Fixing the roads
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What were turnpikes?Many main roads were in a poor state in the late seventeenth century. Having ridden on horseback eight miles from Ely in 1698, Celia Fiennes complained “the road was so full of holes and quicksands, I durst not venture, the water covering them over, a stranger then cannot easily escape the danger”.Such roads were the responsibility of local parishes which lacked funding for maintenance and improvements. Turnpike trusts were created through Acts of Parliament to overcome this, the first in 1663. Their trustees – members of the local gentry and other notables – could levy tolls and borrow against toll revenues. Riders on horseback, wheeled vehicles and livestock droves were all forced to stop at toll gates and pay to continue their journeys. Trusts were required to reinvest all surpluses. Each trust managed a modest mileage, but collectively they became responsible for most of the inter-urban road network by the late 18th century.Dan Bogart said: “People generally think of the railways as the Big Bang for internal travel and forget about the road improvements that came before. But on the eve of the railway age, Britain had the largest toll road network that's ever existed. Roughly one-fifth of main roads were tolled. And these turnpike roads were largely run by locals, community engagement was key to their acceptance and ability to spread. That’s remarkable.”
A country toll house painted by Luke Clennell c.1795-1800
A country toll house painted by Luke Clennell c.1795-1800
Tolls for turnpike gates at Strood and the New Road near Rochester (1792)
Tolls for turnpike gates at Strood and the New Road near Rochester (1792)
Speed, comfort and safetyThe researchers found that journeys recorded by diarists switched from 77% on horseback prior to 1760 to 73% in horse-drawn wheeled vehicles between 1760 to 1820.
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While the speed of journeys on horseback remained stable, the researchers found that stagecoach speeds doubled from 4 to 8 mph between the early 1700s and the early 1800s. Private carriages increased in speed from 4 to 6 mph in the same period. The researchers are convinced that road improvements brought about by turnpiking were mostly responsible for this. They found that speeds were generally around 2mph higher on turnpike roads.But one of the study’s key findings is that road users strongly valued comfort and safety over speed. A key reason for this, they argue, is that most of the diarists were making discretionary, shorter journeys in privately owned vehicles, rather than in rapid, long-distance stagecoaches which expanded in use in the nineteenth century.Dr Alan Rosevear said: “Until now, historians have focused on speed as the key marker of improvement, but diarists rarely mentioned speed. They were far more interested in safety and comfort. People wanted to get to their cousin’s wedding in one piece, and not totally dishevelled, because their carriage bounced them around or tipped them into a river. Getting there a bit faster wasn’t so important.”The diaries suggest that road users expected turnpikes ‘to get the basics right’ by filling in holes, clearing away stones and repairing ruts. They weren’t keen to spend more on tolls to make roads unnecessarily good.
Travellers Refreshed in a Stagnant Pool, after the Fatigues of a Dusty Day's Journey, by Thomas Rowlandson (1809)
Travellers Refreshed in a Stagnant Pool, after the Fatigues of a Dusty Day's Journey, by Thomas Rowlandson (1809)
Traffic passing through London's Tyburn Turnpike, as depicted by Thomas Rowlandson (1809)
Traffic passing through London's Tyburn Turnpike, as depicted by Thomas Rowlandson (1809)
VariationThe researchers acknowledge that there was variation in the quality of both turnpike and standard roads. But they found that over half of non-turnpiked road mileage was considered ‘poor’ whereas for turnpikes less than a quarter of the mileage was classified as ‘poor’.
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Moreover, while around 40% of turnpike mileage was categorised as ‘good’, less than 20% of non-turnpike mileage was judged ‘good’.Regional inequality in road and railway infrastructure investment is a major issue in Britain today, but the researchers found that the turnpike system benefited neglected regions most. Leigh Shaw-Taylor said: “Before the turnpikes, the worst roads were in the Southwest, Wales, and the North of England. Wheeled traffic wasn't really possible there before the turnpikes. They had the greatest impact in those areas, more than in London and the Southeast.”"The road through it is smooth as a bowling green and the ride is all the way as delightful as man could wish.”
The researchers point out that turnpike roads both facilitated and were increasingly funded by tourism, as more affluent people sought to explore Wales, the Lake District and the Southwest.
An artist travelling in Wales, by Thomas Rowlandson (1799)
An artist travelling in Wales, by Thomas Rowlandson (1799)
The turnpikes also played a key role in the rise of North during the Industrial Revolution. Dan Bogart said: “The turnpike system was really important to the North: Coal wagons were beating up the roads, so forcing those vehicles to pay was crucial to maintaining and improving those routes.”High acceptance of tollsWhile there were some riots against turnpike tolls, the researchers note that they were relatively rare and localised. They believe there was a high level of acceptance at least partly because people could see they were getting something for their money: better journeys.Today, many British drivers complain that road tolls are expensive but in the eighteenth century, they were a small fraction of the very high cost of travelling by private carriage or stagecoach, which only the affluent could afford. At the same time, turnpike roads reduced other costs incurred by horse-drawn transport. The number of horses needed to pull a stagecoach, for instance, declined over time, partly because of improved roads.Alan Rosevear said: “Today the UK doesn't have taxes ringfenced to fix local roads. With the turnpikes, people knew their money was going to be used to improve their roads.
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That was a big advantage.”Professor Leigh Shaw-Taylor is Director of the Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure (Campop). Dr Alan Rosevear is a visiting research affiliate working on the Campop project: 'Transport, urbanization and economic development in England and Wales c.1670-1911'. Dan Bogart is Professor of Economics at the University of California, Irvine (UCI) and a collaborator on the project.ReferenceD. Bogart, A. Rosevear & L. Shaw-Taylor, ‘A better ride: New evidence on travel and the quality of roads in England and Wales, 1660-1820’, Explorations in Economic History (2026). DOI:10.1016/j.eeh.2026.101748
Former toll house at Stoliford Gate, Modbury, Devon on the A379, Plymouth to Kingsbridge road. Image: Alan Rosevear
Former toll house at Stoliford Gate, Modbury, Devon on the A379, Plymouth to Kingsbridge road. Image: Alan Rosevear
Former toll house at Overton Gate, Richards Castle, Shropshire, on the B4361 Hereford to Ludlow road. Image: Alan Rosevear
Former toll house at Overton Gate, Richards Castle, Shropshire, on the B4361 Hereford to Ludlow road. Image: Alan Rosevear