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An evocative collection of black and white images covering the National Bus Company across England and Wales in its early years from 1969 to 1975.
Stephen Dowle presents a nostalgic look at the National Bus Company in the 1970s.
A follow-up to the popular first volume, looking at service vehicles in the golden age of the National Bus Company.
Previously unpublished photographs documenting this fascinating and overlooked part of NBC vehicle history.
Using previously unpublished images, Richard Stubbings looks at how the bus scene in south west England has evolved since the 1970s.
Peter Horrex utilises a wealth of rare and previously unpublished photos to give a snapshot of England's modern bus scene in the 1990s and twenty-first century.
This first volume of the Official History studies the background to privatisation, and the privatisations of the first two Conservative Governments led by Margaret Thatcher from May 1979 to June 1987. First commissioned by the then Prime Minister Tony Blair as an authoritative history, this volume addresses a number of key questions: To what extent was privatisation a clear policy commitment within the Thatcher Governments of the 1980s - or did Government simply stumble on the idea? Why were particular public corporations sold early in the 1980s and other sales delayed until well into the 1990s? What were the privatisation objectives and how did they change over time, if at all? How was each privatisation planned and executed, how were different City advisers appointed and remunerated, what precise roles did they play? How was each privatisation administered; in what ways did the methods evolve and change and why? How were sale prices determined? Which government departments took the lead role; what was the input of the Treasury and Bank of England; and what was the relationship between Ministers and civil servants? The study draws heavily from the official records of the British Government to which the author was given full access and from interviews with leading figures involved in each of the privatisations – including ex-Ministers, civil servants, business and City figures, as well as academics that have studied the subject. This new official history will be of much interest to students of British political history, economics and business studies.
Formed on 1st January 1969, the National Bus Company was an amalgamation, as a nationalised industry, of the bus and coach interests of BET and Thomas Tilling. This text tells the story of the National Bus Company from the late 1960s up until the mid-1980s.
On the eve of the railway age, London was the worlds largest and most populous city and one of the most congested. Traffic-clogged roads and tightly packed buildings meant that travel across the city was tortuous, time-consuming and unpleasant. Then came the railways. They transformed the city and set it on a course of extraordinary development that created the metropolis of the present day. This is story that David Wragg explores in his fascinating new book. He considers the impact of the railways on London and the Home Counties and analyzes the decisions taken by the railway companies, Parliament and local government. He also describes the disruptive effect of the railways which could not be built without massive upheaval. His study of the railway phenomenon will be thought-provoking reading for anyone who is keen to understand the citys expansion and the layout of the capital today.