Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-s2hrs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T08:36:46.307Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Did Turnpike Trusts Increase Transportation Investment in Eighteenth-Century England?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 June 2005

DAN BOGART
Affiliation:
Assistant Professor, Department of Economics, University of California, Irvine, 3151 Social Science Plaza, Irvine, California 92697-5100. E-mail: dbogart@uci.edu

Abstract

Turnpike trusts were private organizations that financed road improvements by levying tolls and issuing mortgage debt. They were established by Acts of Parliament throughout the seventeenth, eighteenth, and early nineteenth centuries. The acts transferred authority from parishes to a body of trustees, composed of local landowners and merchants. Parishes financed road improvements with local property taxes; but they could not levy tolls. This article uses a new data set to show that turnpike trusts increased road expenditure, rather than replacing existing or forthcoming parish expenditure. It also illustrates how institutional changes contributed to the process of economic development in England.

Type
ARTICLES
Copyright
© 2005 The Economic History Association

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Albert William. 1972. The Turnpike Road System in England 1663–1840. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
Ashton T. S. 1959. Economic Fluctuations in England 1700–1800. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
Bogart Dan. “Turnpike Trusts and the Transport Revolution in Eighteenth Century England.” Forthcoming in Explorations in Economic History.
Chartres John, and Gerard Turnbull. 1983. “Road Transport.” In Transport in the Industrial Revolution, edited by Derek Aldcroft, and Michael Freeman, 6499. Manchester: Manchester University Press,
Clark Greg. 2001: “Farm Wages and Living Standards in the Industrial Revolution: England, 1670–1869.” Economic History Review 54, no. 3 477505.Google Scholar
Corfield Penelope. 1982. The Impact of English Towns, 1700–1800. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
Family History Library (FHL). Salt Lake City, UT.
Gerhold D. 1996: “Productivity Change in Road Transport before and after Turnpiking, 1690–1840.” Economic History Review 49 491515.Google Scholar
Ginarlis John. 1971. “Roads and Canals.” In Aspects of Capital Investment in Great Britain: 1750–1850, edited by J. P. P. Higgins and Sidney Pollard, 12130. London: Methuen,
Ginarlis John and Sidney Pollard. 1988. “Roads and Waterways: 1750–1850.” In Studies in Capital Formation in the United Kingdom, edited by Charles Feinstein, and Sidney Pollard, 182224. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
Great Britain. 1803. House of Commons. Journals of the House of Commons 15,
Great Britain. 1818, “The Abstract of Returns on the Expense and Maintenance of Highways.” Parliamentary Papers, XVI.
Great Britain. 1821, “The Report from the Select Committee Appointed to Consider the Acts now in Force Regarding Turnpike Roads and Highways in England and Wales.” Parliamentary Papers, IV.
Great Britain. 1830–31. “Annual Value of Real Property.” Parliamentary Papers, XIV.
Great Britain. 1839, “Report on Local Taxation.“ Parliamentary Papers, XLIV.
Great Britain. 1840, “Report of the Commissioners for Inquiry into the State of Roads in England and Wales.” Parliamentary Papers, XXVII.
Great Britain. 1841, “Appendix to the Report of Commissioners appointed to inquire into the State of the Roads.” Parliamentary Papers, XXVII.
Great Britain. 1834, House of Lords. “The Minutes of Evidence before the Committee on Turnpike Road Trusts.” Parliamentary Papers, X.
Hardy William. 1905. Hertford County Records. Hertford: C. E. Longmore,
Hardy William. 1905. Middlesex County Records, Calender of the Sessions Books. London, Sir R. Nicholson,
Hoppit Julian. 1997. Failed Legislation, 1660–1800. London: Hambledon,
Hoppit Julian, and Joanna Innes. 1997. “Introduction.” In Failed Legislation, edited by Julian Hoppit. London: Hambledon,
Jackman W. T. 1916. The Development of Transportation in Modern England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
Klein Daniel B. 1990: “The Voluntary Provision of Public Goods? The Turnpike Companies of Early America.” Economic Inquiry 28 788812.Google Scholar
Levinson David. 2002. Financing Transport Networks. Northampton: Edward Elgar,
Majewski John. 2000. A House Dividing: Economic Development in Pennsylvania and Virginia Before the Civil War. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
North Douglass, and Barry Weingast. 1989: “Constitutions and Commitment: the Evolution of Institutions Governing Public Choice in Seventeenth-Century England.” This Journal 49, no. 4 80332.Google Scholar
Odlyzko Andrew. 2004: “The Evolution of Price Discrimination in Transportation and its Implications For the Internet.” Review of Network Economics 3 32346Google Scholar
Pawson Eric. 1977. Transport and Economy: The Turnpike Roads of Eighteenth Century Britain. New York: Academic Press,
Szostak Rick. 1991. The Role of Transportation in the Industrial Revolution. Montreal: McGill,
Wallis John. 2003: “The Property Tax as a Coordinating Device: Financing Indiana's Internal Improvement System, 1835–1842.” Explorations in Economic History 40 22350.Google Scholar
Webb Beatrice, and Sydney Webb. 1963. English Local Government: The Story of the King's Highway. New Impression, London: Archon,