
In 1885 Melbourne introduced the cable tram for citizens to commute. Summary by Damien Parer.
Mind the curve warned the passengers to hold on while the tram went around a bend. The warning became synonymous with cable trams.
Using historical footage this documentary records the story of cable trams in Melbourne from 1885 to 1940. Enthusiasts have recorded the tram routes and operation of the cable and maintenance of the cable system.
The documentary will fully satisfy the curiosity of the most dedicated transport enthusiast. It is a remarkably detailed account that is also useful as a history of Melbourne. The music used to recreate the period is also a delight.
Cable trams were operated by 'gripmen’ who used a device to lock onto the moving underground cable to propel the tram forward. The term 'grip’ was taken up by the film industry to describe the role of the person in the camera department who operated camera mounts such as dollies and cranes.
Notes by Damien Parer
This clip shows various forms of public transport available in Victoria’s state capital, Melbourne, in the late 19th century up to and including the introduction of the cable-haul tram system in 1885. The clip includes shots of children and adults in and on horse-drawn vehicles, bicycles and a steam-hauled train. There are also shots of the first cable trams and views of several suburban Melbourne streets. Also shown in the clip is a newspaper article that announces the opening of the Richmond tramway, lists rules and regulations and explains the Bell Punch system for collecting fares. The clip concludes with a coloured map illustrating the extent of the tramlines on the completion of the cable tram system in 1920. The predominantly black-and-white film footage has a voice-over narration and is accompanied by lively music of the period.
Education notes provided by The Learning Federation and Education Services Australia
This clip starts approximately 1 minute into the documentary.
Archival footage shows various forms of public transport in Melbourne in the late 19th century, including shots of children and adults in and on horse-drawn vehicles, bicycles and a steam-hauled train. There are also shots of the first cable trams and views of several suburban Melbourne streets. The predominantly black-and-white film footage has a voice-over narration and is accompanied by lively music of the period.
Narrator As the second-last decade of the 19th century dawned, new and more efficient methods of mass suburban transport were sought. Until this time, horse-drawn vehicles and bicycles were the principal forms of transport.
We see a steam train pull up at a station, then shots of the first cable trams and finally a cable-haul tram – accompanied by views of several suburban Melbourne streets.
Narrator Steam-hauled railways had developed since the 1850s but a lighter form of fixed-rail transport was needed for the streets of the cities. Hence, the street railway, or tramway, was developed, initially with horse-drawn vehicles used in Hawthorn, Kew and Royal Parade, steam trams, which were experimented with in Sydney and then finally an innovative form of propulsion contained, not on the vehicle, but in a tunnel under the roadway – a cable-haul tram.
We see pictures of George S Duncan and FB Clapp and a newspaper article announcing the opening of the Richmond tramway, listing rules and regulations and explaining the Bell Punch system for collecting fares. The clip concludes with a coloured map illustrating the extent of the tramlines on the completion of the cable tram system in 1920.
Narrator Two men, Francis Clapp and George Duncan, could rightly claim to be the fathers of Melbourne’s cable tram system. Clapp, after seeing the results of a line in New Zealand and reading reports from the United States, was convinced that Melbourne was suitable for cable trams. He invited Duncan, an engineer who’d been engaged in the building of the initial line in New Zealand, to formulate plans for a service in Melbourne. After lengthy debate and deliberation by Parliament, the first cable tramline in Australia opened with minimal fuss on 11 November 1885.
By 1920, when the final extension was opened, some 17 routes were in operation, with their associated engine houses, covering more than 46 miles of double track and servicing most of the inner suburbs of Melbourne.
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.