Research Catalog
Underground to everywhere : London's underground railway in the life of the capital / Stephen Halliday.
- Title
- Underground to everywhere : London's underground railway in the life of the capital / Stephen Halliday.
- Author
- Halliday, Stephen.
- Publication
- Stroud : Sutton; London : published in association with London's Transport Museum. 2001.
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Text | Request in advance | TF847.L6 H35 2001 | Off-site |
Holdings
Details
- Additional Authors
- London Transport Museum.
- Description
- xvii, 230 p., [8] p. of plates : ill. (some col.), col. maps; 25 cm.
- Summary
- "In 1900 an American financier called Charles Tyson Yerkes was placed in charge of London's underground railways, which had been in service since 1863 and were, even then, showing signs of their age. Over the next five years he applied his business methods - which he described as 'Buy up old junk, fix it up a little and unload it upon other fellows' - to the construction of much of the capital's deep-level tube system. Yerkes was one of many colourful characters who gave London its underground railway system." "But the London Underground is more than a railway. In the twentieth century, under the enlightened management of Frank Pick, the Underground was responsible for some striking developments in industrial design. Bauhaus, Cubist and other innovative ideas were applied to station architecture, advertising posters and seat covers. The work of artists such as Graham Sutherland, Len Deighton and Lucie Attwell was exposed to large audiences for the first time, as was that icon of industrial design, Harry Beck's diagrammatic map of the Underground network." "Making use of extensive research in London's archives, Stephen Halliday shows how these pioneers struggled with the problem that vexes the Underground to this day. London undoubtedly needs it but has never really decided who should pay for it. Passengers or taxpayers? Public or private finance? Is it a profit-making enterprise or a social service? The book places this unanswered question in its historical context as, in the twenty-first century, the debate turns in a new direction, once again headed by an American under the direction of London's first elected mayor."--BOOK JACKET.
- Subject
- Genre/Form
- History
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references (p. [221]-225) and index.
- Processing Action (note)
- committed to retain
- Contents
- Foreword / Maxwell Hutchinson -- Introduction: Early Days and False Starts -- 1. Terminal Connections -- 2. Down the Tubes -- 3. The American Connection -- 4. The First Baron Ashfield: Underground to Anywhere -- 5. Metroland and its Family -- 6. Lorenzo the Magnificent: the Underground's Artistic Heritage -- 7. The Underground at War: 1914-18: 1939-45 -- 8. The Post-war Underground -- Postcript 'See you in court'.
- ISBN
- 075092585X
- OCLC
- 46846918
- SCSB-10529289
- Owning Institutions
- Harvard Library