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Early Victorian Railway Excursions (Hardback)

The Million Go Forth

P&S History > British History > Victorian History Transport > Trains & Railways

By Susan Major
Imprint: Pen & Sword Transport
Pages: 195
Illustrations: 30
ISBN: 9781473835283
Published: 16th November 2015

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£25.00


Publicity

As featured in BBC One documentary: Railways: The Making of a Nation

 

Shortlisted for the Railways and Canal Historical Society Book of the Year Awards 2017

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There is a widely held belief that Thomas Cook invented the railway excursion. In fact, the railway excursion is almost as old as the railway itself, dating back to the 1830s, when hordes of people from one town would descend on another for a ‘cheap trip’. Susan Major has carried out much in-depth research for this book, drawing on contemporary Victorian newspapers, and has discovered that, in fact, Cook played a very minor role, mainly in encouraging middle-class people to go on more expensive excursions. Her book fills an important gap in railway history. It explores for the first time how the vast majority of ordinary working people in Britain in the middle of the nineteenth century were able to travel cheaply for leisure over long distances, in huge crowds, and return home. This was a stunning experience for the excursionists and caused great shocks to observers at the time. These ‘trippers’ had to overcome many obstacles, particularly from the Church of England and the nonconformist movement, who were affronted by the idea of people enjoying themselves on a Sunday, their only day away from work.

The book charts the story of the early railway excursions from the 1840s to the 1860s, a dramatic period of railway and social change in British history. It looks at how these excursions were shaped and the experiences of working-class travellers during this period, demolishing a number of clichés and myths endlessly reproduced in traditional railway histories. While Michael Portillo paints a picture of travellers sitting tidily in their railway carriages, consulting their Bradshaws, many working-class excursionists on their trips were hanging on to the roof of a crowded carriage, endangering their lives, or enduring hours of travel in an open wagon in heavy rain.

As mentioned in

Railwatch magazine, October 2018

As featured by

Wetherby News, 27th September 2018

Author talk as featured by

Wetherby News, 6th September 2018

This is a fascinating, clear, well-referenced and elegantly annotated book. It is based on Dr Major's PhD thesis that was supervised by our current President, Professor Colin Divall. During her PdD studies Susan Major was in receipt of a grant from the HMRS Educational Award Fund.


Dr Major explores the explosion in mobility that came with the early railways, pointing out that whilst people had gone some distance on foot, by cart or boat for pleasure, the train opened up many more possibilities for both day and longer trips. However, the conditions in which they travelled, often in large numbers, were frequently less than perfect and she reminds us that the 1840s was also a decade of political agitation.

Historical Model Railways Society

This is a terrific book, written in an accessible style - a valuable source book.

Manchester Region History Review

The author examines in great detail over nine chapters how excursions catered for all tastes, ranging from Sunday School outings to race meetings and prize fights.
There is a wealth of information for the serious student.

Cumbrian Railways

Recommended reading for all those interested in travel, tourism, leisure and working class culture in the mid nineteenth century.

British Association for Victorian Studies

There is a considerable amount of detail and interesting cameo examples that are set out in an easy to read style, making the book accessible and a pleasure to read.

There is a good selection of illustrations, with a very comprehensive set of notes and sources, together with an effective index. I have no hesitation in recommending this book, either to the casual inquisitive reader or someone more steeped in the knowledge of the railway and its social impact.

Friends of the National Archives

The source material is particularly rich in places and some excellent illustrations are provided, and the excursion train provides a fascinating insight in to leisure in the Victorian period.

British Association for Local History

An excellent book, warmly recommended.
Into the 'mutual antagonism' between the Chartists and the railway companies there is scope for further investigation and Dr. Major would be a most suitable person to undertake it.

Midland Railway Society

As featured in

South China Morning Post

Early Victorian Railways captures something of the tremendous excitement - as well as the reason why people endured its discomforts and dangers - of the huge social changes involved when cheap travel first became available to everybody.
Major provides a meticulously researched interpretation of how and why the travel industry for working people developed.

Business History, 2016

The author provides a detailed exploration of the phenomenon of the excursion in the period of the 1840s to the 1860s.

NW Labour History Journal 41

Major paints a national picture in this thorough book. Well worth reading.

Great Eastern News 168

This excellent study offers a social history of communities at play, and pays serious scholarly attention to the mechanisms by which working-class experiences were expanded with the development of the popular excursion, especially the excursion train.

Family & Community History Oct 2016

This is an excellent book which does what its title suggests.

Railway Observer April 2016

This is a ground breaking account of an important and neglected topic and deserves a wide readership.

5 star review.

Backtrack

The author charts the story of early railway excursions from the 1840s to the 1860s and in doing so presents a fascinating slice of railway and social history. Recommended.

Great Northern Outpost

Featured author article

Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine, Summer 2016

'This is a wonderful work of railway history. Using an amazing range of sources, it re-creates the teeming life of the early 'cheap trip', from the hardships endured by the travellers to the impact on the destinations which they invaded en masse. It's full of good stories, without losing sight of the wider picture. Sources and narratives are weighed with a true historian's care, alert to possible bias and hidden agendas. The writing is clear, calm and intelligent. The book also brings welcome breadth to an aspect of railway history that has been dominated for too long by the experiences of the well-off, travelling by scheduled train with first- or second-class tickets. Strongly recommended to anyone with an interest in Victorian social history, as well as to everyone who loves reading about Britain's railways.'

Simon Bradley

A significant and worthwhile book showing new light on a topic little covered previously.

Welsh Railways Research Circle 147

As featured in.

Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine August 2016

Major's very thorough and wide-ranging research has mined newspaper reports, court reports, letters and, most importantly (and pleasurably) diaries kept by those working class excursionists. She approaches the topic from the point of view of the huge social upheaval wrought by the railway with the sudden availability of unimagined mobility to all social classes, and brings into sharp focus the hostilities that this created in different sections of society at a time when old class certainties were already under great strain.

ournal of Transport History, Vol.37 (1)

This is an academic treatise but will be welcomed by all interested in how railways evolved in to the burgeoning 20th Century excursion trains which just as quickly subsided when the private motor car usurped them.

This England Summer 2016

The author has clearly carried out an extremely large amount of in-depth research for this book, as is obvious from no less than 25 pages of notes and references to contemporary newspapers and other Victorian publications.
From this, she has shown that the widely-held belief that Thomas Cook 'invented' the railway excursion is not true and that Cook played only a very minor role, encouraging the middle classes to go on more expensive excursions......

Paul E DAvis - NRN Friends - Spring 2016

This is an academic treatise but will be welcomed by all interested in how railways evolved into burgeoning 20th-century excursion trains which just as quickly subsided when the private motor car usurped them.

This England, Summer 2016

Well produced on fine art paper, nicely illustrated and well-written. I thought it was entertaining and informative gem of a book.

Ripperologist Magazine, April 2016 - Paul Begg

As Susan Major points out in a book that vividly brings to life a Victorian phenomenon that swept through Britain from the early 1830s, it was not outside agents such as Cook who created the railway excursion but the railway companies themselves...

... The best chapter of the book, ' What Was it Really Like?', beautifully conveys the sense of adventure, excitement and even danger for these early excursionists.

Oldie

... a book which vividly brings to life a Victorian phenomenon that swept through Britain from the early 1830s.

Christian Wolmar Blog

A track through a quite difficult time for railway researchers where the usual sources of material are rather rare; and I can assure you, it is readable!

South Western Circle Society

This is obviously a very well researched book, as evidenced by the copious references to primary source material given in the footnotes. It is also superbly produced and printed. Yet while being scholarly, it is also an absorbing and fascinating read.
Susan Major has given this hitherto largely overlooked yet important aspect of railway operation the attention it deserves. Highly recommended!

Great Northern Railway Society

This is a very interesting piece of social history little touched on elsewhere, and a well-researched exploration of both tourism and the railways.

Your Family History - March 2016

"If you’re like me, and you forget to post your presents until after the deadline for the Christmas post, these recommendations may be of some use. The first book is a real gem of railway social history. Susan Major’s Early Victorian Railway Excursions is a very readable but scholarly account of how railway revolutionised leisure travel in the Victorian era. It goes well beyond the narrow confines of railway history and adds some valuable insights to the historiography of Victorian society and class relations. It also explores some interesting aspects of gender and the perceived morality of women travelling by train in the 1840s. It’s a great book to read on a charter train when it is stuck in a field near Wootton Bassett waiting for a replacement locomotive. Or at your fireside over Christmas."

Paul Salveson Illustrated Northern Weekly Salvo

'It is a meticulously-researched and well-illustrated account of the early days of the great Victorian railway excursions...'

The York Press

As featured on

NRM Blog

This well-researched book challenges established history, offering an insight into the foundation of the leisure of industry and improved social mobility.

Best of British Magazine - December 2015
 Susan Major

About Susan Major

Susan Major completed a PhD with the Institute of Railway Studies & Transport History at the University of York in 2012. Drawing upon material from the National Railway Museum and the British Library, she focused on early railway excursions. Her book based on this research, Early Victorian Railway Excursions, was shortlisted for the Railways and Canal Historical Society Book of the Year Awards 2017. Susan was a programme consultant for the BBC series Railways: the Making of a Nation, taking part in the episode on leisure. She is retired and lives in York.

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