Wokingham to Bradford-on-Avon
On the third leg of his journey, Michael Portillo learns how demand from rail commuters fuelled the development of the modern printing press.
Steered by his Victorian guidebook, Michael Portillo heads north from the south coast towards the West Midlands.
The third leg begins in Wokingham, where Bradshaw's reports the proprietor of The Times newspaper resided and where he was a great benefactor. Michael finds out how demand from a growing number of rail commuters fuelled the development of the modern printing press and learns how to print on an iron press. He then heads to Newbury, where he encounters a Tudor captain of industry, who manufactured cloth in enormous volumes.
Michael's next destination is Trowbridge, where Sir Isaac Pitman invented his famous shorthand. He ends this leg of the journey in Bradford on Avon, where he hears from a local manufacturer how his Victorian forebears were the first in Britain to be licensed to vulcanise rubber. They supplied springs, buffers and hoses for the locomotive industry and now make rubber suspensions systems for bicycles.
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Credits
Role | Contributor |
---|---|
Presenter | Michael Portillo |
Series Producer | Alison Kreps |
Executive Producer | John Comerford |
Broadcasts
- Wed 22 Jan 2014 18:30
- Mon 7 Apr 2014 10:05
- Wed 10 Sep 2014 19:30
- Tue 4 Aug 2015 19:30
- Wed 18 May 2016 16:45
Steam railway programmes on 麻豆官网首页入口 iPlayer
A collection of programmes from the 麻豆官网首页入口 archives on the beauty of steam locomotives.