George Shillibeer, born in London, England c.1797, worked for the coach company Hatchetts in Long Acre, the coach-building district of the capital. In the 1820s he was offered work in Paris, France where he was commissioned to build some unusually large horse-drawn coaches of "novel design". The aim was to design a coach capable of transporting a whole group of people, perhaps two dozen, at a time.
Shillibeer's design worked, and was very stable. It was introduced into the streets of Paris in 1827. Shortly afterwards, Shillibeer built another for a private Quaker school in Stoke Newington near London; this with a total of twenty-five seats, and which entered history as the first school bus. In 1827 Joseph Pearse, a Quaker visitor to the girl's school at Fleetwood House, Abney Park which was supported by the Quaker scientist and philanthropist William Allen, wrote in verse about the school bus:
George Shillibeer died in 1866 and is buried in the church graveyard at Chigwell in Essex.
In 1979, the 150th anniversary of the commencement of the first omnibus service in London, a memorial service was held at the Chigwell Church attended by Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother.
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