NOSTALGIA: Hidden Portsmouth steps revealed, 107 years after they fell into disuse
I have been out and about again taking then and now shots of a scene that is now so overgrown it was a struggle to find.
In the first view, above, we are looking down from half-way up London Road between Cosham and the George Inn on the top of the hill.
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Hide AdThe two ‘sheds’ that can be seen are in fact disused horse trams and were being used as shelters at what was then called ‘Point A’. This was a terminus point for through running cars from Clarence Pier.
Any passengers wanting to travel onward to Horndean were advised to change cars at Cosham for some reason. This was abandoned in 1907.
A flight of concrete steps was put in place from London Road to this point for the use passengers getting on and off.
To the left of the photograph is London Road, the embankment being much higher than it is today. There is not a shrub in sight.
So now we move on to the second picture.
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Hide AdI would like to have been 50 yards farther north and some yards to the right to get an exact re-take of the scene today, but because of overgrown blackberry bushes and shrubs this was the best I could do.
Through the gap in the hedgerow on the left can be seen London Road and it surprised me just how quiet the road was at 12.30pm. Not as quiet as in 1935 when the tram service ceased to run.
I do love it when I find archeology from days past still in situ.
As mentioned earlier, a flight of concrete steps was built from London Road to ‘Point A’... and they are still there, 110 years after they fell into disuse.
If you wish to climb them they are on the left hand side of London Road as you go up the hill, opposite what was Widley Lane, now Widley Road.