by Mark Lee Inman
In the post-war era, there was still a demand for ocean-going travel, not just on the glamorous large liners and mail ships, but also on much smaller ships. Many of these could be just as well appointed and comfortable and doubtless provided an intimacy that may have been missing from the larger and faster ships. If time was not a vital consideration, and money possibly was, then travel by cargo liner was an ideal option. The pictures presented here represent souvenirs of an era that air travel and the onset of the fast container ship have totally obliterated.
Many of the photographs presented here were acquired between 1961 and 1965 from the major British and European shipping companies, some of whom responded particularly generously. Some Asian and American companies contributed as well. This material gives an insight into the use of postcards and photographs as a vital part of marketing, promotion and public relations in a world that was soon to disappear.
Unfortunately, many of the photographs are not that good and in the case of Elder Dempster’s Apapa and Accra depict the wrong ships!
Published by:
Amberley Publications,
The Hill,
Merrywalks,
Stroud,
Glos. GL5 4EP
www.amberley-books.com
Paperback: 234mm x 165mm, 96 pp illustrated
Price: £14.99
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