Coventry Buses 1948-1974

Coventry Buses 1948-1974

Author: David Harvey

Publisher: Amberley Publishing Limited

Published: 2015-11-15

Total Pages: 261

ISBN-13: 1445651793

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A fascinating collection of photographs giving a picture of life in Coventry between 1946 and 1974 through the city's bus fleet.


Coventry Transport 1940-1974

Coventry Transport 1940-1974

Author: Roger Bailey

Publisher:

Published: 2007-09-01

Total Pages: 128

ISBN-13: 9780752442372

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Featuring over 150 photographs, this book is a social history of what was a very important part of Coventry. It leads us on a nostalgic pictorial journey through the Second World War, where the infamous Luftwaffe air raid wrecked the city's tram system, modelled on the local Daimler chassis.


UNITE History Volume 4 (1960-1974)

UNITE History Volume 4 (1960-1974)

Author: John Foster

Publisher: Liverpool University Press

Published: 2022-10-15

Total Pages: 184

ISBN-13: 1802071210

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The fourteen years between 1960 and-1974 saw the trade union and labour movement transformed. In 1959 Labour had been beaten at the polls for the third successive time – with political commentators claiming that class politics in Britain were dead. By 1974 a mobilised trade union movement had forced a Conservative government from office, compelled the abandonment of its anti-trade union legislation, released imprisoned dockers from Pentonville prison and twice provided the miners with the solidarity required for victory. The climax in 1974 was Labour victory in the 1974 general election with a programme calling for an irreversible shift of wealth and power in favour of working people. This volume of the TGWU’s centenary history documents the role of Britain’s biggest union in this transformation. Two remarkable general secretaries, Frank Cousins and Jack Jones, provided leadership. However, it was the TGWU’s members who achieved it: the women and men in the factories, transport depots and docks, who forged the new class unity. The book records their voices. It brings together their struggles from Clydeside, Dublin and Belfast to Longbridge, Dagenham and Heathrow – and it does so with a wealth of new material revealing the tactics of government and employers and the complexity of the struggles for sex equality and against racial discrimination that helped cement the new class unity.


Waste into Weapons

Waste into Weapons

Author: Peter Thorsheim

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2015-08-31

Total Pages: 305

ISBN-13: 1316395502

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During the Second World War, the United Kingdom faced severe shortages of essential raw materials. To keep its armaments factories running, the British government enlisted millions of people in efforts to recycle a wide range of materials for use in munitions production. Recycling not only supplied British munitions factories with much-needed raw materials - it also played a key role in the efforts of the British government to maintain the morale of its citizens, to secure billions of dollars in Lend-Lease aid from the United States, and to uncover foreign intelligence. However, Britain's wartime recycling campaign came at a cost: it consumed items that would never have been destroyed under normal circumstances, including significant parts of the nation's cultural heritage. Based on extensive archival research, Peter Thorsheim examines the relationship between armaments production, civil liberties, cultural preservation, and diplomacy, making Waste into Weapons the first in-depth history of twentieth-century recycling in Britain.