The first public reference to this tramway scheme was in the
Irish Times on 19 April 1880, wherein it was reported that the County Dublin Grand Jury had a proposal before them for the building of the line. The Dublin and Lucan Steam Tramway (DLST) was authorised by an Order in Council under the Tramways Act. A prospectus appeared in the Irish Times on 27 November 1880. The capital was £30,000, comprising 3,000 shares of £10 each, with borrowing powers of £10,000 on the debentures. The board of management comprised: • Colonel Charles Colthurst Vesey, D.L., J.P. (chairman) (
Lucan House) • William Moran, J.P. (Vice Chairman) (St. Edmundsbury, Lucan) • James Macken (of James Macken and Sons, Dublin and Chapelizod) • John A. Walker (Trinity Street, Dublin) Construction commenced on 23 December 1880 and work progressed rapidly such that construction to
Chapelizod was complete mostly by 23 May 1881. Mostly on a roadside reservation, the initial services began to
Chapelizod on 1 June 1881. One of the steam trams they obtained was from the
Nottingham company of
Manlove, Alliott & Co. Ltd. to the patented design of Edward Perrett. It was delivered on a trial basis in the hope of inducing its purchase by the company. This vehicle was a double decker of 2-4-2 type, with vertical coke-fired boilers on the end platforms. The two cylinders and engine were positioned beneath the floor of the saloon. The vehicle weight was 9 tons (with passengers 10½ tons), and the price was £950. By the time of the first half-yearly meeting of the new company on 5 July 1881, construction had reached
Palmerstown and services began in November 1881. Two additional engines had been ordered from
Kitson and Company, as well as passenger vehicles and wagons. A depot was completed at Conyngham Road, opposite the terminus, on land known as the Long Meadows. There was some difficulty in the finance for the remaining section of the line. Eventually a loan of £10,000 was negotiated with the
Commissioners of Public Works in Ireland and services began to
Lucan on 20 February 1883. On 11 August 1883 there was a fatal accident when Patrick Meade was badly injured after being partly run over. The driver, Thomas Barber and the conductor Michael Ward were charged with "the careless management of a steam tramway". At the inquest, it was learned that Meade had been swinging between two passenger carriages, and had fallen. The driver and conductor were exonerated. The tramway was a victim of its own success. By 27 August, the company was attracting passengers beyond its capacity. It was stated that on some days, 200 people were left behind at
Chapelizod for lack of room, despite 34 double journeys having been worked. Additional vehicles could not be obtained quickly from manufacturers due to heavy demand from companies in
England resulting in a 5-month lead time for delivery. By 1895 the tramway was in poor condition and the track needed relaying. Much damage had been done by vehicles other than the tramway engines, and it was decided to reconstruct the track on a raised formation above road level.
Lucan and Leixlip Steam Tramway The
Lucan, Leixlip and Celbridge Steam Tramway Company was established to build lines from the Lucan terminus to Leixlip and
Celbridge (branching off just outside Leixlip). The principal promoters were Alexander Ward and Robert Parker Birkett, the concern having five directors. The capital was £25,000. The
Lucan and Leixlip Steam Tramway (L&LST) extension was built, and operated between 1890 and 1898. Construction costs amounted to £8,850, the passenger vehicles totalling £300. A solitary locomotive supplied by
Thomas Green & Son of Leeds (works no 169) of 1892 accounted for another £825. The Celbridge portion was never built. The steam service between Lucan and Leixlip closed down at the end of October 1897. After it went into liquidation, its assets were sold at auction on 1 August 1899, including around 6160 yards of rails, two bogie passenger carriages, two other passenger carriages, two goods wagons, a locomotive engine, a water ram in the River Liffey and much other material The locomotive engine is understood to have been removed to Donegal. ==Dublin and Lucan Electric Railway==