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Books > Sport & Leisure > Transport: general interest > Road & motor vehicles: general interest > General
This book is all about different kinds of trucks: from a dump truck
to a logging truck. Written with rhyme and pattern to help earlier
readers. The beautiful illustrations will capture the heart of
every child.
In British Columbia by the Road, Ben Bradley takes readers on an
unprecedented journey through the history of roads, highways, and
motoring in British Columbia’s Interior, a remote landscape
composed of plateaus and interlocking valleys, soaring mountains
and treacherous passes. Challenging the idea that the automobile
offered travellers the freedom of the road and a view of
unadulterated nature, Bradley shows that boosters, businessmen,
conservationists, and public servants manipulated what drivers and
passengers could and should view from the comfort of their
vehicles. Although cars and roads promised freedom, they offered
drivers a curated view of the landscape that shaped the
province’s image in the eyes of residents and visitors alike.
In this 85th volume: We travel back to the streets of Sunderland in
the 1950sSunderland's trams had an appeal to tram enthusiasts that
was as great as any other British system. Possibly it was the fact
that many were second-hand from other systems, or was it their
(almost unique) pantographs in their later years? Like many others,
David Clarke was fascinated by trams from an early age. He can
remember looking out of the first-floor front window of his house
(they lived above a shop where his father was manager) and noticing
not the few motor cars, which were all black, or the trade vans, or
even the fairly ordinary shops and houses, but the brightly
coloured red and cream trams that seemed to pass by every few
minutes. This was North London, not Sunderland, but the effect
would have been the same anywhere. Trams were the conspicuous
things, and they were beautiful to behold. When he was just short
of two years old they were taken away and trolleybuses substituted,
and he can remember asking his mother what had happened to them.
The trolleys somehow did not command the presence that the trams
had held. His first visit to Sunderland was in February 1953. he
spent the day riding the trams and securing a few photographs of
them. The memory of that first ride to Seaburn (Sealane) in the
glorious midday sunshine will stick forever. And those elegant
centre-entrance cars! He later discovered similar trams in
Blackpool and Aberdeen, but these were his first experience of
something quite modern. The reason (or excuse) for producing this
new book of Sunderland tram photographs is the recent discovery of
the excellent collection of the late Peter Mitchell. Peter was a
friend of David who lived close by in North London and they
occasionally met up at David's home or went on public transport
visits together. Peter was working and could afford a good camera;
David was on pocket money and had a cheap box camera. So it is
Peter's superb pictures, and some views by Clarence Carter, that
are presented here, together with 11 of Richard Wiseman's excellent
photographs, which he has kindly allowed to be to used. This book
is not a intended to be a definitive history of the trams or the
system, this book is just sheer nostalgia. It is hoped that it will
have appeal not only to tram enthusiasts but also to locals (and
ex-locals) of Sunderland who remember the trams, and the streets
they ran in, before the great Motor Car Age arrived.
Since deregulation in 1986, Merseyside has offered a wealth of
variety to bus enthusiasts with numerous new independent operators
entering the scene, and some soon departing again, while the major
companies have gained strength through takeovers and area
expansion. The area covered here includes Liverpool, the Wirral, St
Helens and Southport, all of which have seen wide changes,
particularly in the 1990s, and all are captured with a selection of
previously unpublished colour photographs.
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