From packhorse to railway. Changing transport systems from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries and their impact upon trade and industry in the Shropshire area
posted on 2010-08-13, 11:27authored byTrevor G. Hill
This thesis considers the development of transport networks
from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries with
particular reference to the county of Shropshire and its
wider hinterland, which has been designated `The Shropshire
Area'.
It examines how road-transport networks evolved in the
Shropshire area during the seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, and how links were formed with other areas of
Britain. It questions historical assumptions which have been
made about the viability of road transport systems, and
explores the difficulties which can be experienced by scholars
who attempt to measure the growth of carrier systems.
The development of transport on navigable rivers and canals,
and their links to coastal shipping are explored and how with
road-transport they formed an integrated transport system.
Further it considers how these integrated networks were a
factor in the development. of specialized areas of production
and manufacture.
In the nineteenth century Shropshire the impact of the
railways on the existing road and waterway systems is studied
and in particular how the evolution of new networks affected
the economy, industry, culture and the population of towns and
their hinterlands.
Overall this thesis takes a holistic view of local history, by
placing the particular within the general and by using the
study of transport systems as a unifying theme around which
other socio-economic topics are explored.