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Table of Contents
viii
Illustrations
ix
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Modern tourism
1
1
Beginnings: The Grand Tour
14
2 The sublime and beautiful
30
3 The age of steam
44
4 Packaging new trips
60
5 Guidebooks and the importance of seeing the sights
76
6 Tourism in an age of empires and nationalism
91
7 Bicycles, automobiles, and aircraft
112
8 Tourism during the interwar years
134
9 Tourism in the postwar
149
10
Mass tourism
165
Conclusion: “Never ask an historian about the future”
180
Notes
185
Bibliography
239
Index
276
vii
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Beginnings: The Grand Tour
Edward Gibbon (1737–94), author of the epic six-volume Decline and Fall
of the Roman Empire, started his education on a sour note. Hindered by
ill health, he was a poor student and the future classicist did not immediately take to Latin or Greek. Worse, although he loved to read, the boy
was largely unimpressed with his tutors. As a result, when Gibbon matriculated at Magdalen College, Oxford, in April 1752 he was unprepared for his
studies. On arrival the future historian found this most wealthy, prestigious,
and ancient of Oxford colleges sorely lacking. He huffed, “these venerable
bodies are suficiently old to partake of all the prejudices and inirmities
of age. The schools of Oxford and Cambridge were founded in a dark age
of false and barbarous science and they are still tainted with the vices of
their origin.”1 Much as critics of large research universities today decry the
use of teaching assistants, Gibbon was disgusted by the fact that professors seldom taught while the tutors were wholly inadequate. In the end,
his fourteen months at Oxford “proved … the most idle and unproitable
of my whole life.”2 It was all too much. A show of protest was called for;
Gibbon converted to Catholicism, eschewing the established Church of
England. Given a prohibition on Catholic attendance at Oxford, he was
summarily tossed out of college.
Fortunately for Gibbon, eighteenth-century Britain offered its wealthy
young men an alternative to university: Continental European travel. He
was well suited. While at Oxford, Gibbon would dart off on excursions to
various English cities to escape the miserable cloisters of Magdalen. What
better than to go to Europe?
Of course, Gibbon’s long-suffering father had little interest in setting
his son on the European continent without guidance. The young Gibbon
would have a tutor, the highly talented Daniel Pavilliard (1704–75), and he
would remain in Lausanne, Switzerland learning French, German, Italian,
Greek, and Classics. Equally important, the younger Gibbon came to detest
the Catholic faith, renouncing his youthful conversion and, less desirably,
eventually denouncing Christianity altogether.
14
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As Gibbon matured under the guidance of his tutor and in an environment far removed from the warm yellow Cotswold limestone of Oxfordshire,
he found himself taking to language and evermore attracted to the works
of classical writers such as Marcus Tullius Cicero (106–43 BCE). He made
contacts with contemporary scholars, was invited to formal gatherings,
and started to become a man of letters. After nearly three years of extraordinary progress, Pavilliard obtained permission from Gibbon’s father to
take the young man on a tour of Switzerland. Now the lessons grew more
cultural and political. Switzerland was a complicated state, divided into
regions speaking diverse languages, exercising distinct political regimes,
and even practicing different religious traditions. At every turn “we visited
the churches, arsenals, libraries, and all the most eminent persons.”3 He
was certainly seeing important institutions, but his tutor ensured that he
gained a deeper understanding of Switzerland and of the Swiss people.
In 1758, Gibbon was called home to England. Over the following months,
he half-heartedly looked for employment, wrote, and joined the national
militia. Hungry for more adventure, ive years after leaving the Continent
the twenty-six-year-old scholar attained permission from his father to return
to Europe, traveling throughout its various countries and kingdoms. Such
a trip was not at all uncommon. He later wrote: “According to the law of
custom, and perhaps of reason, foreign travel completes the education of an
English gentleman.” Gibbon was to embark on the “Grand Tour.”
In Edward Gibbon’s case, the journey lasted three months. He spent
time in Paris, Switzerland, and inally Italy. The classical education that
he had attained under the direction of Pavilliard paid off. He was accepted
into the salons of Paris and, when he reached Italy, was captivated by the
opportunity to visit the sites of so many ancient triumphs. “At the distance
of twenty-ive years,” Gibbon wrote, “I can neither forget nor express the
strong emotions which agitated my mind as I irst approached and entered
the eternal city [Rome]. After a sleepless night, I trod, with a lofty step, the
ruins of the Forum; each memorable spot where Romulus stood, or Tully
spoke, or Caesar fell, was at once present to my eye.”4 It was the stuff of
dreams and boyhood fantasy. It was everything that the Grand Tour was
supposed to be.
Parameters
By the end of the eighteenth century, major European cities such as Paris,
Rome, or Venice might have had hundreds or even thousands of English
men and women roaming their streets.5 For many tourism historians, these
travelers represent the irst modern tourists.6 They made the journey for
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many reasons but in doing so they played a signiicant role in fueling a
growing passion for travel and adventure. Their trips, and their written
accounts and acquired artwork, made others want to follow. Debate about
the merits of travel was everywhere, driving the respectable classes to think
about the potential adventures to be had by leaving home.7
The Grand Tour is generally associated with England’s so-called landed
elite and with the education of young nobles, so much so that one recent
historian claims “the Grand Tour is not the Grand Tour unless it includes
the following: irst, a young British male patrician …; second, a tutor who
accompanies his charge throughout the journey; third, a ixed itinerary
that makes Rome its principle destination; fourth, a lengthy period of
absence, averaging two to three years.”8 While it is true that far more young
Englishmen traveled around Europe than did members of other nationalities and that much of the debate that surrounded the trip centered on
its pedagogical role, the reality is that this deinition is too conining.
Although Britons far outnumbered all others, many people of other nations
went on the tour. Peter the Great (1672–1725), the Europeanizing Russian
Tsar, famously made the trip and encouraged members of his court to go as
well.9 The German philosopher Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749–1832)
took the trek.10 These are but two famous examples. Many others traveled
as well, from France, Russia, Germany, the Low Countries, and beyond.11
Historian Chloe Chard ultimately expands the scope of her own deinition of a Grand Tourist to say that he (or she) originated “somewhere in
northern Europe” and aimed “to travel to the southern side of the Alps.”12
Likewise it was not simply young men who journeyed forth. English
women such as the author Mary Wollstonecraft (1759–97), the widow Lady
Mary Coke (1727–1811), and the fashionable socialite Lady Mary Wortley
Montagu (1689–1762) all spent extensive time on the Continent where
they escaped from unpleasant relationships, enjoyed freedom not possible
at home, and attained the education usually limited to men.13 Nor was age
a barrier. Author Tobias Smollett made the trip later in life alongside his
wife,14 while at least some other older Britons ventured across the English
Channel in pursuit of art to add to rapidly growing collections.15 As the
eighteenth century moved along, even some members of the middling
sort, far removed from the blue-blooded aristocracy, braved the English
Channel to embark on a European adventure.16 Ultimately, any deinition
of the Grand Tour should take into consideration this diversity, focusing
on the signiicant growth of European travel in the eighteenth century, on
the various motivations behind those trips, and on the reality that more
and more people, even removed from the male elite, found the idea of an
extended stay on the Continent appealing. The Grand Tour was far from
being mass travel, but it was a irst tentative step in that direction.
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Origins
While it may be satisfying and dramatic to focus on moments of upheaval,
most of human history features slow evolution, not sudden revolution.
Thus, eighteenth-century tourists did not spontaneously embark on trips
around Europe. Although distinct from earlier travelers, they were the
product of steady change that started in the Middle Ages and stretched
forward into the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The Grand Tour
is rooted in profound cultural, intellectual, political, social, and economic
developments that emerged gradually across Europe during the late
Medieval period. Indeed, while the Grand Tour is generally associated with
the British, its origins are actually quite international in character.
The ifteenth century was a period of remarkable economic expansion
in much of Europe. Part of the reason likely stemmed from the profound
implications of mass mortality. Starting in 1347, a succession of plague
epidemics washed over Europe, resulting in the death of between onethird and one-half of the population.17 At least some survivors beneitted
signiicantly by acquiring newly affordable land and by fostering marriages
with wealthy heiresses that in turn made it possible for families to multiply
wealth rapidly.18 But the plague also had another implication. With a much
smaller labor market, more eficient modes of production were developed—
including stronger horses and eficient watermills that could produce food
more cheaply, freeing investment in other areas. Some of the sail technology associated with the watermills transferred to ships, making them
more eficient and facilitating trade. Land transport was similarly improved
to accommodate better shipping. All of this depended upon investment and
the banking sector grew to meet demand. Ultimately, more products were
generated more eficiently, and were subsequently more widely traded.19
According to historian Fernand Braudel, trade routes between northern
Europe, Belgium, Italian port cities, and the Asiatic world became routine,
creating a “European world-economy.”20 The exchange of goods such as
wool lourished and a signiicant number of merchants became afluent.
These men sought ways to spend money. Many purchased items that would
display prosperity and good taste: sculpture and paintings, for example.
This made it possible for a growing list of painters, sculptors, architects,
and authors to survive under the patronage of rich bankers, merchants,
churchmen, nobles, and politicians. The Renaissance, or “rebirth,” was
the result—a period of extraordinary cultural production that initially
looked to the classical world for inspiration. It was based, at least at irst,
in Italy. Between the late fourteenth and the early seventeenth centuries, Italian cities such as Florence emerged as beacons of good taste that
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both inspired artistic outpourings in other European cities while at the
same time prompting northern Europeans to grow fascinated with Italian
achievements.21
There were other signiicant results of greater opulence, at least two of
which played a role in the development of tourism. First was expanding
trade, combined with a desire among more people to explore the cities of
Europe where original ideas and new artists might be found. Not only did
merchants and traders venture around the metropolises of Europe, but a
signiicant and growing number of travelers drawn from virtually every
European country also set out to explore. These adventurers—and it was an
adventure to brave the crime and pothole-ridden roads of the Continent—
wrote about their experiences. A subsequent increase in demand for travel
writing fueled further wanderlust.22
Second, Italy was anything but uniied during the Renaissance. It was
a veritable hodgepodge of city-states. 23 As wealth increased, Italian politics developed an increasingly “unstable equilibrium of power.” Anxious to
avoid chaos, Italian leaders responded by creating new modes of diplomacy.
The resident ambassador was one of the most signiicant innovations.
Within the short span of only thirty years (1420–50) such men assumed
the role of “agents and … symbols of a continuous system of diplomatic
pressures.” These Italians lived in situ in European cities and in Italian
city-states, reporting back to their superiors and seeking to carry out diplomatic missions on behalf of their governments. The system worked, and
by roughly 1500 such men were employed by other countries throughout
Europe.24
By the end of the sixteenth century, English politics also became
complicated. During her reign, Queen Elizabeth I (1533–1603) faced
daunting tests. She was excommunicated in 1570 for pro-Protestant policies, weathered various internal challenges to her throne, confronted the
Spanish Armada in 1588, and was relentlessly pursued by a host of other
problems.25 On one hand, this situation made journeying to Spain or Italy
quite risky. Travel was inherently dangerous due to poor conditions and
widespread thievery and it was made worse by the fact that upon return
to England it created suspicion at court. To many oficials, going abroad
suggested undoubted tawdry dealings with foreign governments or, worse,
treasonous activity.26 On the other hand, the notoriously independent
queen recognized the need for good information. Intelligence was critical
as English policymaking was often “hamstrung by ignorance of enemy
intentions.”27 In the past, at least some English monarchs traveled to the
Continent to bolster diplomatic ties and to gather information for themselves. Although she reportedly loved to travel, Elizabeth was unable to
make such a trip herself because she believed that venturing from England
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would result in “losing her monarchical power.”28 Consequently, Elizabeth
relied on her councilors, on merchants and diplomats, on spies, and on
other agents. It was an inadequate approach to intelligence as these igures
often “told their paymasters what they wanted to hear.” According to at
least one historian, the employment of resident ambassadors might well
have avoided early diplomatic hassles.29 Evidently the queen agreed, for
as time passed she grew anxious to develop a trained collection of diplomats. Unfortunately, British and European universities, once institutions of
exceptional stature, went into steady decline during the late ifteenth and
sixteenth centuries.30 Oxford and Cambridge grew specialized—focusing
on providing an exceptionally narrow education that was designed more
to create an elite social class than to generate thoughtful leaders. Likewise,
given their parochial nature, these schools failed to spawn a sense of curiosity about other cultures that might have inspired young men to become
statesmen. They offered no instruction in languages other than Greek and
Latin, making no pretense of celebrating a world broader than the English
ruling class.31 The only means of attaining the necessary servants was to
send young men abroad so that they could learn about the languages,
cultures, politics, personages, and military strengths of foreign lands.
Toward this end the crown started to subsidize journeys, such as that made
by Sir Philip Sidney (1554–86) in 1572–75.32
These trends combined so that by the early seventeenth century there
was a sense among many that seeing Europe was beneicial to young
men. The multi-talented Sir Francis Bacon (1561–1626) authored probably the most famous essay celebrating the value of travel. For the young,
it was “part of education.” Making “proitable” acquaintances, learning
languages, observing foreign courts, touring churches and monasteries,
visiting libraries, ruins, armories, and arsenals, or attending any of many
other potential destinations, made such excursions valuable. The philosopher pointed out that it was vital to have a good tutor and to carefully
record one’s adventures in diaries and correspondence. Yet most of all,
and anticipating later debates about the Grand Tour, Bacon informed the
prospective tourist that travel should “appear rather in his discourse, than
in his apparel or gesture; and in his discourse let him be rather advised
in his answers, than forward to tell stories: and let it appear that he doth
not change his country manners for those of foreign parts, but only prick
in some lowers of that he hath learned abroad into the customs of his
own country.”33
Even as Bacon alluded to the fear that travel might make his young aristocratic countrymen somehow less English, he ignored the risks facing those
journeying to the Continent. Europe was a dangerous place. According
to popular historian Christopher Hibbert, early tourist Fynes Moryson
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(1566–1630) braved many dificulties when he crossed the Channel
in 1591. The young man departed from Leigh-on-Thames on May 1 only
to narrowly escape pirates based at Dunkirk. Despite covering a relatively
short distance, the Channel crossing took a monstrous ten days. Once in
the Netherlands, Moryson faced no less risk and discomfort. The coastal
roads in Holland were infested with a veritable swarm of highwaymen who
robbed foreign travelers with impunity. Yet Moryson was ready for them.
He dressed himself up as a “poor Bohemian” who was employed as a Leipzig
merchant. The guise worked and the robbers stayed away. Unfortunately
the scheme meant that Moryson was forced to pursue accommodations
beitting his affected poverty. He had to sleep with the rabble in overcrowded and dirty inns. Rather than beds, they slept on benches. Once,
when a maidservant spotted Moryson’s silk stockings and recognized him
for a disguised elite, the shrewd trekker got to sleep in a bed. It did not
happen often. As further protection against thieves, the young man wore
money-belts underneath his clothing. The tactic worked, though it meant
that when he was caught in the rainstorms that are so frequent in northwestern Europe he could not change his clothes lest his numerous roommates spot his cash and try to rob him. Soggy nights followed.
Little changed when Moryson moved from the Netherlands into France
and then on to Italy. When venturing from Rome to Naples, he hired
sixty musketeers to protect him against bandits. It was money well spent
because, although the tattered remains of drawn and quartered thieves
were scattered along the roadway to dissuade others, there were criminals
everywhere. In fact, despite all of his cleverness, Moryson was robbed while
walking between the French cities of Metz and Châlons. Not only did the
highwaymen steal his money, which would have been bad enough, but
they also took his sword, his cloak, his shirt, and even his hat. No respectable man could be caught without his head covered, so Moryson was forced
to acquire a greasy old French chapeau until he inally reached Paris and
could attain something more desirable.
It could have been worse. Beyond thieves, tourists faced starving canines,
horrendous roads, marauding soldiers, occasional wars, and the Inquisition
that spread through large parts of Europe during the sixteenth century when
desperate Catholics struggled to end the progress of Protestantism. English
visitors were forced to proceed incognito lest they be captured, tortured,
and executed for their religious beliefs. If all of this was not bad enough, at
least one traveler reported seeing no less than thirty-four markers along the
road between Danzig (Gdansk) and Hamburg denoting where a previous
wayfarer had been murdered. In Brandenburg, murder was the least of it.
Cannibalism was common. Disease was another threat. The writer John
Evelyn (1620–1706) nearly died of smallpox in Geneva.34
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Despite it all the Grand Tour was increasingly popular. Speciic igures
are dificult to come by and are anecdotal. We know, for example, that
there were enough “English heretics” on their way to Venice in 1592 and
1595 for the Pope to complain. In 1612, there were reportedly more than
70 Englishmen in Venice—hardly a huge number but it indicates that there
was enough of an increase in English travel to elicit notice. There were far
more Britons in Europe in the irst half of the eighteenth century than
there were previously—somewhere between 12 and 30 in most European
cities at a given moment. By the second half of the eighteenth century,
the numbers climbed into the hundreds and perhaps thousands. There is
even evidence that not all journeyers were from the most elite social class
although we can be certain that they were anything but poor. Such tourists
preferred less expensive, shorter trips. In short, by the eighteenth century
we ind a different scale of travel.35
The Grand Tour expands
The period between 1748 and 1789 was a relatively peaceful one in Europe
and it was then that the Grand Tour reached its zenith.36 Vast numbers
of young Englishmen, and a few Englishwomen, ventured to Paris, Rome,
Venice, Florence, and Naples. Some went to the Low Countries, Hanover,
Berlin, Dresden, Vienna, Munich, Geneva, and Prague (the easternmost site
visited by all but a very few tourists).37
Most sought education; the Grand Tour was a rite of passage from childhood to adulthood. It was truly a “customary” part of the schooling of
landed aristocrats and the often unrealized goal of imbuing future leaders
with knowledge of foreign languages, customs, politics, and culture
remained intact. And yet the Grand Tour gradually relected something
altogether new, a hedonistic approach to consuming that was less evident
during the previous century. The trip represented “a secularized ritual of
commodiication and consumption, whereby what was seen as a rite
of passage itself is acquired in order to be put on show.”38 This new notion
of display remains an important part of tourism today.
There was nothing affordable about traveling in Europe for months
or years at a time, especially because tourists were advised to show their
wealth at every turn. Guidebooks suggested that bleeding money was “the
way to be respected” and being well thought of mattered.39 In eighteenthcentury Britain power derived from land. It had always been this way, of
course, but after the Glorious Revolution, when Parliament essentially
ired one king and hired another, the aristocracy stood atop the British
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political hierarchy as never before. Estates allowed them to inhabit a world
of almost unimaginable opulence. They drew tremendous incomes from
farming, rents, inheritance, and investment in trade. Status was linked to
leisure and not needing to work, while at the same time spending a signiicant fortune on recreation was one way to display one’s position in the
class hierarchy.
During the eighteenth century, only about 3 percent of the population controlled Britain, both economically and politically.40 Their power
was based on vast holdings and palatial estates. From these rural seats,
they controlled elections and largely deined legislative agendas. And yet,
the aristocracy was increasingly worried about its status. The expansion
of international trade and the initial growth of what would become the
British Empire meant that a growing class of merchants grew rich, gradually catching up to the ancient and established families in monetary terms.
Some of these had pretentions to join the gentry, crashing a party that
was hundreds of years old. In addition, by the second half of the century
the irst rumblings of industrialization were underway and a new class
of factory managers and owners began to desire the power of the property-owning classes. Yet even more than the arrival of what amounted to
“new money,” the traditional elite worried about its hold on power. Those
who made money amid the expanding economic environment were the
ones most directly impacted by government economic policies, yet they
had virtually no say in politics. The landed elite controlled who ran for
parliament and they deined how their tenants would vote. It was an irritating reality for those who felt unrepresented. By the 1760s, the irst hints
of radical politics emerged, gaining strength over the last half of the decade
and continuing, haltingly, into the nineteenth century when a series of
reform acts, beginning in 1832, gradually eroded landed control.41
During the eighteenth century the Grand Tour played an increasingly
signiicant role in the expression of wealth. It was a question of taste.
Members of the aristocracy could not be distinguished purely by their
estates; they had to set themselves apart by the way that they displayed
those acres, by the appearance of their houses, and by the way that they
decorated their manors. Italy retained the cultural reputation gained during
the Renaissance. It was truly “classic,” an easily consumable expression of
reinement. The Grand Tour offered a means of teaching young people to
consume like landed gentlemen: A inishing school for the rich. In a world
of manorial holdings, “political power depended on cultural display.”42
Investing copious amounts on a Continental tour, to say nothing of
related expenditures on art, architecture, landscaping, lavish clothing, and
other expenses, was a way of hopefully staving off the inevitable. Travel
certainly made it easy to spend. Trips were much longer than those taken
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by most twenty-irst century vacationers and this necessitated arranging
longer-term accommodations. Transportation was costly, much more so
than it is at present, especially if the tourist was anxious to cover ground
quickly. Many purchased their own carriages upon arriving in France,
and then proceeded to complain bitterly at every turn about the outlays
encountered along the way, especially in places such as Paris and Italy
where post roads carried particularly high tolls. According to Grand Tour
historian Jeremy Black, accidents represented an even greater expense and
there was nothing rare about them. Altogether, it cost anywhere between
£250 and £600 per year to go on the Grand Tour, but some spent far more.
James Duff, the Second Earl of Fife (1729–1809), for example, managed to
spend over £1700 during a stay of several weeks in Paris. Total expenditure
varied wildly. Black notes that Lord (Frederick) North (1732–92) withdrew
£70,000 from one banker alone during his 1753 tour. By contrast, a year
later, Francis Hastings, the Tenth Earl of Huntingdon (1729–89), spent a
rather more modest £5700. The British government, concerned about
revenues lost to foreign governments, estimated that British travelers
dispersed as much as £4 million per annum.43
Given the amounts and the reason for spending, it is hardly surprising
that the idea of “packing light” was unheard of. Even in the seventeenth
century, tourists were to take prayer books, swords and pistols, a watch,
lice-proof bedclothes, waterproofs, hats, handkerchiefs, and more. By the
eighteenth century, guidebooks added further items including special
strongly made shirts, an iron fastener for securing hotel doors, tea caddies,
penknives, seasonings, oatmeal, seasickness remedies, plenty of reading
material, medicines, and so on. All of this added up. The Earl of Burlington
(1694–1753) took no less than 878 pieces of luggage when he made his tour
during the second half of the eighteenth century.44
Getting a taste for Europe
Historians debate when modern consumer society began. While many
focus on the nineteenth century, especially after about 1850,45 others note
the beginnings of a change starting much earlier.46 Either way, the extent
to which the aristocracy pursued a lifestyle premised on exceptional levels
of consumption is striking. Members of the elite spoke volumes when they
hired a designer such as Lancelot “Capability” Brown (1716–83). The foremost landscape architect of his day, Brown created vast, carefully manicured
estate grounds that resembled “open savannah” and projected “a sense of
ininity.”47 Not only did the vistas suggest who was in control of nature,
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they gave a property a feeling of vast space. When elites constructed their
houses, symmetry, order, and tasteful design told the world that the inhabitants were cultured, educated, and classy; because touring manor houses
was almost as popular in the eighteenth century as it would later be in the
twentieth and twenty-irst centuries, these estates presented their impressive message to a wide audience.48 It is no accident that the property class
further projected their taste and control in the paintings they purchased
or commissioned. Some made repeated trips to Italy to buy art, compiling
huge collections in the process.49 It was not uncommon for landed families
to have themselves depicted with their estates or homes as a backdrop,
with well-designed “natural” landscapes extending into the distance.50
What people purchase speaks volumes.51
For sociologist Colin Campbell, the reason for all of this buying is
not hard to see: Patterns of consumption underwent profound change, a
veritable philosophical revolution that was closely tied to the growth of
Romanticism in the second half of the eighteenth century. Fiction, art,
and music all provided a light into something that seemed better than
the everyday. Escape made one feel good, offering a different perspective
on the world. Buying art, then, was an exercise in self-improvement.
The result was a new approach to consumption which Campbell calls
“self-illusory hedonism.” In essence, people spent a great deal of time imagining what they would like to have and feeling that they had improved
themselves by acquiring things. This new pattern of behavior formed the
foundation for the eventual “consumer revolution” and not long thereafter the irst industrial revolution.52 Although Campbell does not explicitly make the connection, these same developments were vital to the rise
of modern tourism.
As noted above, the Grand Tour offered plentiful opportunity to spend
and to pursue personal betterment through the development of taste.
Grand Tourists also needed to bring something home that would display to
everybody where they had been and what they had seen. A small industry
developed to feed this need. Paintings depicted important sites such as the
Pantheon and the Coliseum in Rome, the canals in Venice, the Parthenon
in Athens, and Roman ruins wherever they might be. Equally important,
the paintings nearly all feature tourists looking at the sites/sights in question. These igures visually consume the spectacle, while at the same time
projecting the message to whomever looks on the canvas: The owner of
this painting was here; he bought the experience. Paintings worked in
much the same way as contemporary postcards emblazoned with the
words “Wish You Were Here!” Such cards do not truly mean that the sender
wishes that the recipient were literally underfoot, but rather announce that
“I am seeing these places and you are not.” They make a comment about
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the status accrued through travel. In some sense, the eighteenth-century
paintings purchased by the box load by Grand Tourists are the irst postcards, the irst travel snapshots. These art works are physical reminders that
travel was about consuming.53
Elites behaving badly
Although the purpose of the Grand Tour was supposed to be self-improvement,
the reality was often rather different.
Edward Gibbon was an atypical tourist. He attained a solid education
in Lausanne, then returned for his Grand Tour after some years had passed
and following his stint in the national militia. Gibbon was more mature
than the average tourist. He was 26 years old. Most made their trip between
the ages of 18 and 25, the equivalent age of a twenty-irst century undergraduate. These were students with virtually unlimited budgets and often
little supervision. They frequently behaved accordingly.
Once in Europe, young elites did see the sites. They attended the papal
ireworks at the Castel Sant’Angelo, toured Rome and Venice, spent time in
Paris, hoped to see an eruption of Mount Vesuvius, and explored much of
what was in between. They looked at art, visited gorgeous homes, admired
monuments, and studied classical architecture. Some even learned a few
words of French or Italian. As was true during the seventeenth century,
there remained no ixed route. Major cities like Rome, Venice, Florence,
and Naples were still popular. Travel was considerably safer than it had
been, though periodic military and political conlict around Europe did
deine where tourists went to some degree.54
In theory, each sightseer employed a tutor who assured that all of
these positive learning outcomes took place. The problem was that most
instructors were untalented and inattentive, the very opposite of Gibbon’s
beloved Daniel Pavilliard. They were frequently failed writers, academics,
or churchmen, essentially men who had fallen from favor at court and who
had to earn a living in some other way. Given their decrepit status, most
cared little about their young charges and often preferred to spend their
time drinking and whoring. Unsurprisingly, their pupils often did much
the same and chose their destinations accordingly.55 Italy was long a leading
center of sexual promiscuity.56 Prostitutes were ubiquitous. Paris, meanwhile, was well known as one of the leading producers of condoms, dildos,
and pornography.57 Parisian wives had the reputation of being accommodating with their sexual favors, performing every imaginable act with
travelers, especially when it was common for these young men to lavish
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Figure 1.1 Young Grand Tourists were expected to travel with a tutor. Parents imagined
that this individual would offer instruction in language, culture, history, and other
important information. Very often this hope went unrealized. “A Tour of Foreign Parts” by
Henry William Bunbury (artist) and James Bretherton (printmaker). Courtesy of The Lewis
Walpole Library, Yale University.
gifts of as much as £1000 on them for services rendered.58 Unsurprisingly,
venereal disease was a real threat to tourists anxious to explore the more
licentious side of Continental cities.59
Much like fraternity life today, drinking and gambling featured prominently on the itinerary. Both activities represented a signiicant component
of eighteenth-century life both in Britain and elsewhere. Indeed, alcohol
consumption in London during the eighteenth century was staggering by
modern standards. In 1743, for example, the average ingestion of cheap
spirits in London was 2.2 gallons per capita.60 At one stage, there was one
public house in Britain for every eighty-seven people.61 Both statistics
largely relect the drinking habits of ordinary Britons, of course, but the
amount of wine and spirits imbibed by the landed elite must have been
impressively high as well. Yet the reality is that European cities offered
extraordinary opportunity for debauchery outside of the ordinary strictures
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of an apparently sodden society, especially among unattended young
men. Gambling losses were sometimes equally astonishing. Sir Carnaby
Haggerston (c. 1700–56) wrote home constantly begging for more money
to cover his expenses. Francis Anderton (dates unknown) lost nearly £200
(now equivalent to £17,000) in a single evening. John Thornton (dates
unknown) was not far behind and lost £150 (now equivalent to £12,700).62
Gambling was expensive, but drink was cheap. Many became “unhappily
addicted to drinking to the highest degree.”63
Not every traveler was male or ventured across the Channel in order
to spend lavishly or to behave badly. Travel could offer an escape from
oppression, especially for women. For example, Mary Wollstonecraft,
author of A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792), made the trip and her
motivations are telling. Cultivating taste, learning languages, and seeing
signiicant historic sites was part of it. But women like Wollstonecraft had
another reason for traveling—to ind scope for the imagination and to
escape the male-dominated realities of eighteenth-century British culture.64
Even women far less famous than Wollstonecraft found this sort of inspiration, focusing their attention more on “antiquities and works of art as
well as cultural, social, and commercial developments” than on armies or
politics.65 Men were supposed to worry about earning money and running
the country, women about managing the house. Thus, the 1747 book
The Art of Governing a Wife advised that women were to “lay up and save;
look to the house; talk to few; take of all within.”66 Georgian Britain was
a gentleman’s club and for independently minded women, it was stiling.
Travel represented a reprieve.
While continental adventures offered escape they also raised very real
concerns about the social order. What was to be made of women engaging
in male pursuits? Besides, what possible beneit was there in female travel?
They were not responsible for building landed estates or for purchasing the
lavish décor of these places. No woman would serve in Parliament or make
signiicant political decisions. At best, the experience of jaunting through
European cities might improve a woman’s chance on the marriage market
by making her conversant in more languages and giving her something
to chat about with suitors. Granted, the trip might almost make her less
compelling to men. What man wanted a wife as interesting and erudite
as himself? Given such prevalent attitudes, there is little surprising about
the reality that women like Mary Wollstonecraft were rare. Adventurous
women were the exception, not the rule.67
Most of the anxiety inspired by the Grand Tour was a result of the fact
that parents, aware of the behaviors exhibited by many tourists, worried
about their children. A ierce debate about the merits of continental travel
resulted—perhaps the irst signiicant and widespread discussion about the
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A HISTORY OF MODERN TOURISM
implications of going abroad. While many young people seemed to take
touring foreign cities to be a license for sin, a few parents feared what their
sons might get up to. Most anxiety did not center on sexual behavior or the
risks of over-imbibing. Dr. Samuel Johnson (1709–84), though critical of
sending unattended young men to Europe, summed up the majority view
in a conversation with his traveling companion James Boswell (1740–95):
“If a young man is wild, and must run after women and bad company, it is
better this should be done abroad, as, on his return, he can break off such
connections, and begin at home a new man, with a character to form, and
acquaintances to make.”68 Evidently, travel was a license to move outside
of social norms.
Instead, parents fretted about what their offspring might become.
Edward Gibbon reports in his memoirs that his command of English
declined while he was away. He came to love Switzerland and European
culture more generally, getting evermore critical of English life as he spent
more time away.69 This was something to be concerned about. Bacon
suggested that travelers should relect their experience in discursive ability
rather than in “apparel or gesture,”70 yet an alarming number of tourists
evidently returned to Britain as odd hybrids of English and European.
Gibbon learned languages; most did not. Instead, they mastered a handful
of words and illed in with strange accents and wild gestures. As one poem
summarized:
Returning he proclaims by many a grace,
By shrugs and strange contortions of his face,
How much a dunce, that has been sent to roam,
Excels a dunce, that has been kept at home.
British adults were mortiied. Historian Christopher Hibbert notes that the
level of concern was so pronounced that an “Act Against Rambling” was
proposed. If passed, the bill would have made it
an offence to the debase purity of the English language “by a vile
mixture of exotic words, idioms, and phrases,” to make any unmeaning
grimace, shrug or gesticulation, to use the world canaille more than
three times in the same sentence, or wantonly to cast contempt on the
roast beef of old England. Offenders against the Act were to be “logged
like schoolboys.”71
Parents sent their children to Europe hoping that they would return as
cultured members of the landed elite. What they often got in return were
young people who eschewed the very emblems of English identity.
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Conclusion: End of the Grand Tour
While the Grand Tour was customary in 1763, it was becoming a bygone
memory by 1815. Part of the reason for this is immediately obvious: The
French Revolution, followed closely by the Napoleonic Wars, swept across
Europe starting in 1789 and extended until 1815. During the irst conlict,
many continued to travel around the Continent, but the second wave of
hostilities was far more dangerous. By 1807, overland travel was risky and
“sea routes had become impossible.” When the ighting stopped, many
visitors returned—even if only to see the damages of war—but this was no
longer the old Grand Tour. Important ideas, especially about aesthetics and
health, had changed, replacing the urban-centered and overwhelmingly
aristocratic character of the eighteenth century trip.72
Of course, many of the trends inaugurated by the Grand Tour did not
end. Elite tourism established a sense that travel generated prestige. There
was something important to be gained by visiting the great European capitals. Foreign exploration and consumption made one a better person. It
promised good mental health and a heightened intellect. This dream of
self-improvement would ultimately connect closely to a desire for “self
help” that permeated middle-class society during the Victorian age.
Likewise, the idea that good taste was partly to be found on the
Continent also remained in place. As railways made it possible for ordinary
Britons to view their own country, the sight of massive European-inspired
manor houses and palaces was omnipresent. It was nice to see the British
copies, but what about the real thing? Authenticity had its merits.
Perhaps most of all, the Grand Tour generated a body of literature
describing travel adventures. These accounts did not disappear from the
public consciousness. Yet the wave of new texts relected the reality that
something had changed. By the 1820s a new way of looking at the world,
developing from at least the middle of the eighteenth century, had taken
hold—a romantic vision of landscapes and history, a sense of excitement
to be had in nature that European mountains and beaches offered in
abundance. The old cities were still attractive, but more and more people
wanted to escape the “beaten track” in order to locate “hidden secrets.”
They wanted to visit the mountains and to experience wild nature. They
wished to enjoy “romantic travel.”73 What was soon known as the “sublime
and beautiful” was very much on offer, if only you could leave home to
ind it. It was a goal that, increasingly, attracted tourists from all social
classes and helps to explain the rise of a much more widespread wanderlust
during the nineteenth century.
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Index
Abbot, Francis, 104–5
Aberdeen, Lady, 94
Acapulco, 161
Addington, Charles, 105
aesthetics, 35, 37
Africa, 96, 183, 208n.3
African-Americans, 171, 215n.7
“age of exploration”, 5
aircraft, 126–33, 157, 176–7
see also airports; air fares;
airspace; aviation
Aircraft Travel and Transport
Company (AT & T), 129, 130
air fares, 158–9
Air India, 157
airplanes, see aircraft
airports, 157, 183
airspace, 157–8
Albert, Prince Consort, 64, 65, 92–3
Alexander the Great, 4–5
Ali, Muhammad, 95, 100
Alps, the, 40
see also Blanc, Mont; Kitzbühel
Al-Queda, 182–3
American Airlines Flight 587, 183
American Automobile Association,
115
Anand, Ascem, 188n.40
Anderton, Francis, 27
Andes (mountain range), 31
Anglo-American Commission, 162
Annapolis Railway Company, 85
Antarctica, 175–6
Aran Islands, 88–9
Arendt, Hannah, 150
Aron, Cindy, 188n.40
Art of Governing a Wife, The, 27
Ash, John, 160
Asia, 53, 183
Association for Tourist Trafic in
Netherlands India, 148
Auschwitz, 176
Australia
automobile clubs in, 115
and Thomas Cook, 99, 102
motor touring in, 123
and paid vacations, 224n.51
as example of the “pleasure
periphery”, 161–2
during World War II, 149
Autocar (journal), 115
Automobile Club of France, 115
Automobile Club of Rhodesia, 115
Automobiles
and camping, 125–6
and clubs, 115
costs and availability of, 119
development of, 114–15
and family vacations (USA), 170
racing of, 115–18
and roads, 115, 116, 120–2
and roadside attractions, 126
and touring guides (guidebooks),
123–5
and travel accommodations, 125
women and, 118, 125
276
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INDEX
aviation, 155–9
see also aircraft
Ayers, Thomas A., 108
Ayrshire (Scotland), 83, 204n.14
Bacon, Sir Francis, 19, 28
Baden-Baden, 68
Baedeker, see guidebooks
Baedeker, Karl, 75, 78, 80, 83
Bagge, Frederik, 123
Bahamas, the, 162
Bali, 147–8
Bank Holiday Act, 70
Barton, Susan, 60–1
Bass Brewery, 61
Bath, 68
bathing (sea), 32, 68–71
see also beaches; seaside; spas
baths, see spas
Batista, Fulgencio, 162
Bayly, C. A., 11
beaches
and aesthetics, 35
avoided before mid-eighteenth
century, 32
beauty of, chronologically
contingent, 182
as Grand Tour destinations,
192n.54
and ideas about health, 43
and the sublime, 38
working class adoption of, 69–70
see also bathing (sea); seaside;
seaside resorts
Beale, Benjamin, 70
Beer Act, 62
“Beer Street” (Hogarth), 85
Beethoven, Ludwig van, 39
Bennett, Tony, 171
Benz, Karl, 115
Beowulf, 32
Berger, Dina, 147
277
Berlin, Isaiah, 134
Bhabha, Homi, 211n.35
Biarritz (France), 72
bicycles, 112–14, 137, 215n.7
Black Act, 96
Black, Adam and Charles
(guidebook publishers), 80
Black Forest, 80
Black, Jeremy, 23
Blackpool, 69, 135, 149
Blanc, Mont, 40
Blauen, the, 80
Bleriot, Louis, 127
Blum, Léon, 144
Bodman and Wadebridge Railway,
61
Boeing, 157
Bonaparte, Napoleon, 72, 100
Boswell, James, 28, 38–9, 82
Bradley, Ian, 66
Brasília, 157
Braudel, Fernand, 17
Brazil, 157
Brendon, Piers, 62
Briggs, Asa, 42
Brighton, 73
British Aviation Insurance Group,
130
British Empire,
and decolonization, 228n.38
and Great Exhibition of 1851, 92
hunting opportunities in the,
96–7
and international tourism
cooperation, 154
railways in the, 50, 51
tourism enhanced power of the,
95
Brontë sisters, 84
Brown, Lancelot “Capability”, 23
Buddha, Gautama, 7
Buddhism, 7, 8
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INDEX
Bullers of Buchan, 38
Bureau for Public Roads, 122
Burke, Edmund, 37–8
Burnet, Thomas (archbishop of
Canterbury), 33–5
Burns, Robert, 83–4, 204n.14
Bush, George W., 183
Butler, R. W., 174
Butlin, Billy, 145, 168–9, 173
Buzzard, James, 89
Cabral, Pedro Alvares, 5
Cairo, 102
Cambridge University, 14, 19
Campbell, Colin, 24
camping, 125–6, 170
Canada, 85, 96–7, 102, 146
Cancún, 161, 177, 178
Canterbury Tales, 8
caravan parks, 125
Caribbean, 162–3
Caribbean Tourist Association,
153, 162
cars, see automobiles
Casson, Lionel, 5, 6
Castro, Fidel, 162
Catskills, the, 170–1
Central Park, 108
Chard, Chloe, 16
Chaucer, Geoffrey, 8
Chevalier, Maurice, 162
Chicago World’s Fair (1893), 93–4
Christianity, 8
Churchill, Winston, 150, 162
Cicero, Marcus Tullius, 15
Coke, Lady Mary, 16
Cole, Henry, 92
Cole, Nat King, 162
Coleman Lantern Company, 125
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 31, 39
Collins, Edward K., 56
Collins Line (steamships), 56
colonialism, see empire
Columbus, Christopher, 5
communism, 150
communist tourism, 140–3,
Constellation (airliner), 157
Cook, Capt. James, 5, 74
Cook, John Mason, 62, 66, 100–2,
212–13n.66
Cook, Thomas
around-the-world tour of, 102
and Australian tourism, 99, 102
background of, 62
Egypt and Middle East tours of,
99, 100–2
irst organized trip of, 62–3
and Great Exhibition of 1851, 65,
66, 93
guidebooks of, 78
Scottish business of, 64–5, 66
and tours abroad, 66
and women, 65–6
see also Thomas Cook & Son
Corbin, Alain, 32, 41
Cossons, Neil, 175
Coward, Noel, 162
Crawford, Alexander, 100
Creevey, Thomas, 47
Crocker, Sewall K., 117–18
Cross, Gary, 143
Cuba, 146, 162
Cubitt, Thomas, 92
Cugnot, Nicolas-Joseph, 46, 114
Cummings, Bob, 165
Cunard, Samuel, 55
Dachau, 176
Danish Touring Club, 115
Darwin, Charles, 35
Davis, John D., 116
Davis, Louise Hitchcock, 116
Davis, Manila, 131
Dawson, Sandra Trudgen, 173
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INDEX
DC-8 (jet aircraft), 157
DeForest, Antoinette, 105
Della Coletta, Cristina, 94–5
Denmark, 123
Dias, Bartolomeu, 5
Dickins, Charles, 84
Dieppe (France), 72–3
disease
and the Grand Tour, 20
industrialization and
urbanization aided, 42
in Jamaica, 98
on sailing vessels, 45
as threat to tourism industry, 183
see also health
Disneyland
and authenticity, 179
creation of and vision for, 165–7,
168
location of, 231n.6
middle class and, 170
as secular pilgrimage site, 8
youth culture and changes to,
174
Disney, Walt, 165–6, 167, 168, 179
Disney World, 168, 174
Dominion Atlantic Railway
Company, 85
Douglas Aircraft Company, 157
Drais, Karl von, 112
Duff, James, second earl of Fife, 23
Easy Rider (ilm), 173
Ebola, 183
Egypt, 5, 95, 96, 100–2
Eiffel Tower, 86
El Al (airline), 157
Elizabeth I (queen of England and
Ireland), 18–19, 180
empire (imperialism)
and aircraft, 131
and airlines, 130
279
and Balinese tourism, 147–8
and Caribbean tourism, 162–3
and guidebooks, 79
and historical study of travel,
95–6
railways, 50–1
travel’s relationship to, 91–2, 95
see also British Empire; Ottoman
Empire
Endy, Christopher, 151
Engels, Friedrich, 42
Epic of Gilgamesh, 4, 32
Esperanto, 94
European Recovery Program (ERP),
151–4
European Travel Commission
(ETC), 151–2, 153
“Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie”
(Longfellow), 85
Evans, Oliver, 114
Evelyn, John, 20
Everest, Mount, 176, 177–8
fascism, 135–6, 150
fascist tourism, 136–40
Federal Highway Act, 120
Fédération Internationale de
l’Automobile, 115
Finland, 160
First Nations, 97
First World War, see World War I
Fisher, Carl Graham, 121–2
Fleming, Ian, 162
Floyer, John, 68
Flynn, Errol, 162
Fonda, Peter, 173
“foodie culture”, 176
Ford, Henry, 119
Ford Motor Company, 119
Forsmark (estate), 39
Forster, E. M., 76
Fraga, Manuel, 163
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INDEX
Frame, John, 62
France, 68, 124–5, 144–5, 152, 171
Franco, Francisco, 163
French Riviera, 71
Friedrich, Caspar David, 40
Friendly Society, 60
Fuller, Francis, 92
Gainsborough, Thomas, 192n.50
Galen of Pergamon, 42
Gall, Richard, 84
gambling, 27, 162, 229n.59
garden cemeteries, 107–8
Garros, Roland, 128
Gaze, Henry, 62, 78, 92
geological history, 35
George III (King of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain
and Ireland), 69
George IV (King of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain
and Ireland), 69
German Labor Force, 138
Germany
car culture in, 119
fascist tourism in, 138–40
Michelin Guide to, 124
and national airlines, 129–30
postwar economic expansion in,
159–60
youth hostels in, 172
see also Kraft durch Freude
Ghengis Khan, 4–5
Giani, Mario, 137
Gibbon, Edward, 14–15, 25, 28, 38
Gilpin, William, 81
“Gin Lane” (Hogarth), 85
global warming, 176, 177
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von,
16, 81
Golding, William, 134
Good Roads Association, 116
Grand Hotel (ilm), 144
Grand Tour
alcohol and, 26–7
anxieties inspired by, 27–8
attitudes towards nature changed
by, 36
chronology of, debated, 191n.36
and consumption, 21–5
costs of, 23, 191n.43
deinition of, 16
demise of, 29
destinations on, 15, 21, 25
and English landed elite, 16
gambling on, 27
and guidebooks, 77
and landscape, 33
mountaineering on, 40, 192n.54
origins of, 17–18
participation estimates of, 21
and rational thought, 37
risks faced on, 19–20
roots of modern tourism in,
12, 16
sex and the, 25–6
tourism prior to, argument
for, 6
train station reminders of, 53
tutors on, 25
twenty-irst century tourism
compared to, 180
urban focus of, 192n.54
women on, 16, 27, 192n.64
Great Britain
and aircraft, 129, 130
alcohol consumption in, 26
and automobiles, 100, 119–20
camping in, 125
and decolonization, 228n.38
and Egypt, 100
family holidays decline in, 173
Grand Tour and lost revenues
of, 23
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INDEX
hunting in, 96
industrialization and
urbanization in, 42
literary tourism in, 82–3, 84
paid holidays in, 144
postwar economic expansion in,
159
private tourist initiatives in, 145
and railways, 52
roads in, 44
steamship services in, 55
suburbanization in, 167–8
tourism literature’s focus on,
180–1
visitors from, in Rome, 181
and World War II, 149
see also British Empire; Grand
Tour; Scotland; seaside;
seaside resorts
Great Exhibition of 1851, 65, 66,
70, 92–3
Greece, 6, 162
Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), 54
Greenwood Cemetery, 108
Grosvenor, Hugh Lupus, 81
guidebooks
audience’s biases relected in, 79
for automobile touring, 123–5
of Karl Baedeker, 75, 78, 80, 83
and the “beaten track,” 89
of Adam and Charles Black, 80
for camping, 170
of Thomas Cook, 78
downsides of, 78–9
early, 77
of Henry Gaze, 78
and Grand Tour, 21
and literary tourism, 78, 83, 84,
204n.14
of John Murray, 75, 78, 90
and Niagara Falls, 105
origins of, nineteenth century, 78
281
prescribed tourists’ experiences,
79, 80–1
and preservation, 80–2
and rail travel, 77
and roadside attractions, 126
role of, in tourists’ experiences,
76–7
of Roman (Augustan) tourists, 7
in A Room with a View, 90
as a technology of control, 75
and women, 78
Haggard, Rider, 84
Haggerston, Carnaby, 27
Hajj, 187n.30
Handbook for Travellers on the Rhine,
from Switzerland to Holland
(guidebook), 80
Hansen, Peter H., 40
Hart, Alice, 94
Hastings, Francis, tenth earl of
Huntington, 23
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 84, 104
health
bathing (sea) and, 68–9
and hydrotherapy, 201–2n.34
linked to leisure, 180
and spas, 67
and the sublime, 43
associated with water, 32, 66
see also disease
“Hebrides Overtures”
(Mendelssohn), 39
Heil, Nick, 178
Henry the Navigator, 5
Herf, Jeffrey, 136
heritage tourism, 175
Hermannsdenkmal, 86
Herodotus, 5–6, 11
“heroic” travelers, 4
Hibbert, Christopher, 19, 28
Highgate Cemetery, 100
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INDEX
Highways Act, 44
hiking, 139
Hillary, Edmund, 176
Hill, Octavia, 81
Hill, Richard, 39, 105
Himalayas, 176
Hinde, John, 87–9
Hindenburg, 133
Histoire Naturelle (Leclerc), 35
Hitler, Adolf, 138, 140
Hobsbawm, Eric, 208n.1
Hogarth, William, 85
holiday camps, see Butlin, Billy
holidays, see vacations
Holidays in Mexico (ilm), 161
Holland, see Netherlands, the
Holocaust sites, 176
Holy Land, the, 8, 102
Homeland Security, Department
of, 183
H1N1, 183
Honeychurch, Lucy (ictional
character), 76, 78, 79, 90
Horne, Lena, 162
hostels, see youth hostels
hotels, 7, 125, 152
“hubs-and-spokes”, 159
Hugo, Victor, 81
human safaris, 176
hunter-gatherers, 2–3
Hunter, Robert, 81
hunting, 96–7
Huskisson, William, 48–50
Hutchings, J. M., 108
Hutchinson, Sara, 30
Hutton, James, 35
hydrotherapy, 201–02n.34
Imperial Airways, 132
India, 51, 52, 96
industrialization, 42, 199–200n.2,
201n.27
Industrial Revolution, 12
Institutional Revolutionary Party
(PRI), 161
Inter-American Development Bank,
161
International Aeronautical
Exhibition (1911), 127
International Air Transport
Association (IATA), 158, 159
International Union of Oficial
Travel Organisations
(IUOTO), 151–2, 153, 154,
155
Ireland, 87–9, 144, 149, 153–4,
178
Irish Potato Famine, 45
Islam, 7–8, 187n.30
Isle of Wight, 71, 140
Italian Riviera, 71
Italian Touring Club, 137
Italy, 18, 25, 136–8, 145, 159–160
Jackson, Horatio Nelson, 116–18
Jamaica, 96, 97–9, 102
Jamaica Hotels Law, 99
Jamaica Tourist Association, 99
Jennings, Eric J., 96
Jessup, Elon, 123
John the Baptist, Saint, 8–9
John Hinde Studios, 87, 90
see also Hinde, John
Johnson, Lyndon B., 171
Johnson, Samuel, 28, 38–9
Jouffroy d’Abbans, Claude de, 54
Keats, John, 84
King Solomon’s Mines (Rider), 84
Kinks, The (rock band), 164
Kitt, Eartha, 162
Kitzbühel, 177
Knight, Goodwin 166
Koenker, Diane P., 141, 142
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Koshar, Rudy, 9, 78, 116, 119
Kraft durch Freude (KdF), 138–40,
144, 182
Krakauer, Jon, 176
Laker Airlines, 32
Lancashire, 68, 70
landscape
attitudes towards, changed, 33–5
and guidebooks, 80–1
of Niagara Falls, 106
painted, 41
postcards and, 87
roads as a threat to, 120–1
and the sublime and beautiful,
38–9, 80
Lansky, Meyer, 162
Laurel Hill Cemetery, 108
Lawson, Harry, 115
League of Nations, 155–6
Leclerc, Georges-Louis, comte de
Buffon, 35
Leed, Eric J., 4–5
Lenin, Vladimir, 141
Levassor, Émile Constant, 115
Ley, Robert, 138
Lincoln Highway, 121–2, 217n.52
Linkletter, Art, 165
literary tourism, 78, 82–5, 204n.14
Liverpool and Manchester Railway,
47, 48–50, 53
Loch Lomond, 80
Lockheed Corporation, 157
Locomotives Act, 115
Locomotives on Highways Act, 115
Löfgren, Orvar, 87
Lomine, Loykie, 6, 7
Longfellow, Henry Wadsworth,
84–5
Louis XIV (King of France), 46
Lusitania, 57
Lyell, Charles, 35
283
Macfarlane, Robert, 30, 40
Madeira, 140
Maine (USA), 1
Mannock, Edward, 128
Marshall, George C., 151
Marshall Plan, see European
Recovery Program (ERP)
Martha’s Vineyard (USA), 106
Marx, Karl, 42
Mazower, Mark, 134
McAdam, John Loudon, 44
McGirr, Lisa, 231n.6
McKenzie, Brian A., 153
McNeill, John R., 4
McNeill, William H., 4
Mechanics’ Institute, 60, 61
Mendelssohn, Felix, 39, 64
Metcalf, “Blind Jack”, 44
Mexico, 146–7, 160–61, 229n.59
see also Cancún
Michelin, André, 123–4
Michelin, Edouard, 123
Michelin Guide, 124–5
Middle East, 100–1, 181
Minoans, 4
Miranda, Carmen, 162
mobility, 2, 7–8, 185n.2
Model T (automobile), 119
modernity, 11–12
Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley, 16
Moore, Thomas, 104
Morris Minor (automobile),
120
Morris Motor Company, 119–20
Morrison, Herbert, 133
Morris Oxford (automobile), 119
Moryson, Fynes, 19–20, 44
motels, 125
Motor (magazine), 123
Motor Car Clubs, 115
mountaineering, 30–1, 78, 40
see also Everest, Mount
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mountains
and aesthetics, 35
attitudes towards, changed, 32
avoided before mid-eighteenth
century, 31
beauty of, chronologically
contingent, 182
as Grand Tour destinations, 40,
192n.54
and health, 43
and the sublime, 38
see also Alps, the; Andes;
Catskills, the; Everest,
Mount; Himalayas;
Hermannsdenkmal; Kitzbühel;
Olympus, Mount; Sca Fel;
Sinai, Mount; Snowden,
Mount; Ventoux, Mont
Mount Auburn Cemetery, 100,
107–8
“Mr. and Mrs. Andrews”
(Gainsborough), 192n.50
Mrs. Dalloway (Woolf), 129
Murray, John, 75, 78, 90
Mussolini, Benito “Il Duce”, 136,
137
Mycenaeans, 4
Nagelmackers, George, 52
Napier, Robert, 55
Napolitano, Janet, 183
Natal Automobile Club, 115
National Commission to Promote
Artistic and Recreational
Excursions of the Foreign
Public, 163
National Confederation of Fascist
Syndicates, 137
national identity, 97, 103, 122
nationalism
German, and tourism, 139
and historical sites, 82
history in discussions of,
206n.40
Irish, 210n.28
and motoring (USA), 120
nature of, in nineteenth century,
91
national parks, 108–9
Glacier, 109, 121
Grand Canyon, 109
Mount Rainier, 109, 121
Yellowstone, 109
Yosemite, 108–9, 121
National Revolutionary Party
(PNR), 146
National Roads and Motorists
Association (NRMA), 123
National Socialist Democratic Party
(NSDAP), 138, 139
National Trust, 81, 205n.33
Nazis, see National Socialist
Democratic Party (NSDAP)
Neolithic revolution, 3
Netherlands, the, 36, 41, 147–8
New Picture of Scotland (guidebook),
77
Niagara Falls, 103, 104–6
Nicolas I (Tsar of Russia), 51
Nietzsche, Friedrich, 136
Norgay, Tenzing, 176
North, Lord (Frederick), 23
Norway, 126
Nova Scotia (Canada), 85
Nuevo Laredo–Mexico Highway,
147
Oak Bluffs (Massachusetts, USA),
106
Ojibwe (First Nations), 97
Olmstead, Frederick Law, 106, 108
Olympus, Mount, 31
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Opera Nazionale Dopolavoro (OND),
136–8
Organisation for European
Economic Co-operation
(OEEC), 151, 152
Organization for Economic
Co-Operation and
Development (OECD), 177
Ottoman Empire, 95, 100
Our Common Future (report) 178
Oxford University, 14, 19
Ozanam, Jacques, 112
Paciic Travel Association, 153
package tours
and Thomas Cook, 62–6
and Egypt, 100
as a factor in the globalization of
tourism, 99
and the Great Exhibition of
1851, 93
of Kraft durch Freude, 140
of Sovtur, 142
and steam power, 92
and trains, 54
package trips, 60–1
Palestine, 99, 100, 101
Pan-American Airlines, 132, 158
Paris Exposition Universelle (1889),
86, 115
Paris Exposition Universelle et
Internationale (1900), 93, 94
Parker, Harry, 74
parks, 106–10
see also camping; caravan parks;
Disneyland
“Pastoral” (Beethoven), 39
Pausanias, 77
Pavilliard, Daniel, 14, 15, 25
Peter the Great, 16
Petrarch, Francesco, 31–2
285
Philosophical Inquiry into the Origins
of Our Ideas of the Sublime
and Beautiful (Burke), 37–8,
39, 41
Phoenicians, 4
pilgrimage
in language of modern tourism, 8
religious, 7–9, 77, 187n.30
Pius II (pope), 81
Pius IX (pope), 104
plague (Black Death), 17
Portugal, 163
postcards, 85–9, 180
Pozzy, Colonel Théo J., 153–4
Prague, 21, 158, 184
pre-modern travel, 2–9
preservation, 81, 82
Prince Rupert’s Land, 96
Principles of Geology: An Attempt to
Explain the Former Changes to
the Earth’s Surface by
Reference to Causes Now in
Operation, The (Lyell), 35
Provence, 71
Psychrolousia or, History of Cold
Bathing (Floyer), 68
Pullman, George Mortimer, 52
Pullman Company, 52
railways
automobile travel compared to,
114
in British India, 50
and Thomas Cook, 62, 66
development of
in Great Britain, 46–50
in Russian Empire, 50–51
in United States, 50
and guidebooks, 77–8
improvements to, 52
and literary tourism, 84–5
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railways – continued
and national parks (USA), 108–9,
121
and Opera Nazionale Dopolavoro,
137
and spas, 68
and working-class tourism, 61–2
and World War I, 122
see also trains
Rainhill Trials, 48
Raleigh, Sir Walter, 5
Rawnsley, Hardwicke, 81
Reagan, Ronald, 165
Reform Act of 1832, 33
religion, 7–9, 33, 66, 187n.30
Renaissance, 17–18
resorts
see seaside resorts
Richard, Cliff, 169
Richthofen, Manfred von, 128
Rickenbacker, Edward, 128
Rivers, Joan, 171
roads, 44, 115, 116, 120–2
roadside attractions, 126, 170
road trips, 170
Rocket, The (steam train), 48–9
Roman Empire, 4
Romanticism, 39
Rome (Augustan), 6–7
Rome, 8, 180
Room with a View, A (Forster),
76, 90
Roosevelt, Franklin D., 126, 162
Rosenthal, Elisabeth, 176
Rousseau, Jean-Jacques, 82
Rugh, Susan Sessions, 170, 172
Russell, Bertrand, 143
Russell, John Scott, 92
Russell, Richard, 68
Russia, 50–1, 141
see also Soviet Union (USSR)
Ryde (Isle of Wight), 71
Sacred Theory of the Earth (Telluris
Theoria Sacra) (Burnet), 35
St. Pancras railway station, 53
St. Petersburg-Tampa Airboat Line,
127
San Miguel de Allende, 161
Santiago de Compostela, 8
Sca Fell, 30, 31
Scandinavia, 171, 192n.64
Scarborough (England), 70, 135
Schirrmann, Richard, 172
Schwartz, Stuart B., 12
Scotland
Robert Burns tourism in, 83–4
and Thomas Cook, 64–5, 66
guidebooks on, 77, 80, 123
hunting in, 97
roads in, 122
steamship service in, 55
the sublime in, 64
Scotland Tourist (guidebook), 84
Scott, A. O., 174
“Scottish Sympthony”
(Mendelssohn), 39
Scott, Sir Walter, 39, 64, 84
sea monsters, 32
Sears, John F., 103
seaside
attire, 74
bathing at the, 32, 68–9
behaviors at the, 73–4
and health, 32
holidays declined in England,
164
social-class distinctions at the,
69–73
attitudes towards the, changed
32
see also beaches; seaside resorts
seaside resorts, 69–73
France, 72–3
Great Britain, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73
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Greece, 163
Mexico, 161
piers at, 71–2
Portugal, 163
Spain, 163–4
United States, 71–2, 73
see also beaches; Cancún; seaside;
spas
Second World War, see World
War II
“See America First”, 109, 120
Self Help (Smiles), 71
Self-Propelled Trafic Association,
115
September 11, 2001 attacks,
182–3
707 (jet aircraft), 157
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome
(SARS), 183
Shaffer, Marguerite, 120
Shakespeare, William, 82–3
Shakespeare Memorial Trust, 83
ships (sailing), 45–6
Sidney, Sir Philip, 19
Sinai, Mount, 31
Sinatra, Frank, 161
Skytrain program, 158–9
Smiles, Samuel, 71
Smith, Albert, 40
Smith, Anthony D., 206n.40
Smollett, Tobias, 16
Snowden, Mount, 86
Society of Proletarian Tourism,
142–3
South American Travel Association,
153
Southend-on-Sea (England), 72
Soviet Union (USSR)
and airspace, 158
communist tourism in, 140–3
individualized travel in, 173
and national airlines, 130
287
paid vacations in, 162
postwar tourism in, 164
and totalitarianism, 150
see also Russia
Sovtur (Sovietskii turist), 142
Spa, 67, 68
Spain, 163–4, 183, 184
spas, 66–8, 164
Springield, Dusty, 169
Stalin, Joseph, 150
Stanley, Henry Morton, 91,
208n.3
Stanley Motor Carriage Company,
215n.16
Starr, Ringo, 169
staycation, 184
steam
cars, 215n.16
engines, 47–8
-powered vehicles, 114
power expanded tourism
opportunities, 46, 92
trains, 46–7
steamboats, 54–5, 77, 103
steamships, 55–9, 102, 199n.72
Stein, Gertrude, 127
Stephen, Heinrich von, 86
Stephenson, George, 47–8, 49
Stockton and Darlington Railway,
46
Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 84
Stratford-upon-Avon, 82–3
Strength through Joy, see Kraft
durch Freude
sublime, the
and attitudes on aesthetics, 37
Samuel Taylor Coleridge addicted
to, 31
and ideas about health, 43
and Romanticism, 39
in Scotland, 64
travel as a way to pursue, 40
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sublime and beautiful, the
applied to landscape, 38–9
and literary tourism, 84–5
and preservation, 80–1
in the twenty-irst century, 103
and United States tourism
development, 103
suburbanization, 167–8
Sustainable Tourism (journal), 178
Symington, William, 54
Syria, 100
Taylor, A. J. P., 181
Taylor, Bayard, 78–9
Telford, Thomas, 44
temperance, 60, 62–3, 64–5
terrorist attacks, 182–3
Thomas Becket, Saint, 8
Thomas Cook & Son, 54, 66, 92,
100–2
see also Cook, John Mason; Cook,
Thomas
Thornton, John, 27
Tinturn Abbey, 81–2
Tommy (musical), 173
totalitarianism, 150–1
Tour de France, 113
Touring Club of Denmark, 123
tourism
deined, 9, 188n.40
and the environment, 176–8
historical study of, 180–1
and individualism, 89–90
modern
and historical debates about
modernity, 10–12
origins of, 7, 9–10, 12, 18–19
precursors to, 5–6, 8–9
pre-modern, argument for
existence of, 6–7
recent statistics on, 180–1
worth of as service sector
industry, 1–2
Tourism and Labor, 171
trailers, 125
trains, 46–54
anxieties towards early, 47
horse-drawn, 46
and package trips, 60
responses to changes brought
by, 53
speed of, increased, 52
and standardization of time, 54
steam, early demand for, 47–8
travel conditions on, 51–2
see also railways; train stations
train stations, 52–3
Transcontinental Air Transport
(TAT), 131–2
Travel Association (TA), 145
traveller’s cheques, 212n.66
travel writing, 123, 204n.14,
210n.35
Trevithick, Richard, 46, 114
Turner, Louis, 160
Turnpike Act, 44
Turpin, Dick, 44
United Nations, 155
United States
and aircraft, 130–1
and airspace, 157–8
camping in, 125–6
democratization of tourism in,
106
Ebola panic in, 183
family vacations decline in,
172–3
and historical study of empire
and tourism, 96
literary tourism in, 84
and the Marshall Plan, 152, 153
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and Mexican tourism
development, 146
national identity and tourism in,
103
nationalism and motoring in, 120
paid vacations not mandated in,
160
parks in, 106–9
postwar economic prosperity in,
159
postwar tourism in, 150
railways in, 50, 52
roads in, 120–2
staycations in, 184
steamship services in, 55
suburbanization in, 168
and terrorism, 182–3
tourism in, during World War II,
135
tourism industry jobs in, 180–1
transcontinental automobile
races in, 116–18
vacations forfeited in, 184
urbanization, 42
Ussher, James (archbishop of
Armagh), 33
vacations
family, 167–71, 172–3
forfeited, 184
paid, 143–4, 160, 164, 224n.51
Van Goyen, Jan, 41
VARIG (airline), 157
Venice, 21
Ventoux, Mont, 31–2
Victoria (queen of the United
Kingdom of Great Britain
and Ireland), 52, 64
Vienna, 21
Vikings, 4
Volkswagon Beetle (automobile), 138
289
Voltaire, 82
voluntourism, 176
Voyage of the Beagle, The (Darwin),
35
Wagner, Webster, 52
Walton, John K., 70, 72
“Wanderer Above the Sea Fog, The”
(Friedrich), 40
Watt, James, 54
Watts, Steven, 166
Webb, Capt. Matthew, 73
Weideger, Paula, 205n.33
White, William Pierpont, 120
Who, The (rock band), 173
Wilderness Society, 122
Wilson, Woodrow, 120
Wollstonecraft, Mary, 16, 27,
192n.64
Wolseley (automobile
manufacturer), 119
women
airplane travel popularized
by,130–1
and automobiles, 118
and bicycles, 114
Thomas Cook encouraged travel
by, 65–6
on Grand Tour, 27
guidebooks impacted travel of,
78
and motor touring, 125
in postwar United States, 168
Woolf, Virginia, 129
Wordsworth, Dorothy, 30, 64
Wordsworth, William, 30, 39, 64,
81, 84
World Commission on Environment
and Development, 178
World Congress for Leisure Time
and Recreation, 144
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world’s fairs, 92–5, 182
see also Chicago World’s Fair
(1893); Great Exhibition
of 1851; Paris Exposition
Universelle (1889); Paris
Exposition Universelle et
Internationale (1900)
World Tourism Organization
(WTO), 1, 155, 181
World War I, 127–8, 134–5
World War II, 135, 149
Wright, Orville, 126–7
Wright, Wilbur, 126–7
youth culture, 173, 174–5
youth hostels, 145, 171–2
Zeppelin, 132–3
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