London Transport's association with Dennis Aces and Maces was entirely peripheral.
It only owned four in total (not all at the same time), and all were bought, or ordered,
by companies absorbed into the London Transport empire as it expanded in the 1930's.
There were also fewer than a handful in non-LT companies within the area.
They seem to have been quite satisfactory - and distinctive - little buses,
but for London Transport's purposes they suffered from being non-standard, so their lives were short.
West Kent Motor Services had a fleet of nine small buses, fourteen or twenty seaters,
for use around the narrow lanes of Sevenoaks Weald and the North Downs / Darent Gap.
The last acquired was an Ace, in January 1936.
The company was taken over by London Transport just after the start of the war,
including the buses. Two others were taken into stock,
but the Ace was sold without use by LT,
its duties being taken over by Cubs from Dunton Green. The Ace went to Newbury & District.
White Bus Service of Winkfield, near Windsor,
who had the distinction of running buses through Windsor Great Park between Windsor Castle and Ascot or Bagshot,
had a couple of Aces in the thirties and the war years.
Again, the colour scheme is uncertain
(the "White" does not refer to the colour) It was possibly red, white and blue.
The Walton -on-Thames Bus Company was an oddity,
in that it was wholy within the LT boundary, yet was allowed to continue.
This was because LT considered its operations worthwhile,
but uneconomic for LT to provide.
In the thirties it operated a small Bedford saloon
and a Dennis Ace on a link between town and station.
(Operations by the company continued after the war until taken over by Golden Miller in 1970).
Ian's Bus Stop
DC text.
DC histories
DC photo refs
DA Darts