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 14 - Climax and Climacteric: The British Coastal Trade, 1870- 1930
- 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
The period 1870-1930 saw the continued rise and precipitous decline of the British coastal trade. Coastal shipping had been a crucial component in industrialization, transporting low-value, high-bulk goods such as coal, corn, bricks and slates which were essential to the growth of towns and industry. In the early nineteenth century its volume increased steadily as the economy expanded, and specialization led to an increased movement of goods from lowcost areas to centres of consumption. The coastal trade continued to expand until the First World War and in many ways was at its zenith just before that conflict. However, the Great War brought an abrupt end to this long period of expansion. In the 1920s, although there was growth from the very low wartime levels, the prewar volume of activity was never achieved, and the interwar period saw the British coastal trade stagnate. This chapter will oudine and explain the trends in each of these three sub-periods. In so doing the role and economics of the coastal ship will become apparent.
Apogee, 1870-1914
The period 1870-1914 saw the British coastal trade at an apogee. This high point can be demonstrated in a variety of ways. The number and tonnage of ships with cargoes entering the harbours of the UK in the coasting trade rose continuously between 1870 and 1913. A dense network of coastal lines had developed which linked virtually all major ports with regular, fast and scheduled services. The coastal collier was moving an increasing quantity of coal from the producing regions, especially the North East of England and South Wales, to the consuming areas, particularly London and the South East. In addition, the screw collier took on die competition offered by the railways and from the 1890s regained the lion's share of the coal trade to London, carrying more than the railway companies each year save two from then until the First World War. In the last years of the nineteenth century and the early years of the twentieth, the coaster was performing about as much work as the railway system as a whole if measured in ton-miles. Finally, the coaster was extensively used for passenger traffic, both as a means of business and pleasure travel, and increasingly in the last decade or so of the nineteenth century as part of the nascent mass leisure industry.
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- The Vital SparkThe British Coastal Trade, 1700-1930, pp. 261 - 282Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2017