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Northern Counties Motor & Engineering Company : ウィキペディア英語版
Northern Counties Motor & Engineering Company
Not to be confused with Northern Coachbuilders, a Newcastle upon Tyne-based coachbuilder active from c.1920-51.
The Northern Counties Motor & Engineering Company〔(Companies House extract company no 308576 ) The Northern Counties Motor & Engineering Company〕 was an English builder of bus and coach bodywork based in Wigan.
==History==

Northern Counties Motor & Engineering Company was founded in Wigan in 1919 by Henry Lewis. The Lewis family remained owners of the company until it was bought out over seventy years later. As was common at the time, early products were bodywork for private automobiles. By the early 1920s, the private automobile work had ceased and the manufacture of bodywork for service buses commenced. Bodywork was for both single and double deck vehicles. Very few coaches were produced.
During World War II, Northern Counties was authorized by the government to produce bus bodies to a utility specification, mainly using steel-framed construction.
Northern Counties established a loyal client base and reputation for quality construction in the post-war years. Notable clients included local operators SHMD Board, Manchester Corporation and Lancashire United Transport. Further afield, Barton Transport and Southdown Motor Services were among a number of regular customers.
In 1967, fellow bodybuilder Massey Brothers, located in nearby Pemberton, was acquired and became a part of the Northern Counties operations.〔(Northern Counties takes over Massey Bros ) ''Commercial Motor'' 14 April 1967〕' The Massey factory was retained and used as a paint-shop and for final completion of bodywork assembled at Wigan Lane.
The Transport Act 1968 merged the municipal corporations of Manchester, Salford, Bolton, Oldham, Stockport, Rochdale, Bury and Stalybridge, Hyde, Mossley and Dukinfield Joint Board (SHMD Board). The resulting conglomerate was known as the Southeast Lancashire Northeast Cheshire Passenger Transport Authority, commonly known as SELNEC. SELNEC was faced with a fleet of 2,500 vehicles consisting of a wide variety of types and manufacturers, reflecting the preferences of their former municipal owners. Northern Counties worked closely with SELNEC to develop a standard bus for fleet replacement.
The Local Government Act 1972 came into effect on 1 April 1974. This reorganization added Wigan Corporation Transport to SELNEC to create the Greater Manchester Passenger Transport Executive that was the largest bus operator outside of London until privatisation in the late 1980s. A large proportion of Northern Counties production after this time was for the Greater Manchester fleet.
In 1975 the company collaborated with Foden, a well-known manufacturer of commercial vehicles, to produce a semi-integral double-deck vehicle intended to compete with chassis manufacturer Leyland.〔(Foden bus for Manchester PTE ) ''Commercial Motor'' 21 November 1975〕 Leyland had merged with traditional rival Daimler and was experiencing production and quality problems. In the event, only seven Foden NCs were produced, going to Greater Manchester PTE, West Midlands PTE, West Yorkshire PTE, Derby City Transport and Potteries Motor Traction.〔(Foden presses on with seven orders ) ''Commercial Motor'' 9 April 1976〕
In June 1983, Greater Manchester Transport purchased a 49% shareholding in the business.〔(GMT joins with NC in partnership deal ) ''Commercial Motor'' 18 June 1983〕
In May 1991, Northern Counties was placed in administration.〔(The story of Northern Counties, the Wigan based bodybuilder ) ''Commercial Motor'' 9 January 1992〕
Northern Counties reputation and engineering skills saw it survive these difficult times and become a major supplier once again as demand picked up in the mid-1990s. In May 1995, it was purchased for £10 million by the Henlys Group, owner of Plaxton. The Northern Counties name was dropped in 1999, and vehicles were badged as Plaxton.
In 2000, Henlys entered a joint venture with the Mayflower Corporation, owner of bodybuilder Alexander and chassis manufacturer Dennis. The joint venture was known as TransBus, and vehicles were badged using the TransBus name.〔(Mayflower and Henlys burst past rivalry to merge UK bus building ) ''The Independent'' 2 August 2000〕
On 31 March 2004, TransBus International was put into administration.〔(Update: re Administration ) Mayflower Corporation 22 April 2004〕 On 21 May 2004, TransBus International was bought by a consortium of merchant banker Noble Grossart, and businessmen David Murray and Brian Souter.〔(Murray and Souter join forces to buy TransBus ) ''The Scotsman'' 21 May 2004〕 The new company was named Alexander Dennis. On 26 January 2005, the former Northern Counties Wigan plant closed, after completing outstanding orders of for Plaxton President bodies.〔(Bob's life on the buses ) ''Wigan Evening Post'' 8 September 2006〕

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