John Davies' excellent Book is hard to review because it is packed with delights, obviously the easiest review methodology is to look at maps - there is a clue in the book's title! The best way to approach the book is to scan quickly its joyousness, then go back and explore thoroughly.
In these blogs, the best that fbb can to is the quick flick shallow dive. The deep dive follows later when more time os available.
But remember, dear reader, that as well as a multiplicity of maps, there are other articles of interest. Do you remember British Coachways?It was a small consortium of independent coach operators attempting to dent the supremacy of NBC companies and thus challenge National Express.
There is no British Coachways map,
There was no National Express map either, but it you lived outside the UK, you might have picked up this item.But it's map didn't tell you much ...... no routes, just an unhelpful set of names. fbb is not sure what the thinking was. You certainly could not plan any journeys!
The scope of the next sections of the book is to present cartography for the 1950s heyday of the British bus through into the PTE era..
Here is a very basic offering from Bradford Corporation under C T Humpidge ...... who then moved to Sheffield Transport which begat a better map, one of which was well used by fbb in his University Days.Legibility was good, despite only going for two color printing. The first PTE fold out for Sheffield with Rotherham ...... was also two colour plus a third (blue) for the county boundary; a bit if a waste of a precious and expensive colour.
Similarly, we see progress in Glasgow from Corporation, with trams on one side of the sheet ...
... and buses overleaf ...... on to a huge PTE area map, fbb has chosen East Kilbride by wat of a sample, first in green ...... then in PTE orange.They were smart maps but perhaps a bit too big to open up on the top deck of a bus!
The non-PTE companies continued their pre-war policy with sone 'challenging' results. Did it really make sense to put the whole of Midland Red on one huge map?There is a different colour for Stratford Blue but what was needed was different colours for each main operating area. The technology was not yet available at a reasonable price.
At first, SELNEC PTE used Manchester red as its colour ...... rather than SELNEC orange.The livery never really sat well on traditional front engine double deckers.
Another less satisfactory map was an attempt to publicise the whole bus network in England and Wales..But there was no detail, not even legible route numbers.The Great Britain Bus Timetable map of UK bus services did a better job.
But Atlas UK does an even better job but it is only available on line.It is based in operators' networks rather than a more useful set of colours based on geographical hubs.
But fbb is ahead of himself!
Tomorrow we are deregulated.
We also see how print technology makes full colour maps more affordable.
fbb is still luvvin the book! Actually luvvin it more!
Next Book Review blog : Friday 19th Feb































































