Capital Transport lists interesting books and publications relating to London transport, including buses, steam trains, and modern day underground and overground lines. It offers book summaries and the ability to purchase books through the site, and the ability to order specific books in.
Classic Buses is a site all about nostalgia for British passenger transport vehicles from the 1920s to the 1960s. Their events diary contains all the upcoming events for the year, such as transport museum open days, free bus services, and bus collector fairs.
Whether you are a bus enthusiast, a fifties fanatic, a number collector, a photographer, or someone who just likes a good day out, Country Bus Rallies are the thing for you.
Ensign Buses offer a variety of bus services. Whether its for a wedding, corporate event, school outing or sporting event, they are able to help with bus hire. They also have hundreds of buses available for immediate viewing for sale, and the bus services they run can be seen on their Bus Services page.
Epping Ongar Railway is both the longest heritage railway in Essex and the closest to London, easily accessible via the tube network. Their vintage buses start from Epping Underground station and take you back in time to period stations with steam and diesel hauled heritage trains.
This is an outsider's view of London Transport buses, mainly in the 1930-1980 era.
The Isle of Wight Bus & Coach Museum was established in 1997 and has a display of around 20 historic vehicles, transport artefacts, displays, photographs, a tea bar and a shop.
The Greater London Bus Map series is based on the style of London Transport's maps of the late '70s. It shows the complete bus network in and around London, including school routes and night buses, regardless of operator. New editions are normally produced each year.
Have you ever wondered what happened to all those wonderful old buses that ran in London and which you only now see in old films and books? Well, the good news is, some of them live on! While thousands went to the scrap yard at the end of their working lives, some have found their way into preservation as living, moving museum pieces at London Bus Museum.
The aim of the site is to look at all the individual bus routes that were operating in 1950 onwards and give full details including garage allocations, number of buses required, blind displays, route changes, stand workings and photographs.
The London Omnibus Traction Society was founded in 1964, and now has the largest membership of any bus enthusiasts' organisation in the UK.
London Transport Museum explores the story of London and its transport system over the last 200 years, highlighting the powerful link between transport and the growth of modern London, culture and society since 1800.
The RF was the standard single-decker in the London Transport fleet in the 1950s and 1960s, before replacement by modern, mostly rear-engined buses.
Thames Valley & Great Western Omnibus Trust aims to keep alive the rich history and memories of these companies, by restoring and preserving surviving vehicles, developing an archive and providing access to them for the public.
Visions International contains a large collection of top quality DVD programmes and a growing collection of books.