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Gallery Themes : Images of Brighton Gallery

Collections Home
navigation symbol Introduction to the Images of Brighton Gallery
navigation symbol Fishing
navigation symbol Health
navigation symbol Fashionable Society
navigation symbol Regency Architecture
navigation symbol Resort
navigation symbol Coming to Brighton
navigation symbol Mods and Rockers
navigation symbol Clubbing
navigation symbol Lesbian and Gay Brighton
navigation symbol Employment in Tourism
navigation symbol Dirty Weekend
 
 
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  Coming to Brighton

'If you love good roads....be so kind as never to go into Sussex'
Horace Walpole, Ex-Prime Ministers son, 1749

Many early travellers came to Brighton to cross the Channel. The journey from London could take days. Brighton has no natural harbour, so passengers were rowed to their boats.

In 1762 a same-day service to London by horse-drawn carriage began. Improved roads and Brighton's rising fame as a fashionable resort meant that by 1822 dozens of carriages were arriving daily. Stock-traders even commuted from Brighton, spending two and a half hours a day in the capital.

Model of a D2 class steam locomotive (train) called 'Como', used by London, Brighton & South Coast Railways. The model was made by Dr. J. Bradbury Winter  between 1884 and 1915, in Brighton, in his spare time.
Model of a D2 class steam locomotive (train) called 'Como', used by London, Brighton & South Coast Railways.

In the 1840s the railway started bringing five times as many passengers to the resort. Some felt this lowered the tone of the town. However, the train that became the Brighton Belle was one of the most luxurious in the world.

In 1896 fifty-four motorcars set out from London to Brighton to celebrate a law permitting them to travel at fourteen miles per hour. Thirteen cars completed the journey. Today, the event is celebrated annually by the famous Veteran and Vintage Car Run.

See objects on display in the Coming to Brighton section of Images of Brighton Gallery

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