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Looking Back

On the Buses

By Mick Roberts

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Hill's new "double decker" before it was commissioned in 1947

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BUS transport to and from Wollongong has been readily accessible to northern suburbs residents since early last century.
Jumping on a bus for a bit of shopping in Wollongong has developed quite a lot from the rough and tumble years of the 1920s.
One of the first operators was William "Billy" Murphy in 1920.
He drove a T-Model Ford with seats around the sides and back, with no windows except the windscreen and a small opening at the back. In wet weather canvas blinds were rolled down placing passengers in total darkness.
There was no timetable and the bus travelled between Austinmer and Wollongong on the basis of how long it took.
Roads were unpaved and buses, with their solid rubber tyres, often were bogged during wet weather on notorious black spots like Bulli Hill and Black Cutting Hill at Corrimal.
The legendary Dion family purchased Murphy's bus in 1923 beginning a transport dynasty that has continued to the present day.
As the industry developed in the 1930s at least seven bus companies serviced the Austinmer/Wollongong route and competition became fierce.
Joining the swag of northern buses was the Hill family of Thirroul in about 1935.
Hill's Bus Service was established by Hyacinth Hill, whose husband Jim operated the Thirroul Garage on the bend in Lawrence Hargrave Dv at the intersection of Phillip St (pictured above).

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A Hills bus heading north at Bulli in the late 1940s.

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Jim opened the brick garage in the early 1930s which traded from the site until the mid 1990s when it was demolished to make for a string of shops.
Hyacinth was already an experienced business woman running a Thirroul mixed business prior to going into public transport.
She put her son Jim Jnr in charge of the company and the business prospered eventually buying out competitors.
Hyacinth’s daughter, 76-year-old Daphne Hicks of Woonona told me in the late 1990s her mum and brother operated the bus company in unison with her father at the Thirroul garage.
The buses were kept and serviced in a large garage in the family home on Lawrence Hargrave Drive opposite Woodward Park. Their home and garage remain today in the shadow of a large fig tree.
Daphne’s husband Ted started with the cream and orange Hill’s Buses as a conductor in 1947 and recalled some of the family companies operating the Austinmer/Wollongong bus section at the time.
In addition to Hill’s buses, the Dion, Price, Rowles, Henson and Agnew families managed bus companies which ran on a common timetable.
“The timetable was divided into eight sections with operators doing a fortnight on each section.
“By doing so every operator had a share of busy and slack periods,” Ted said.
Drivers for Hill’s Bus Service over the years included Ted Hicks, Stan Howell, Keith Wheatley, Marshall Bates, Russ Harris, Sam Harris, Bob Berry, Keith Jenkins, Col Frost, George Brown, Bill Narbeth, Neville Spinks, Eric Lee, Ernie Wright, Des Ayliff, Reg Downie and Joe Green.
Hill’s Bus Service had a fleet of single and double decker buses comprising of Leylands, Albions and Macs and by the 1960s they and the Dion Company had bought out competitors leaving just two servicing the Austinmer/Wollongong run.
The Hill’s Bus Service, still under the management of Jim Hill Jnr (pictured above), had over 60 buses in the fleet by this time and operated from a depot in Fairy Meadow.
Ted Hicks, who eventually became a manager at the company, said driving the buses demanded long hours and unusual jobs.


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