BRITISH RAILWAY LOCOMOTIVE DEPOTS, WORKS AND STABLING POINTS.
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CHICHESTER LOCOMOTIVE DEPOT, Hundred of Manhood and Selsey Tramway - The locomotive shed at Chichester was adjacent to Abbey Station and was a two-road dead-end shed well able to accommodate most of the railway's ramshackle fleet of engines. Seen here is the Ford railcar poking out. In 1924, Stephens was seeking means of reducing operating expenses and acquired two railcars built on Ford Model T chassis, with bodies by Edmunds of Thetford. They operated together, back-to-back with a truck for luggage and parcels between them; they had rails on the roof to contain additional parcels stowed there. Two more railcars were acquired from the Shefflex Motor Company of Tinsley in 1928; they too operated as a unit with a truck between. The railcars were provided with a crude timber buffer beam in front of the radiator, as protection.