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The Home Front as seen by the wartime media, highlighting community and social ties
An important new study with a vast scope: the people and events that made the achievements of Stephenson and Brunel possible
Explore the fascinating town of Reading in this fully illustrated A-Z guide to its history, people and places.
It is hard, from a distance of nearly two centuries, to imagine the impact the coming of the railways must have had at the start of the nineteenth century. Their physical impact was dramatic enough - great mechanical horses, breathing fire and smoke and drawing impossibly heavy trains at unimaginable speeds, across a landscape transformed by the embankments and cuttings, viaducts and tunnels their passage demanded. However, they would also transform the way war was conducted and peace was maintained; prove to be one of the drivers of the dramatic industrial growth of the nineteenth century; create opportunities for many to become enormously wealthy, but impoverish many more, who invested unwisely; cause the state to think again about the policy of laissez-faire that was its default position; transform our leisure; radically re-shape our towns and cities and change our very notions of time and how we measured it. In this book, Stuart Hylton looks at the changes wrought in the British Isles during the first century of the railway age and answers the question, what did the railways do for us?
Illustrated throughout with over 100 b&w photographs and drawings, this text explores the history of the city of Manchester, England from its founding as a Roman fort to the present day. Particular attention is paid to early 19th century Manchester, where radical new employer- employee relationships
In Reading: The 1950s Stuart Hylton gives a fascinating account of the town and its people during a decade of rapid and memorable change.
The fascinating - and sometimes bizarre and fatal - early story of the motor car
An illustrated insight into the realities of wartime life in the town of Reading, which draws on contemporary accounts from local newspapers to provide examples of both heroism and tragedy, in addition to details of the bureaucracy that developed as Britain went into war, and information on the everyday struggle of life during the conflict.
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