Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Foreword
- About the Author
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 British Coastal Shipping: A Research Agenda for the European Perspective
- Chapter 2 The Significance of Coastal Shipping in British Domestic Transport, 1550-1830
- Chapter 3 The British Coastal Fleet in the Eighteenth Century: How Useful Are the Admiralty's Registers of Protection from Impressment?
- Chapter 4 Management Response in British Coastal Shipping Companies to Railway Competition
- Chapter 5 Conferences in British Nineteenth-Century Coastal Shipping
- Chapter 6 Coastal Shipping: The Neglected Sector of Nineteenth- Century British Transport History
- Chapter 7 Railways and Coastal Shipping in Britain in the Later Nineteenth Century: Cooperation and Competition
- Chapter 8 The Crewing of British Coastal Colliers, 1870-1914
- Chapter 9 Late Nineteenth-Century Freight Rates Revisited: Some Evidence from the British Coastal Coal Trade
- Chapter 10 Liverpool to Hull - By Sea?
- Chapter 11 Government Regulation in the British Shipping Industry, 1830-1913: The Role of the Coastal Sector
- Chapter 12 An Estimate of the Importance of the British Coastal Liner Trade in the Early Twentieth Century
- Chapter 13 The Role of Coastal Shipping in UK Transport: An Estimate of Comparative Traffic Movements in 1910
- Chapter 14 Climax and Climacteric: The British Coastal Trade, 1870- 1930
- Chapter 15 The Shipping Depression of 1901 to 1911: The Experience of Freight Rates in the British Coastal Coal Trade
- Chapter 16 The Coastal Trade of Connah's Quay in the Early Twentieth Century: A Preliminary Investigation
- Chapter 17 The Cinderella of the Transport World: The Historiography of the British Coastal Trade
- Bibliography of Writings by John Armstrong
Chapter 2 - The Significance of Coastal Shipping in British Domestic Transport, 1550-1830
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Series Editor's Foreword
- About the Author
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 British Coastal Shipping: A Research Agenda for the European Perspective
- Chapter 2 The Significance of Coastal Shipping in British Domestic Transport, 1550-1830
- Chapter 3 The British Coastal Fleet in the Eighteenth Century: How Useful Are the Admiralty's Registers of Protection from Impressment?
- Chapter 4 Management Response in British Coastal Shipping Companies to Railway Competition
- Chapter 5 Conferences in British Nineteenth-Century Coastal Shipping
- Chapter 6 Coastal Shipping: The Neglected Sector of Nineteenth- Century British Transport History
- Chapter 7 Railways and Coastal Shipping in Britain in the Later Nineteenth Century: Cooperation and Competition
- Chapter 8 The Crewing of British Coastal Colliers, 1870-1914
- Chapter 9 Late Nineteenth-Century Freight Rates Revisited: Some Evidence from the British Coastal Coal Trade
- Chapter 10 Liverpool to Hull - By Sea?
- Chapter 11 Government Regulation in the British Shipping Industry, 1830-1913: The Role of the Coastal Sector
- Chapter 12 An Estimate of the Importance of the British Coastal Liner Trade in the Early Twentieth Century
- Chapter 13 The Role of Coastal Shipping in UK Transport: An Estimate of Comparative Traffic Movements in 1910
- Chapter 14 Climax and Climacteric: The British Coastal Trade, 1870- 1930
- Chapter 15 The Shipping Depression of 1901 to 1911: The Experience of Freight Rates in the British Coastal Coal Trade
- Chapter 16 The Coastal Trade of Connah's Quay in the Early Twentieth Century: A Preliminary Investigation
- Chapter 17 The Cinderella of the Transport World: The Historiography of the British Coastal Trade
- Bibliography of Writings by John Armstrong
Summary
An examination of the literature on inland transport in Britain in the early modern period might lead one to believe that the most important method of conveying goods was by road. In the last twenty years there has been a plethora of articles on the role of road transport, including important pieces by John Chartres, Gerard L. Turnbull, Michael J. Freeman and, most recently, Dorian Gerhold. The effect of this research has been to disprove the idea that road travel was at best difficult, and at worst, in winter, near impossible, when mud, inclines, potholes and other hazards prevented mobility. It is now clear that there was a network of carriers, for both short-distance local travel and long distances, which provided regular and reasonably reliable journey times for a range of commodities. Road transport grew in significance over the period. Coastal shipping was equally important, however, and the aim of this paper is to highlight its role in the transport developments which preceded the coming of the railways.
The pendulum has swung too far in one direction, and the bias in the literature in favour of road transport might be mistaken as a sign of the relative unimportance of coastal shipping. This essay sets out to correct that impression. It isolates economic variables relevant to transport and reassesses the relative importance of coastal shipping in light of those factors. Material is drawn chiefly from secondary sources. Little primary research has been done since T.S. Willan wrote his masterpiece over fifty years ago, which is a la-mentable reflection on the neglect of the coasting trade. Thus, a further aim of this review is to indicate some areas where further research might be profitable. Chartres, Turnbull and others have shown that road transport was a normal method of moving goods as early as the sixteenth century and that its importance increased with Britain's economic growth. By the eighteenth century there existed a reasonably well-integrated network of carriers capable of moving significant quantities of freight. The price of the service was not in all cases the only, or even the most important, consideration in choosing a transport mode. Sometimes speed, reliability of arrival time or regularity of service was of more importance to customers. There is no simple rule as to how prices, speed or reliability compared between different transport modes.
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- Information
- The Vital SparkThe British Coastal Trade, 1700-1930, pp. 15 - 40Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2017