
The 555 bus route from Lancaster to Keswick is celebrating its 100th birthday and a parade of historic buses will mark the occasion.
Stagecoach is organising the event, on Sunday September 14, which will see a convoy of historic buses making the 45-mile journey, pausing along the way to allow the public to admire the immaculately-restored vehicles of yesteryear.
Launched by Henry Meageen as the Westmorland Main Service in 1925, the service was operated by Ribble Motor Services for most of its life, initially as service 68.
It became the 555 in 1969 and has carried that route number ever since under Cumberland Motor Services and latterly Stagecoach.
Only invited guests will travel on the restored vehicles but the public can board to look around.
They include a 1965 single-decker Leyland Leopard, a type widely used on Ribble’s longer routes from the 1960s to the 1980s, and a 1962 Leyland PD3 double-decker, once a common sight on Ribble’s city services in Carlisle.
They are joined by a 1976 Ribble Leyland Atlantean double-decker, which remained in service until 1990 and would have been seen on the 555 in the 1980s, and a Volvo B10M single-decker built in 1996, which is typical of a Kendal based vehicle seen in the Lakes in the early 2000s.
All have been restored with loving care by the Ribble Vehicle Preservation Trust.

Tom Waterhouse, managing director of Stagecoach Cumbria and North Lancashire, said: “The 555 is more than a bus route. It’s a moving piece of history.
“We wanted to do something special to mark its 100th year and what better than a cavalcade of restored buses traversing the full route through Lancaster, Kendal, Windermere, Ambleside and Keswick?
“It will bring back memories for older passengers and, to show how buses have improved, one of our modern double-deckers will bring up the rear.”
The Lancaster-Keswick bus route offers views of six lakes –Windermere, Rydal Water, Grasmere, Thirlmere, Derwent Water and Bassenthwaite Lake – and traverses the foot of Helvellyn, England’s third-highest mountain.
Lance Jobson, the trust’s company secretary said: “The Ribble Vehicle Preservation Trust is proud to play a key role in keeping the North West’s rich transport heritage alive.

“Our volunteers work tirelessly to restore and maintain historic buses, many of which once operated on routes like the 555. Events like this give us the chance to showcase our collection and share the story of Ribble’s transport history with new generations.
“It’s about preserving the past so people can experience it first-hand today.”
The convoy leaves Lancaster Bus Station at 9am, stopping at Kendal bus depot from 9.50am to 10.20am, Grasmere Stocks Lane at 11.10am, Grasmere Broadgate at 11.40am, Swirls car park, Thirlmere, from noon to 12.10pm, reaching Keswick coach park at 12.30pm.
It returns from Keswick at 2pm, calling at The Swan, Grasmere, at 2.50pm and Kendal Bus Station at 3.40pm, arriving at Lancaster Bus Station at 4.30pm.





