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The Great North Road is Britain's Route 66 - we've just forgotten
how to sing its praises In 1921, Britain's most illustrious
highway, the Great North Road, ceased to exist - on paper at least.
Stretching from London to Edinburgh, the old road was largely
replaced by the A1 as the era of the motor car took hold. A hundred
years later, journalist and cyclist Steve Silk embraces the
anniversary as the perfect excuse to set off on an adventure across
11 days and 400 miles. Travelling by bike at a stately 14 miles per
hour, he heads north, searching out milestones and memories,
coaching inns and coffee shops. Seen from a saddle rather than a
car seat, the towns and the countryside of England and Scotland
reveal traces of Britain's remarkable past and glimpses of its
future. Instead of the familiar service stations and tourist
hotspots, Steve tracks down the forgotten treasures of this ancient
highway between the two capitals. The Great North Road is a journey
as satisfying for the armchair traveller as the long-distance
cyclist. Enriched with history, humour and insight, it's a tribute
to Britain and the endless appeal of the open road.
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