Surrey Ambulance Service

Surrey Ambulance Service (SAS) was the ambulance service for the County of Surrey in England. It was formed in 1948 and became part of South East Coast Ambulance Service on 1 July 2006.

History
Surrey Ambulance Service (SAS) was founded in 1948 and was initially run by the county council. On its formation, the service ran 48 ambulance stations, 16 of which were staffed on a part-time basis. The headquarters were originally at New Malden, but moved to Banstead in November 1964, in advance of the creation of Greater London. On 1 April 1965, SAS ceased to provide ambulance services to the new London Boroughs of Croydon, Kingston, Merton, Sutton and Richmond. On the same date, SAS began providing ambulance services to Staines and Sunbury-on-Thames Urban Districts, which had previously been part of Middlesex.

In 1974, responsibility for SAS passed to East Surrey Health Authority. In January 1988, the service took over operations in northeast Hampshire, including the Farnborough ambulance station in Hawley Lane. By expanding its operations into the neighbouring county, it became the sole ambulance operator for Frimley Park Hospital.

A new £1M control centre opened at The Horseshoe, Banstead on 11 January 1991. In 1992, Surrey Ambulance Service was managed by East Surrey Health Authority as part of the National Health Service (NHS) and operated 17 ambulance stations. It served an area of around 700 sqmi in Surrey and northeast Hampshire.

Authorisation to become a self-governing NHS trust was granted in February 1994 and took effect that April. On 1 July 2006, SAS merged with neighbouring services in Sussex and Kent to form South East Coast Ambulance Service. The Banstead centre was the headquarters for the combined organisation until mid-2018.