It's only in relatively recent times, since the advent of the internet, that any sort of formality has been brought to the process of naming bus stops. The stops have always had names of course, but these developed through custom and practice and were chosen, informally, by local passengers and bus crews.
Apart from those stops that were timing points or fare stages, the names never appeared anywhere in print, or on the bus stop signs themselves.
When bus timetable information began to move online and it became possible to identify individual stops and show them on online maps a national database of bus stops was established with details of location and name of each one. Responsibility for populating the database was given to County Councils and they used a variety of means of naming the stops. The best of them attempted to establish the names that were already in use informally, albeit with varying degrees of success. This was a sound approach, but occasionally it fell foul of the fact that over the years there had been no mechanism by which the informal "custom and practice" name of a stop could be changed, even when the feature after which it was named, such as a pub, post office or other landmark, was no longer there.
Take Forton, for example. In this village, some 11km south of Lancaster and served by buses 40, 41 and 42, the principal stop is "Forton, War Memorial". Here it is:
Forton War Memorial bus stop (northbound) (from Street View) |
Forton War Memorial (from Street View) |
Thirty Years Ago
So how does the bus stop come to have such a misleading name?
From some online research, the Bus Users' Group has established that the war memorial did indeed used to be situated near the current bus stop on the A6. However, following a number of incidents of it being hit and damaged by road vehicles it was removed in 1993 and reinstated on its present site three years later.
But despite this having happened almost 30 years ago, no one at the council or the various bus companies that served the stop appears to have noticed and the stop is still known as "Forton, War Memorial".