Gosh. I just found another grey hair!
As a kid, I lived in the east end of London, and well remember the gang wars between the "new" minicab operators, which, I recollect, resulted in a number of shootings. So, I can actually remember the 1960s, but only as a kid, I was not involved in transport then. My first ever cab, was a MkI Cortina, with bench seat and column change and very little in the way of licenses, because, at the time, the 1976 Act simply did not exist. Thats all the clues you will get as to my age. And, I am nowhere near retirement age yet, although, in my mind, I retired at 16 when I left school.
So, the answer to your question Dusty, is closer to the delving into the history books. The original consultation papers (they were not called that then, as no-one consulted jack in those days) are all contained in the Public Records Office at Kew, and in the Guildhall Library in London on microfiche. I studied the subject in considerable depth at one stage, as I was contemplating writing a book on the trade. Sadly (for me, but probably for the benefit of mankind), the book never got finished.
And anyway, I ain't got as many grey hairs you Wharfie. And I still got a lot more hair than Nidge
