Difference between revisions of "MRP: Physical goods handling"

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(6) Plan of vaults on site of Old Custom House’, extract from Plate 62, in London County Council, Survey of London, vol. XV: the parish of All Hallows Barking (pt. 2) (London, 1934)<ref>Plan of vaults on site of Old Custom House’, extract from Plate 62, in [http://www.archive.org/stream/surveyoflondon15londuoft#page/n293/mode/2up London County Council, Survey of London, vol. XV: the parish of All Hallows Barking (pt. 2) (London, 1934)]</ref>
 
(6) Plan of vaults on site of Old Custom House’, extract from Plate 62, in London County Council, Survey of London, vol. XV: the parish of All Hallows Barking (pt. 2) (London, 1934)<ref>Plan of vaults on site of Old Custom House’, extract from Plate 62, in [http://www.archive.org/stream/surveyoflondon15londuoft#page/n293/mode/2up London County Council, Survey of London, vol. XV: the parish of All Hallows Barking (pt. 2) (London, 1934)]</ref>
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==Notes==
 +
===Broad wheeled waggons, The Gentleman's Magazine, 1756===
 +
 +
"'Observations on the Broad Wheels'
 +
 +
To the AUTHORS of the LONDON MAGAZINE
 +
 +
SIR,
 +
 +
In your Magazine for June, p. 262, you desire from your correspondents an account of the effect of broad wheels on our roads, and agreeable to your request, I inform you, that, in the wet weather, the middle of this month, I took a small tour in a post-chaise to Birmingham, by way of Oxford, and returned thro' Coventry, Dunstable, &c.  On the road thither there were a great many broad wheels used, but they were so called country waggons, but they were so greatly out numbered by what  are called country waggons, and especially by coal and culm waggons in Warwickshire, drawing with five, and often six horses, that it has made the road excessive rutty and bad, tho' the whole was turnpike road, extremely troublesome, and often very dangerous in turning out of the way for the empty as well as loaded waggons.  On my return, I found still more broad wheels, but there were also such numbers of coal waggons, all with narrow wheels, as still kept the roads very rutty and very bad, till I came to Stony-Stratford, beyond which the coal waggons did not travel, and scarce any thing but with broad wheels.  And I had the pleasure to find the good effects of them; for from that town to London, which is 52 miles, tho' the weather was excessive rainy, I did not meet with a single rut; even the narrow roads, thro' the villages, were all like a gravel walk.  The driver of my postchaise set out a professed enemy to broad wheels, but returned a very great advocate for them, and declared it, as his opinion, that four horses would draw a larger weight from London to Stony-Stratford with broad wheels, than wight would from thence to Birmingham with narrow ones.  As the farmers, and a majority of the carriers, won't see their own interest, I sincerely hope the legislature will compel them to use broad wheels, as it will greatly tend to their advantage, as well as to the pleasure and safety of all travellers.  I was persuaded of the usefulness of broad wheels, by reading the pamphlet you recommended, but am now fully convinced, that we never can have good roads where broad wheels are not generally used.
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August 26, 1756.  I am, &c."<ref>[http://books.google.co.uk/ebooks/reader?id=-1QDAAAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover&output=reader&pg=GBS.PA434 'XII. Observations on the broad Wheels', The London magazine; or Gentleman's monthly intelligencer (London, Sept. 1756), p. 434]</ref>
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==Possible primary sources==
 
==Possible primary sources==

Revision as of 13:22, February 2, 2012

Physical goods handling

04/01/12, CSG: Created page






Introduction




Suggested links


See Customs
See Trade
See Transport bibliography



To do



Images

Coal-waggon, Gentleman's Magazine, 1764


BOOK PLATE Coal Waggon Gent Mag March 1764 BetwPP144145 Anon GoogFEB DL CSG 040112.png



Wheel barrow, Hyde Park, Sandby, 1780


BOOK PLATE Sandby Crop Whl Bar 1780 Serpentine Plt 23 BurlFinArtsCat 1920 IArch V2 DL CSG 020212.PNG



Barrels on south bank of Thames by London Bridge, Vischer, 1616


BOOK PLATE Vischer 1616 Lon Bri Crop Ft LCC Survey Lond Bank Vol 22 1950 IArch DL CSG 010212.PNG



Barrels on wharf by Old Custom House, London, 1663


BOOK PLATE PRINT EXTR Barth Hwlett Old Cust Hse Plt63 LCC Survey Vol XV 1934 IArch DL CSG 310112 copy.png



Vaults, Site of Old Custom House, 19XX


BOOK PHOTO Vaults Old Cust Hse Plt62 LCC Survey XV 1934 IArch DL CSG 310112.png



Plan of Vaults, Site of Old Custom House, 19XX


BOOK PLAN Vaults Old Cust Hse Plt62 LCC Survey XV 1934 IArch DL CSG 310112.png


Image credits & copyright information


(1) Anonymous, 'Coal wagon', in The Gentleman’s Magazine, March 1764, betw. pp. 144 & 145, accompanying article on by "Coal-waggons' by T.S. Polyhistor in same edition[1]
- Book and image are out of copyright
- Sourced from Google Free E-Book edition

(2) Cropped section of plate 23, 'Camp near Serpentine, Hyde Park, 1780,' Paul Sandby, 1780, reproduced in Burlington Fine Arts Club, 'Catalogue of a collection of early drawings and pictures of London with some contemporary furniture' (London, 1920)[2]

(3) Cropped section of frontpiece, Old London Bridge, from Vischer (XXXX, 1616), in London County Council, Survey of London, vol. 22, Bankside (the parishes of St. Saviour and Christchurch, Southwark) (London, 1950)[3]
- Book and image are out of copyright
- Image sourced from Internet Archive copy

(4) Cropped section of print, 'Old Custom House,' Bartholomew Howlett, 1663, Plate 63, in London County Council, Survey of London, vol. XV: the parish of All Hallows Barking (pt. 2) (London, 1934)[4]
- Book and image are out of copyright
- Image sourced from Internet Archive copy

(5) Photograph of 'Vaults on the site of the Old Custom House', date?, photographer?, Plate 62, in London County Council, Survey of London, vol. XV: the parish of All Hallows Barking (pt. 2) (London, 1934)[5]
- Book and image are out of copyright
- Image sourced from Internet Archive copy

(6) Plan of vaults on site of Old Custom House’, extract from Plate 62, in London County Council, Survey of London, vol. XV: the parish of All Hallows Barking (pt. 2) (London, 1934)[6]



Notes

Broad wheeled waggons, The Gentleman's Magazine, 1756


"'Observations on the Broad Wheels'

To the AUTHORS of the LONDON MAGAZINE

SIR,

In your Magazine for June, p. 262, you desire from your correspondents an account of the effect of broad wheels on our roads, and agreeable to your request, I inform you, that, in the wet weather, the middle of this month, I took a small tour in a post-chaise to Birmingham, by way of Oxford, and returned thro' Coventry, Dunstable, &c. On the road thither there were a great many broad wheels used, but they were so called country waggons, but they were so greatly out numbered by what are called country waggons, and especially by coal and culm waggons in Warwickshire, drawing with five, and often six horses, that it has made the road excessive rutty and bad, tho' the whole was turnpike road, extremely troublesome, and often very dangerous in turning out of the way for the empty as well as loaded waggons. On my return, I found still more broad wheels, but there were also such numbers of coal waggons, all with narrow wheels, as still kept the roads very rutty and very bad, till I came to Stony-Stratford, beyond which the coal waggons did not travel, and scarce any thing but with broad wheels. And I had the pleasure to find the good effects of them; for from that town to London, which is 52 miles, tho' the weather was excessive rainy, I did not meet with a single rut; even the narrow roads, thro' the villages, were all like a gravel walk. The driver of my postchaise set out a professed enemy to broad wheels, but returned a very great advocate for them, and declared it, as his opinion, that four horses would draw a larger weight from London to Stony-Stratford with broad wheels, than wight would from thence to Birmingham with narrow ones. As the farmers, and a majority of the carriers, won't see their own interest, I sincerely hope the legislature will compel them to use broad wheels, as it will greatly tend to their advantage, as well as to the pleasure and safety of all travellers. I was persuaded of the usefulness of broad wheels, by reading the pamphlet you recommended, but am now fully convinced, that we never can have good roads where broad wheels are not generally used.

August 26, 1756. I am, &c."[7]



Possible primary sources




Possible secondary sources

  1. This is the footnote text
  2. Cropped section of plate 23, 'Camp near Serpentine, Hyde Park, 1780,' Paul Sandby, 1780, reproduced in Burlington Fine Arts Club, 'Catalogue of a collection of early drawings and pictures of London with some contemporary furniture' (London, 1920)
  3. Cropped section of frontpiece, Old London Bridge, from Vischer (XXXX, 1616), in London County Council, Survey of London, vol. 22, Bankside (the parishes of St. Saviour and Christchurch, Southwark) (London, 1950)
  4. 'Old Custom House', extract from print, Bartholomew Howlett, 1663, Plate 63, in London County Council, Survey of London, vol. XV: the parish of All Hallows Barking (pt. 2) (London, 1934)
  5. Photograph of 'Vaults on the site of the Old Custom House', date?, photographer?, in London County Council, Survey of London, vol. XV: the parish of All Hallows Barking (pt. 2) (London, 1934)
  6. Plan of vaults on site of Old Custom House’, extract from Plate 62, in London County Council, Survey of London, vol. XV: the parish of All Hallows Barking (pt. 2) (London, 1934)
  7. 'XII. Observations on the broad Wheels', The London magazine; or Gentleman's monthly intelligencer (London, Sept. 1756), p. 434