1st Edition

Transport and Its Place in History Making the Connections

Edited By David Turner Copyright 2020
250 Pages 15 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

250 Pages 15 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

250 Pages 15 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Transport and mobility history is one of the most exciting areas of historical research at the present. As its scope expands, it entices scholars working in fields as diverse as historical geography, management studies, sociology, industrial archaeology, cultural and literary studies, ethnography, and anthropology, as well as those working in various strands of historical research. Containing... Read more

“Making the Connections” – Introduction
David Turner

Part I: Policy and Practice

1. ‘Supersonic/gin & tonic: The rise and fall of Concorde, 1950-2000’.
Peter Lyth

2. Observing 'Saint Monday': variations in the potential for leisure mobility for workers in the north of England in the mid-19th century
Susan Major

3. The vulnerability paradox: the illusion of permanence in the UK public transport industry
Kevin Tennent

4. Barrels rolling free: modal shift in the British brewing industry, 1897-1914
David Turner

Part II: Cultures of Transport

5. Maintaining the Connections: A Social and Cultural History of the Permanent Way
Oliver Betts

6. “Being poor is going to the Ritz on the bus”: The portrayal of buses and trams in popular culture
Martin Higginson

7. Canals in Nineteenth-century Literary History
Jodie Matthews

Part III: Methodologies

8. “The Trajectories of Railway Kinship Families in Victorian York”
Philip Batman

9. Sensory ethnography and film interpretation: sociological readings of historical archives
Peter Cox

10. Identification of the urban infrastructure of nineteenth-century horse transport: a case study of Worksop, Nottinghamshire, UK
Megan Doole

11. Digital disasters: Crowdsourcing the railway accident
Mike Esbester

Biography

David Turner is Associate Lecturer in Railway Studies at the University of York, and teaches at the Centre for Lifelong Learning and The York Management School’s Masters in Railway Studies. He completed his PhD with the Institute of Railway Studies and Transport History, York, in 2013 and was awarded in 2016 the Business Archives Council’s Bursary for Business History Research. He is also a book review editor for the Journal of Transport History and a co-convener of the Institute of Historical Research’s Transport and Mobility History Seminar.