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Eastern Coach Works Ltd was a bus and railbus body building company based in Lowestoft, England. ==History== The company can trace its roots back to 1912, when United Automobile Services was founded in the town to run bus services.〔(United - a potted history )〕 United began a coach building business at the Lowestoft site in 1920.〔White, Malcolm R. (2007) ''Coachwork by Eastern Coach Works, Lowestoft'', Coastal publications. ISBN 978-0-9547323-5-6.〕 In 1931, the East Anglian operations of United were hived off into a new company, Eastern Counties Omnibus Company, and Eastern Counties inherited the coach works - now concentrating on building bus bodies, with a workforce of over 600 people.〔White, Malcolm R. (2007) ''Coachwork by Eastern Coach Works, Lowestoft'', Coastal publications. ISBN 978-0-9547323-5-6〕 In July 1936,〔 the coach works were separated into a new company, Eastern Coach Works, which developed into the largest full-time employer in Lowestoft. In May 1940, the factory received orders from the military authorities to cease production. It was thought that, following the outbreak of World War II, the East Coast would be the first target for an invading German army, so all wheeled vehicles were moved away from the site so that they did not fall into enemy hands. As a result of this, 950 staff were laid off.〔 By 1947, though, production was back to pre-war levels. ECW was nationalised in 1947. For the next 18 years, its business consisted mainly of building bus bodies, which were mounted on Bristol chassis, for state-owned bus operators. In 1965, the state-owned Transport Holding Company sold a 25% share in ECW to Leyland Motors, which enabled ECW to sell to the private sector.〔Townsin, Alan (2000). ''The Bristol Story Part Two'', Venture Publications. ISBN 1-898432-78-3〕 During the 1960s, it was common to see a bare bus chassis being driven through town by a goggle-wearing driver, delivering the chassis for a body. In 1969, ECW became part of a 50/50 joint venture between the National Bus Company (successor to the Transport Holding Company) and British Leyland (successor to Leyland Motors). The materials to build the buses came into the Coachworks via Essex Road at the back of the factory, but the newly built buses were driven out of the big doors at the front. They drove down the short, narrow lane, with no pavements called Eastern Way, on their way to their new depot. Eastern Way used to be called Laundry Lane, but the name was changed to Eastern Way following the opening of Eastern Coachworks. The joint venture came to an end in 1982, when British Leyland took complete control, and ECW closed in 1987. The site was subsequently demolished to make way for the North Quay Retail Park, which opened in 1990.〔 〕 ECW was one of Lowestoft's largest employers, with around 1200 staff at its peak.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Eastern Coach Works」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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