Download Underground, Overground: A Passenger's History of the Tube by Andrew Martin PDF

By Andrew Martin

Why is the Victoria Line so scorching? what's an electric a number of Unit? Is it rather attainable to experience from Kings move to Kings pass at the Circle line? The London Underground is the oldest, such a lot sprawling and illogical metropolitan delivery procedure on the earth, the results of a sequence of botch-jobs and improvisations.Yet it transports over one thousand million passengers each year - and this determine is emerging. it truly is iconic, acknowledged internationally, and enjoyed and despised through Londoners in equivalent degree. mixing reportage, humour and private encounters, Andrew Martin embarks on a superbly enticing social heritage of London's underground railway approach (which regardless of its identify, is actually 55 in line with cent overground). alongside the best way he makes an attempt to untangle the mess that's the Northern Line, stopover at each station overnight - and discover which gaps to be specifically conscious of. Underground, Overground is a hugely relaxing, witty and informative historical past of every thing you want to learn about the Tube.

---
Uploader unlock Notes:
Retail EPUB, contains TOC/chapters
---

Show description

Read or Download Underground, Overground: A Passenger's History of the Tube PDF

Best england books

Decision-Making in Medieval Agriculture

This interesting and critical ebook makes use of a wealth of up to date assets to reconstruct the psychological global of medieval farmers and, by way of doing so, argues that there was a stereotypical interpretation of the center a long time. David Stone overturns the normal view of medieval countrymen as economically backward and in its place unearths that agricultural decision-making used to be as rational within the fouteenth century as nowa days.

The Big Walks of the North

From the nice Glen approach to the Coast to Coast direction, there is not any higher approach to detect the mind-blowing range of northern Britain's panorama than strolling. even if you get pleasure from exploring eco-friendly and lightly rolling dales or tackling rugged mountain paths, there are walks the following to maintain you rambling all yr around.

Society and Cultural Forms in Nineteenth Century England

The transformation of British society throughout the nineteenth century is a normal of historic description. The transition from an business yet nonetheless predominantly agricultural society, with a lot of its conventional, vertically prepared varieties of social association nonetheless intact, to a predominantly city, category divided and recognizably glossy society continues to be one of many impressive changes of social historical past, the prototype certainly for a lot of human heritage within the twentieth century.

1415 : Henry V’s year of glory

An epic account of King Henry V and the mythical conflict of Agincourt, from the writer of the bestselling Time Traveller's consultant to Medieval England.
Henry V is thought of as the nice English hero. Lionised in his personal lifetime for his victory at Agincourt, his piety and his rigorous program of justice, he was once increased by means of Shakespeare right into a champion of English nationalism. yet does he fairly should be regarded as 'the maximum guy who ever governed England'?

In Ian Mortimer's groundbreaking booklet, he portrays Henry within the pivotal 12 months of his reign; recording the dramatic occasion of 1415, he bargains the fullest, so much specific and least romanticised view we have now of Henry and of what he did. the result's not just a desirable reappraisal of Henry; it brings to the fore many unpalatable truths which biographies and army historians have principally neglected. on the centre of the booklet is the crusade which culminated within the conflict of Agincourt: a slaughter flooring designed to not enhance England's curiosity at once yet to illustrate God's approval of Henry's royal authority on each side of the channel.

1415 used to be a 12 months of spiritual persecution, own agony and one horrendous conflict. this is often the tale of that yr, as noticeable over the shoulder of its so much cold-hearted, so much formidable and such a lot celebrated hero.

Additional resources for Underground, Overground: A Passenger's History of the Tube

Sample text

37 Fourth it was sometimes thought that providing agricultural labourers with land would teach their children skill in husbandry from an early age. Finally, it was also occasionally suggested that labourers with land would themselves become ‘better servants’. The benefits expected for the country at large were first, greater social stability, and second, increased national production. The first of these was mentioned by a number of writers, perhaps most revealingly by Glasse and by Bernard. ’39 Increased national production took on particular importance in the war years because of the disruption of trade with continental Europe.

Ibid. i (1797–8), 93. Ibid. iii. 163. Ibid. iv (1802–5), 200–1. Thomas Stone, A review of the corrected agricultural survey of Lincolnshire, by Arthur Young, London 1800, 408. 30 SBCP, Reports, iv. 200–1; ibid. i. 241. vp 01 October 2002 10:01:04 Color profile: Generic CMYK printer profile Composite Default screen c. 31 Moreover, the possession of land would make labourers more thrifty. 32 Another argument sometimes used in favour of providing labourers with land was that this could prevent crime.

Northants. Wilts. Rutland Glos. Wilts. Herts. Cheshire Leics. Norfolk Wilts. Lincs. Wilts. Essex Suffolk Somerset Wilts. Leics. Hants. Wilts. Glos. Northants. Cambs. Wilts. Warks. Somerset Northants. Somerset Wilts. Suffolk Northants. Norfolk Wilts. vp 01 October 2002 10:01:09 Date between 1793 and 1803 1795 1795 1795 1800 or before 1800 c. 1804 1806 1806 1809 1811 1813 or before 1813 or before 1813 1817 or before c. 1817 1817 1817 1818 between 1819 and 1824 1819 c. 1820 early 1820s 1820 1820 1820 1821 1821 1821 1822 1823 1824 1824 1825 1825 1825 1825 c.

Download PDF sample

Rated 4.79 of 5 – based on 11 votes