Horse-drawn trams were first introduced in Dundee in 1877. They were promoted by the Dundee Trawmway and Omnibus Company, but construction was managed by the police commissioners, and when the system was completed, it was leased to the
Dundee and District Tramways Company. Following some expansion of the system, the company experimented with a steam tram in 1880, and in 1884 bought the first two steam tram locomotives and a second-hand trailer car. The first public steam tram service ran on 20 June 1885, and most but not all of the horse trams were gradually replaced by steam tram locomotives pulling trailer cars, some of which were bought new, while others were made from pairs of redundant horse trams. By the mid-1890s, there were 13 tram locomotives and ten trailer cars operating on the system, as well as ten double-deck horse trams. In 1893, the original lease ran out, and the corporation renewed it for a further 14 years. However, in 1897, they decided that they would prefer to run the tramway themselves, and so started negotiations to see if this might be possible. The two parties agreed that the corporation would pay for the trams, buildings and plant, based on an estimate of their value by a third party, and would also pay £2,100 per year in compensation, from the date of takeover, which was 1 June 1899, until the original end date of the lease in May 1907. The process of upgrading the lines to allow electric trams to run began soon after the takeover, and on 12 July 1900, the horse trams stopped working the Perth Road route, and electric trams began public service. The Lochee route followed suit on 22 October 1900. Work then began on converting the rest of the system, and the steam trams running on the Fairmuir route were the last to be replaced, when they were replaced on 14 May 1902. Services on the Baxter Park line were suspended, and that route did not reopen until 20 August 1906. Some minor sections in the central area were abandoned, and there were some extensions to the system at the outer edges. In order to operate the services, which ran on
standard gauge track, the corporation ordered ten bogie double-deck cars with open tops from the
Electric Railway and Tramway Carriage Works of Preston. The trams were stabled in the Lochee Depot, and were subsequently fitted with top covers. These were followed by eight trams purchased from
G. F. Milnes & Co. of Birkenhead in 1902, which were also open topped double deck vehicles, and were later fitted with top covers. At the same time they obtained six bogie combination cars, with a central saloon and open ends, which were the only single deck vehicles to run on the system, and were supplied by
Hurst Nelson and Company of Motherwell. Once the changeover to electric traction was completed in 1902, the steam trams were disposed of. Several of the trailer cars were sold at an auction, which took place at Lochee depot on 24 July 1902. The corporation retained two of the tram locomotives, which were used as snowploughs until 1934. On 20 November 1902, a new line was opened, linking the Fairmuir route to Hilltown, while in 1903 the new Maryfield Depot was opened. It was located on Forfar Road in Stobswell, and was built of red and blue brick with curved gables. When first built, it provided stabling for 12 trams, but was later extended to hold 70 vehicles. Some short extensions to the system were opened in 1907, and in 1908 a line to Craig Pier on the
River Tay began operating. Five more double-deck trams, this time with covered tops, were added to the fleet, two from
Brush Electrical Engineering Company of Loughboprough in 1907 and three from G. C. Milnes, Voss and Company of Birkenhead in 1908. The corporation also tried running trolleybuses in 1912, but the service was short-lived and closed again in 1914. Several more short extensions to the tramway network followed, but the line to Craig Pier was closed on 1 June 1919, as it was not profitable. The corporation continued to expand the fleet, adding four top-covered cars in 1916, 14 in 1920/21, nine totally enclosed cars between 1923 and 1925, and ten totally enclosed cars with wider bodies for the Lochee route in 1930. They also started to run motor buses in 1922, which gradually replaced some of the trams, with the Constitution Road route being the first to be replaced by buses on 26 February 1928. Although short, this route included a section with a gradient of 1-in-9, and was operated by the single deck bogie trams, which were powered by four motors. The next route to close was that to Belsize Road, to the east of Dundee, which was replaced by buses on 16 May 1931. This had provided a link to the
Dundee, Broughty Ferry and District Tramways system since it opened in 1905, and on which there was through running. This had developed into a through service running from Lochee to Monifieth in 1922, but in 1931 the corporation had bought that entire system, and closed it all on the same day as they closed their link to it. Despite such closures, the official policy as stated by Robert Taylor, the general manager, was that trams would remain a major component of transport in Dundee, and this continued to be the position until the early 1950s. Taylor reduced the fleet from 99 to 60 trams, but he implemented a major rebuilding programme for those that were left. The new trams for the Lochee route were supplied with EMB swing-axle trucks, manufactured by the Electro-Mechanical Brake Company of West Bromwich, which gave a much smoother ride, and caused less wear of the track. This type of truck was fitted to the trams as they were rebuilt, while other improvements included air brakes and Fischer bow collectors, which increased the contact area between the overhead wire and the collector, reducing both wear and noise. There were several sizes of rebuilt trams, but the largest, which ran on four-wheel trucks, were designed with seating for 68 passengers. However, because a large number of passengers made short journeys, six seats were subsequently removed, to increase the free space for those boarding and alighting. By the end of the Second World War, the system still had 56 trams in working order, and traffic levels were high. As renewals of the tramcars and infrastructure became necessary, the general manager, W. I. Russell, reviewed the options meticulously, and decided that the future lay with motor buses. The first part of the changeover was the closure of the Moncur Crescent route on 26 April 1952, although trams continued to run on days when there was a football match. The Blackness route was the next to succumb, on 26 November 1955, and the Downfield route closed a few hours later in the early morning of 27 November. The rest of the system closed on 20 October 1956, although there was a farewell procession of trams from Maryfield Depot to Lochee early the next morning. The final car to run in public service was car 23, and following withdrawal, the tramcars were taken to Marchbanks and burnt, so that the metal could be sold for scrap. ==Trolleybuses==