At the start of the 20th century, only people with extensive disposable
income and time to spare could enjoy leisure travel. By the century’s
end, journeys took hours, not days, and mass travel — especially brief
air flights — became the new normal. Along the way, ocean liners broke
speed records, aerodynamic trains roared down the tracks, stylish
boat-plane clippers evolved into jumbo jets. Whether aboard high-speed
locomotives or ships, jets or Greyhound buses — or when setting their
own schedule on the open road — Americans demanded ever greater mobility
and wider choice of destinations, thereby setting a new standard for
travelers around the world.
A
lush visual history of this national wanderlust, this volume features
400-plus print advertisements from the Jim Heimann Collection, which
illustrate the evolution of leisure travel — from domestic to global,
exclusive to popular, exotic to standardized — and its crucial role in
American culture.
With an introduction,
decade-by-decade analysis, and an illustrated timeline, this book
highlights the cultural and technological developments that transformed
travel from a cushioned journey of the elite into a convenient leisure
pastime for the general public. 20th Century Travel takes us on a grand tour of travel’s golden age.