Follow

Today's idle curiosity: a century ago, if you wanted to leave London in a hurry and go far away, would there be a ship *tomorrow*?

Quick count of ads in one paper: between 11/4/1923 and 21/4/23 there were eleven passenger sailings from London to India/Australia/the Far East. Eight to the US/Canada/Caribbean. Double that easily if you took the train to Liverpool or Southampton and met your ship there.

· · Web · 2 · 4 · 3

Not exactly the five hundred flights a day from Heathrow, but it's a pretty impressive level of connectivity.

(One interesting detail: the ads are all very emphatic about the sailing days but omit day of arrival - I guess if you booked a three-week passage, you knew what you were letting yourself in for. They also generally omit actual prices, which would have been exorbitant)

@generalising Was the spread of pricing from steerage to first class the same as now? My $299 coach flight vs $10,000 first class?

@bradpatrick Surprisingly difficult to get a handle on prices from the papers, but I think varied by route - the Atlantic passage would have had a greater mix of luxury down to steerage emigrants, whereas prices for the India routes were a bit narrower - eg this 1927 ad quoting £30 third, £66 first.

@generalising @bradpatrick that seems remarkably affordable. I'm guessing wages have increased beyond inflation, however.

@generalising “If any person feels he must get out of London now or bust…”

@LucasWerkmeister honestly was more thinking of the bit in the novels where the detective says "we'll be watching the ports, he can't get far...'

Sign in to participate in the conversation
Mastodon

The social network of the future: No ads, no corporate surveillance, ethical design, and decentralization! Own your data with Mastodon!