before the deregulation of local bus services. Western National, the owners of the coaches, was split up in 1983 and its successor companies were privatised in 1986 and 1987. In 1986, to strengthen the national brand, National Express dropped all regional names, and so the Royal Blue name came to an end after 106 years.

In 1988 National Express was sold to its management, and in 1992 it was floated on the London Stock Exchange.

References

*Anderson, R.C.A. and Frankis, G. (1970) "History of Royal Blue Express Services" David & Charles


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