Description
This collection of aerial photographs, produced by Aerofilms Ltd mostly between 1920 and 1953, tells the story of England's seaside resorts as holiday destinations, but also as working towns, blessed with the sea as their backdrop. It also illustrates the type of entertainments available for holidaymakers and highlights how the seaside holiday at some resorts became big business with industrial-scale facilities and infrastructure.
About the Author
Allan Brodie is a Visiting Fellow at Bournemouth University. He is the author of a number of books about the history of tourism and seaside resorts. He is the co-author with Mark Bowden of Defending Scilly.
Reviews
'Brodie has a briskly jovial turn of phrase, and his introduction explains how seaside resorts grew out of an 18th-century fashion for curative bathing, with their appeal and accessibility greatly amplified first by the coming of the railways and later by the passing of the 1938 Holidays with Pay Act. [...] This book is an absorbing way to be beside the seaside.'
Carly Hilts, Current Archaeology
'[England's Seaside Heritage from the Air] will appeal to students of urban form and lovers of grand Edwardian hotels and [their] superb piers... as well as to collectors of illustrated books on architecture and fans of aerial photography... It provides valuable evidence about sites and structures.'
Graham Tite, Context
Book Information
ISBN 9781800859647
Author Allan Brodie
Format Hardback
Page Count 312
Imprint Historic England
Publisher Liverpool University Press