Transport in Britain:
From Canal Lock to Gridlock
Philip Bagwell and Peter Lyth
Britain's history has been and still is a history
of its transport.
The Industrial Revolution, which made Britain the Workshop of the World and
underpinned
its empire, was made possible by the improved roads and new canals of the
eighteenth century, and by the railway network of
the nineteenth. As cities grew, transport continued to be central to Britain's economy, yet its
infrastructure became steadily inadequate. Faced by too many cars in too small an area, and by an
urgent need to spend vast sums to modernise the public system,
transport has now become one of the most pressing and controversial issues for our time.
Transport in Britain is a complete history of a fascinating and highly important subject. It covers all the major forms of transport, from the horse to the aeroplane, setting them in their historical context. It highlights long term themes in Britain's transport history, looks at the dilemmas facing today's society and suggests possible solutions.
Philip Bagwell is Emeritus Professor of History, University
of Westminster. Peter Lyth is Lecturer in History at the University of Tel Aviv.
320 pages 24 illus 2002
1 85285 263 1 £19.99
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