Singapore Traction Company
Company type | Public limited company[1] |
---|---|
Industry | Transport |
Founded | 1 October 1925 |
Defunct | 28 December 1978[2] |
Headquarters | Singapore |
Area served | Singapore |
Services | Tram, trolleybus and bus service |
TheSingapore Traction Company(STC) was atram,trolleybusandmotor busoperator in Singapore from 1925 to 1971. Established as a result of the Traction Ordinance in 1925, it was initially owned by the Shanghai Electric Company. The company took over Singapore's tram network, converting it to a trolleybus network by 1927. It acquired its first omnibuses in 1929, took over "mosquito bus" (seven-passenger buses) service in 1933, and became independent of the electric company in 1935.
With only 20 operational trolleybuses at the end ofWorld War II,a programme to restore full service by purchasing new buses was begun during the late 1940s. The company experienced a 15-week strike in 1947, and a 142-day strike over wages from 1955 into 1956.
Trolleybus service ended in December 1962, and the company headquarters was moved fromLondonto Singapore in 1964. By the late 1960s, the STC's financial state had worsened; with the April 1971 repeal of the Traction Ordinance, its losses mounted. With the company near bankruptcy, its buses were sold to Singapore's three other bus companies and the STC ceased operation in December 1971.
History
[edit]Background
[edit]The Shanghai Electric Company (SEC), which operated a trolleybus network inShanghai,was approached to rehabilitate theSingapore tramway networkduring the early 1920s. Due to the poor state of the tram infrastructure, rehabilitation was deemed too costly and plans were made to convert the system to trolleybuses.[3]
The SEC began negotiations with Singapore's municipal government over a new traction ordinance. The ordinance included the conversion of the tram system to trolleybuses and the restructuring of the old tramway company.[4]
Establishment and conversion of tram system
[edit]The STC was established in 1925 in accordance with the Singapore Traction (Transfer) Ordinance, which was passed by theLegislative Councilin March of that year, to take over Singapore'stram networkfrom Singapore Electric Traction and replace it withtrolleybuses.[5]The first two trolleybus routes began operation on 14 August 1926,[6]and the last tram line was converted on 4 September 1927.[7]
The company received approval to operate motor buses on its existing trolleybus routes in 1929, and operated an experimental route betweenGeylangandFinlayson Greenwith seven buses. The buses, introduced to reduce travel time, were noted by a reporter forThe Straits Timesas having a smooth, comfortable ride.[8]The motor-bus service was then expanded with the introduction of a route toSeletarin July of that year.[9]
STC revenue declined by £20,000 from 1931 to 1932 (during theGreat Depression), due to the continuation of service despite reduced demand.[10]By 1933, the company operated what was claimed to be the largest trolleybus network in the world: 24.96 mi (40.17 km) long, served by 108 vehicles.[11]That year, negotiations began on articles and amendments to the management agreement to release the STC from Shanghai Electric Company control.[12]
Mosquito-bus takeover
[edit]In 1933, with the failure of Southern Omnibus Services, the municipal government decided to transfer all mosquito-bus service to the STC by replacing the service with new routes and extending existing ones.[13]The replacement of mosquito buses on the first few routes prompted commuter complaints about overcrowding, and the Municipal Commission recommended adjusting the route timetables.[14]The STC added buses to its fleet and began express service on the Tampines Road route, the route with the most problems.[15]
The company bought out its Shanghai Electric Company ownership for £100,000 in 1935.[16]The deal was delayed, however, when the Chancery Court granted an injunction to the Investment Trust Corporation and other STC shareholders because the STC did not have the required money.[17]The STC successfully appealed the injunction on 1 May 1935.[18]The management agreement between the companies was terminated in October of that year, when payment was made.[19]
In September and October 1936, STC bus drivers and conductorsstrucktwice over split shifts and harsh working conditions.[20]Two years later, STC workers went on strike again after four months of negotiations with the company failed.[21]The strike continued for 15 days, with strikers unwilling to negotiate with the company until the government stepped in to arbitrate.[22]The strikers were unwilling to accept arbitration, and the strike continued for almost a month before service resumed on 22 August 1938.[23]
1940s and 1950s
[edit]Only 20 trolleybuses were found fit for service when Singapore returned to British rule, and operations were limited until new buses could be delivered.[24]The restoration of full service was also delayed by a 15-week strike in 1947[25]over wages.[26]Concerns about overcrowding on STC buses were also raised frequently in the media and by the Municipal Commission, and fines for breaches of regulation were increased in 1950.[27]The company introduced buses for schoolchildren in April 1950, in response to a request made six months earlier.[28]
In September 1955, the STC refused to accept demands for 60- to 70-percent wage increases and over 2,800 employees went on strike. Although some of the workers attempted to run a free bus service, they were prevented from doing so.[29]The STC chairman flew to Singapore for negotiations at theLabour Ministry,[30]but no progress was made.[31]Negotiations resumed in December 1955,[32]reaching an impasse after a few days.[33]
The government convened a court of inquiry for the dispute,[34]which recommended a wage increase. Management rejected the recommendations, saying that the company would incur a loss.[35]After Chief MinisterDavid Marshallwarned that the STC might have its franchise cancelled, the company backed down[36]and bus service resumed on the afternoon of 16 February 1956.[37]
Demise
[edit]The STC discontinued trolleybus operations in December 1962.[38]In January 1964, the company transferred its headquarters fromLondonto Singapore; the Singapore company was formed by a new board, and the London company wasvoluntarily liquidated.Most of the company's shareholders were inMalaysia,and greater opportunity for expansion was possible in Singapore.[1]
By 1966, as a result of competition frompirate taxis(which resulted in the loss of about six million passengers in 1965),[39]the STC was operating at a loss of$1 million per year.[40]The company was unable to meet itspayrollor acquire new buses, and its directors considered voluntary liquidation.[41]The government's seizure of 1,000 pirate taxis and the resulting reduction of operating losses in 1967 averted the STC's financial collapse.[42]However, the company continued to incur losses for the rest of the 1960s.[43]
In April 1971, with the adoption of the Wilson Report by the government, the Traction Ordinance was repealed and the STC had to compete on an equal footing with Singapore's other bus companies.[44]The company's losses increased to $13,000 per day, leaving it nearly bankrupt.[45]
It was learned in November 1971 that the United Bus Company had made a bid for the STC's bus operations, with negotiations between the companies directed by the government.[46]The following month, the STC concluded negotiations with the three other bus companies for the sale of its buses for about $2.7 million.[47]In addition to acquiring the buses, the three companies hired 2,000 STC employees (including 1,700 drivers and conductors). Several mechanical workers were hired by theMinistry of Defence,and others were registered at Labour Ministry employment exchanges in Havelock and Bendemeer Roads.[48]
The company was placed inreceivershipby the Chung Kiaw Bank on 21 December 1971.[49] The STC's Upper Aljunied Road bus depot was purchased by the three Chinese bus companies in 1972 for about $2 million, and its Mackenzie Road property was taken over by the government.[50]Unsuccessful efforts were made to salvage the company over the next five years, and it was wound up in 1978.[2]
Fleet
[edit]The initial fleet of trolleybuses acquired in 1926 consisted ofchassisbuilt by theAssociated Equipment Companyin England andbodiesconstructed in Shanghai, with assembly in Singapore. The trolleybuses, with a capacity of 32 passengers, had a two-class layout.[51]The STC began replacing its 20-seat,petrol-poweredmotor buses with 30-seatheavy-oilbuses during the late 1930s as part of a fleet renewal programme.[52]
AfterWorld War II,nearly all the company's buses were unusable as a result of deferred maintenance and the use of poor-quality lubricants during theJapanese occupation.[53]The STC ordered new omnibuses and trolleybuses from theUnited Kingdom,which came into service in 1946 and 1947 respectively. The bus chassis were built in the United Kingdom, and the bodies were assembled in Singapore.[54]By 1949, all but 10 of the STC's buses were modern vehicles ordered after the war; the total carrying capacity was higher than the pre-war level by 1950.[55]
In 1954, as part of an expansion programme, the STC acquired 24 new 8-foot-wide (2.4 m) omnibuses and Singapore's first 30-foot-long (9.1 m) buses.[56]The 30-foot buses, which had lighteraluminiumchassis, were ordered as part of a plan to move the STC fleet towards fewer, larger buses.[57]The company began a programme to convert its buses to aluminium bodies in March 1956,[58]and invested $2 million in aluminium-body buses from Britain.[59]
In 1962, the STC replaced its trolleybus fleet with 35Isuzubuses.[60]The Japanese-built buses had automatic doors, telescopic shock absorbers and air suspension.[61]In 1967, the STC acquired 50 37-seatNissanbuses at a cost of $1.5 million to serve theToa Payohhousing estate.[62]To pay for the buses, the company mortgaged its Mackenzie Road properties.[42]
References
[edit]- ^ab"Singapore board takes over STC from London".The Straits Times.Singapore. 23 January 1964. p. 14.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^ab"Bus firm winds up after 73 years".New Nation.Singapore. 28 December 1978. p. 4.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Singapore Tramways".Malaya Tribune.Singapore. 12 July 1923. p. 3.Retrieved6 September2018.
- ^"Singapore Tramways".The Singapore Free Press & Mercantile Advertiser.Singapore. 2 April 1924. p. 10.Retrieved6 September2018.
- ^"Singapore Traction Co".The Straits Times.Singapore. 7 March 1925. p. 11.Retrieved3 September2018.
- ^"Trolley Buses".The Straits Times.13 August 1926. p. 8.
- ^"Last of the Trams".The Straits Times.Singapore. 1 September 1927. p. 9.Retrieved6 September2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"SINGAPORE 'BUSES".The Straits Times.Singapore. 2 February 1928.Retrieved8 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"SINGAPORE TRACTION COMPANY".The Straits Times.Singapore. 22 February 1930. p. 11.Retrieved8 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"SINGAPORE TRACTION".The Straits Times.Singapore. 21 March 1933.Retrieved21 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"MODERN SINGAPORE—The City Of Opportunity. IX.-HOW SINGAPORE GOES TO WORK".Malaya Tribune.Singapore. 7 April 1933. p. 15.Retrieved21 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"S'pore Traction Company Proposals".The Straits Times.Singapore. 24 July 1933. p. 9.Retrieved21 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"City's Bus Services".The Straits Times.Singapore. 3 December 1933. p. 10.Retrieved23 November2018.
- ^"Transport system is adequate".The Singapore Free Press And Mercantile Advertiser.Singapore. 27 January 1934. p. 10.Retrieved23 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"IMPROVED BUS SERVICE".The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser.Singapore. 10 February 1934. p. 6.Retrieved27 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Local Traction Company Freed".The Straits Times.Singapore. 24 January 1935. p. 11.Retrieved27 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Opposition To Proposed £100,000 Deal".The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser.Singapore. 5 April 1935. p. 1.Retrieved27 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Singapore Traction. Detailed Report Of Appeal. Not governed by former case".The Straits Times.Singapore. 18 May 1935. p. 9.Retrieved27 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Singapore Traction".The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser.Singapore. 28 October 1935.Retrieved27 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Sudden Bus Strike In Singapore: Complete Deadlock".The Straits Times.Singapore. 22 October 1936. p. 12.Retrieved28 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"General Strike Move To Enforce Transport Demands".Malaya Tribune.Singapore. 7 July 1938. p. 11.Retrieved28 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Singapore Transport Settlement In Sight".Morning Tribune.Singapore. 21 July 1938. p. 2.Retrieved28 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Buses Are Back—Now Rickshas Are Idle".Malaya Tribune.Singapore. 22 August 1938. p. 12.Retrieved28 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"S'Pore Once Had Steam Trams".Malaya Tribune.Singapore. 26 January 1948. p. 4.Retrieved3 December2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Busmen Go Back Today".The Straits Times.Singapore. 8 May 1947. p. 1.Retrieved23 December2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Traction Enquiry Findings".Malaya Tribune.Singapore. 8 May 1947. p. 4.Retrieved23 December2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Move To Put End To Bus Overcrowding".The Straits Times.Singapore. 10 February 1950. p. 7.Retrieved23 December2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"8 BUSES FOR SCHOOLS".The Straits Times.Singapore. 6 April 1950. p. 9.Retrieved23 December2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Bid to run free buses fails".The Singapore Free Press.Singapore. 27 September 1955. p. 1.Retrieved20 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"STC: Peace talks on today".The Straits Times.Singapore. 11 October 1955. p. 5.Retrieved20 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Buses: Decision today".The Straits Times.Singapore. 13 October 1955. p. 1.Retrieved20 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"New Bid To End Strike".The Straits Times.Singapore. 3 December 1955. p. 1.Retrieved20 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Hope To End Bus Strike Fades".The Straits Times.Singapore. 10 December 1955. p. 1.Retrieved20 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^Joshua, P.J. (18 January 1956)."The Why and How Of Union's Pay Claims".The Straits Times.Singapore. p. 8.Retrieved20 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"S.T.C. Men Say Yes To Award".The Straits Times.Singapore. 13 February 1956. p. 1.Retrieved20 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Marshall Warns S.T.C."The Straits Times.Singapore. 14 February 1956. p. 1.Retrieved20 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"S.T.C Buses Back With a Big Bang".The Straits Times.Singapore. 17 February 1956. p. 1.Retrieved20 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Off for good: S'pore trolley buses".The Straits Times.16 December 1962. p. 15.
- ^"'Stolen' by pirate taxis: 6 mil passengers from buses ".The Straits Times.Singapore. 7 February 1966. p. 7.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Wednesday, March 9, Ending The Bus Chaos".The Straits Times.Singapore. 9 March 1966. p. 8.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"The STC's Woes".The Straits Times.Singapore. 23 February 1967. p. 8.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^ab"'STC saved from very grave, critical situation'".The Straits Times.Singapore. 27 April 1968. p. 4.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"STC still has a long way to go".The Straits Times.Singapore. 24 September 1970. p. 14.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Better bus service for Spore by April".The Straits Times.Singapore. 12 January 1971. p. 3.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^Johnson, Blair (6 December 1971)."STC shares to be suspended this morning".The Straits Times.Singapore. p. 15.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Bid by UBC for STC buses and routes".The Straits Times.Singapore. 17 November 1971. p. 30.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^Bhatia, Anil (2 December 1971)."STC will sell buses for $2.7 mil".New Nation.Singapore. p. 1.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Chinese bus firms to hire 2,000 of 2,824 STC workers".The Straits Times.Singapore. 5 December 1971. p. 4.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^Johnson, Blair (21 December 1971)."STC placed in hands of receiver".The Straits Times.Singapore. p. 1.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Three bus firms negotiate to buy STC depot".New Nation.Singapore. 4 July 1972. p. 2.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Rail-less Cars".The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser (Weekly).Singapore. 14 April 1926. p. 228.Retrieved29 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Traction Company's New Bus Programme".The Singapore Free Press and Mercantile Advertiser.Singapore. 21 February 1939. p. 7.Retrieved28 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"BUSES BACK SOON".The Straits Times.Singapore. 14 September 1945. p. 2.Retrieved28 November2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Streamlined Buses For City Workers Soon".Sunday Tribune.Singapore. 14 April 1946. p. 4.Retrieved3 December2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"New Buses For Colony".The Straits Times.Singapore. 28 December 1948. p. 7.Retrieved23 December2018– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Fleet Of New S.T.C. Buses To Meet Expansion".The Singapore Free Press.Singapore. 12 May 1954. p. 2.Retrieved12 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Bus Of the Future Is Bigger".The Straits Times.Singapore. 8 November 1954. p. 4.Retrieved12 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"STC buses to change dress".The Straits Times.Singapore. 21 March 1956. p. 6.Retrieved20 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"$2m. buses ordered".The Straits Times.Singapore. 24 March 1956. p. 4.Retrieved20 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Now cool comfort in buses".The Straits Times.Singapore. 29 September 1962. p. 11.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"Elegance, comfort for the City's bus riders".The Straits Times.Singapore. 20 October 1962. p. 20.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
- ^"50 new buses arrive for the STC".The Straits Times.Singapore. 28 July 1967. p. 4.Retrieved24 January2019– via NewspaperSG.
External links
[edit]Media related toTrolleybuses in Singaporeat Wikimedia Commons
- "Mosquito bus".National Library Board of Singapore.Archivedfrom the original on 27 July 2018.Retrieved8 April2019.