Help your KS2 child steam ahead with Kidadl's fast facts about Victorian era transport.
The pace of change during Queen Victoria's 64 year reign was unprecedented, transforming every aspect of life - including how we got around.
At the start of the era, Victorians' transports were largely horse-driven, but by the beginning of the 20th century railway travel was popular, the car and bicycle had been invented, and the first electric tramways were also in use.
The horse drawn carriage was the main type of transport at the start of the Victorian era. Upper class families owned at least one four-wheeled horse drawn carriage.
The Brougham and the Phaeton were the names of two popular horse drawn carriages.
The Landau carriage was a luxury vehicle, driven by a coachman and drawn by two or four horses. In 1890, the price of a Landau carriage was £220.
In 1865, the speed limit on roads was four miles an hour in the countryside and two miles an hour in cities.
Most poor people could not afford to buy their own transport. The lucky ones had wagons that were drawn by one horse, but many poor Victorians had to travel everywhere by foot.
In cities, horse drawn buses, known as omnibuses, were a popular form of Victorian transport. They were pulled by three horses and could carry 22 people.
Victorian buses began to change towards the end of the nineteenth century, and the first public journey by a bus with a petrol engine took place in 1899.
Before the invention of steam trains, it took twelve hours to travel from London to Birmingham, using a horse drawn carriage. Steam trains halved the journey time.
Five thousand miles of railway were built in the 1840s.
Between 1845 and 1900, £3 billion was spent on the construction of Britain's railway network.
In 1863, the world's first underground railway opened in London.
By 1870, the UK had 16,000 miles of railway line, used by 423 million passengers a year.
In the early Victorian era, only children from wealthy families went to school because there was no free education.
In 1880, it became compulsory for all children to go to school from the age of five until the age of ten. Some schools provided free education, but many charged a weekly fee that was hard for poor families to afford.
In 1891, Parliament passed the Free Education Act to make it easier for poor children to go to school.
Britain was going through the Industrial Revolution during Victorian times. Great changes to the way we live and work took place during this period.
Between 1851 and 1901, the population of England and Wales almost doubled, going from 16.8 million to 30.5 million.
Questions To Ask Your Child About Victorian Transportation
Bachelor of Arts specializing in Media and Business (Journalism)
Sarah BlakeBachelor of Arts specializing in Media and Business (Journalism)
With over two decades of experience as a writer, Sarah calls Lancashire her home. She has a Bachelor's degree in Media and Business from the University of Manchester. She is passionate about fitness and wellness, and her love for gym workouts and yoga is unmatched. When not donning her Lycra, she loves spending time with her family and indulging in fun activities, except for anything that involves getting cold.
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