Charabancs and Social Class in 1930s Britain

Law, Michael John 2015. Charabancs and Social Class in 1930s Britain. Journal of Transport History. 36 (1), pp. 41-57. https://doi.org/10.7227/TJTH.36.1.4

TitleCharabancs and Social Class in 1930s Britain
TypeJournal article
AuthorsLaw, Michael John
Abstract

The renowned writer J. B. Priestley suggested in 1934 that the motor-coach had annihilated the old distinction between rich and poor passengers in Britain. This article considers how true this was by examining the relationship between charabancs, motor coaches and class. It shows that this important vehicle of inter-war working class mobility had a complicated relationship with class, identifying three distinct forms of this method of travel. It positions the charabanc alongside historical responses to unwelcome steamer and railway day-trippers, and examines how resorts provided separate class-based entertainment for these holidaymakers. Using the case study of a new charabancwelcoming pub, the Prospect Inn, it proposes that, in the late 1930s, some pubs were beginning to offer charabanc customers facilities that were almost the match of their middle class equivalent. Motor coaches and charabancs contributed to the process of social convergence in inter-war Britain.

KeywordsAutomobility; Charabancs; leisure; motor coaches; social class
JournalJournal of Transport History
Journal citation36 (1), pp. 41-57
ISSN0022-5266
Year2015
PublisherSage
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.7227/TJTH.36.1.4
Publication dates
Published01 Jun 2015

Related outputs

Not Like Home: American visitors to Britain in the 1950s
Law, Michael John 2019. Not Like Home: American visitors to Britain in the 1950s. McGill-Queen's University Press.

1938: Modern Britain
Law, Michael John 2018. 1938: Modern Britain. London Bloomsbury Academic.

The Roadhouse comes to Britain: Drinking, Driving and Dancing, 1925-1955
Gutzke, David W. and Law, Michael John 2017. The Roadhouse comes to Britain: Drinking, Driving and Dancing, 1925-1955 . London Bloomsbury.

1930s London - The Modern City
Law, Michael John 2015. 1930s London - The Modern City. Canterbury Yellowback.

The experience of suburban modernity: how private transport changed interwar London
Law, Michael John 2014. The experience of suburban modernity: how private transport changed interwar London. Manchester Manchester University Press.

‘The flashy strings of neon lights unravelled': motoring leisure and the potential for technological sublimity on the Great West Road
Law, Michael John 2014. ‘The flashy strings of neon lights unravelled': motoring leisure and the potential for technological sublimity on the Great West Road. London Journal. 39 (3), pp. 281-294. https://doi.org/10.1179/0305803414Z.00000000053

‘The car indispensable’: the hidden influence of the car in inter-war suburban London
Law, Michael John 2013. ‘The car indispensable’: the hidden influence of the car in inter-war suburban London. Journal of Historical Geography. 38 (4), pp. 424-433. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2012.04.005

Cars, Driving, Landscape, and the Architectural Gaze
Law, Michael John 2013. Cars, Driving, Landscape, and the Architectural Gaze. Journal of Historical Geography. 41 (July 2013), pp. 86-89. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2013.04.001

Speed and blood on the bypass: the new automobilities of inter-war London
Law, Michael John 2012. Speed and blood on the bypass: the new automobilities of inter-war London. Urban History. 39 (3), pp. 490-509. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0963926812000247

‘Stopping to dream’: the beautification and vandalism of London’s interwar arterial roads
Law, Michael John 2010. ‘Stopping to dream’: the beautification and vandalism of London’s interwar arterial roads. London Journal. 35 (1), pp. 58-84. https://doi.org/10.1179/174963210X12598738033459

Automobility and the Expanding Metropolis: Motoring Culture and the Growth of London 1925 -1939
Law, Michael John 2010. Automobility and the Expanding Metropolis: Motoring Culture and the Growth of London 1925 -1939. PhD thesis Royal Holloway, University of London Geography

Turning night into day: transgression and Americanisation at the English inter-war roadhouse
Law, Michael John 2009. Turning night into day: transgression and Americanisation at the English inter-war roadhouse. Journal of Historical Geography. 35 (3), pp. 473-494. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhg.2008.09.002

Permalink - https://westminsterresearch.westminster.ac.uk/item/9w4x9/charabancs-and-social-class-in-1930s-britain


Share this

Usage statistics

360 total views
0 total downloads
These values cover views and downloads from WestminsterResearch and are for the period from September 2nd 2018, when this repository was created.