Perth Trolleybuses 1933-1969

Trolleybus #2, operating route 1 to Leederville, loads in Wellington St. 

The first generation: 1930s and 1940s

In 1933 a trolleybus service was established from East Perth to Leederville station, running via Wellington St and Cambridge St - the first permanent trolleybus system in Australia.

Although regarded initially as an experiment, it was felt that trolley buses had greater flexibility than the trams. This and the increasingly worn condition of the tram system made it seem likely at one stage that the trams would, in time, all be replaced by trolleybuses.

The original fleet contained just three Leyland three-axle trolley buses. Trolleybus #1 was imported complete from England; the other two were imported as chassis and the bodies constructed at the Midland workshops.

The trolley poles were arranged in a radial fashion, which was not repeated in later orders.

The destination number box was also not repeated on later buses.

Perth trolleybus #1 with its driver and conductor. 

Trolleybus #13 in Wellington St. 

By 1940 the fleet comprised 22 Leyland three-axle trolley buses, and trolley buses had replaced trams -

Also a new route, not previously a tram line, branched off Cambridge St at Gregory St and travelled along Grantham St to Reserve St.

A further 18 two-axle Leylands - #23 to #40 - arrived to help with the overloaded wartime public transport system, taking the fleet total to 40. These additions, with bodies built at the WAGR workshops, were part of an order originally intended for Canton, but diverted due to war conditions.

Perth trolleybus #38 in Wellington St, bound for the Depot. 

Restoration work by the Bus Preservation Society of W. A. shows us the interior of Perth Leyland trolleybus #38, as introduced in the 1940s. 

"Canton" trolley bus 38, looking from the front door to the driver's seat and controls. 

The interior of #38, looking towards the rear. 

The second generation: 1950s and 1960s

Trams crossed to the southern side of the Swan River via the Causeway, to Victoria Park, Welshpool, South Perth [Zoo] and Como, and it had been planned to replace these with trolley buses. Fifty two-axle Sunbeam trolley buses were ordered for the replacement service.

Perth's Sunbeam trolleybuses featured a centre entrance, which meant that a two-person crew was required, even in the evening and on weekends when loadings were lighter.

Perth trolleybus #55 in a suburban setting. 

Trolleybus 57 in Wellington St, Perth 

When the Causeway was reconstructed in 1950, it was decided that trolleybus overhead wiring on the new Causeway would be unsightly, so the South-of-the-River tram services were replaced by motor buses.

The 50 excess trolley buses were then used in 1951 to replace trams on the Mt Hawthorn line (terminating in Scarborough Beach Rd at Kalgoorlie St), and in 1954 to extend the Cambridge St and Grantham St routes.

A further major expansion of the trolley bus system occurred with the closure of the tramways in 1958, when trams were replaced by trolleybuses on the Inglewood route. In 1959 a new branch was opened along Grand Promenade. The Walcott St branch, which had closed as a tram route in 1953, reopened in 1959 with trolley buses.

Trolleybuses came to Barrack St. with the closure of the last tram route in 1958. 

Trolley bus route closures began soon after the last expansions, some being officially associated with various major roadworks around the city. A significant factor was the configuration of the Sunbeam vehicles (by then forming the majority of the fleet): growing wage costs made them, with their two-person crews, increasingly uneconomical to operate. Indeed, trolley buses were not used at night and during weekends in the final years of the system.