Barry Island

The Making of a Seaside Playground, c.1790- c.1965

Andy Croll author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Wales Press

Published:15th Jul '20

Should be back in stock very soon

Barry Island cover

• Casts a revealing light on Wales’s contribution to coastal tourism in the nineteenth century. • Argues that visitors had a powerful role in setting a resort’s social tone. • Written in an accessible style.

By the mid-twentieth century, Barry Island had become one of Britain's most popular seaside resorts. Its history carries important lessons for historians of coastal tourism. This is the first full-length academic study of the Island's development as a seaside resort.Barry Island was one of the most cherished leisure spaces in twentieth-century south Wales, a playground of generations of working-class day-trippers. This book considers its rise as a seaside resort and reveals a history that is much more complex, lengthy and important than has previously been recognised. As conventionally told, the story of the island as tourist resort begins in the 1890s, when the railway arrived in Barry - in fact, it was functioning as a watering hole by the 1790s - yet decades of tourism produced no sweeping changes. Barry remained a district of 'bathing villages' and hamlets, not a developed urban resort. As such, its history challenges us to rethink the category of 'seaside resort' and forces us re-evaluate Wales's contribution to British coastal tourism in the 'long nineteenth century'. It also underlines the importance of visitor agency. Powerful landowners shaped much of the island's development but, ultimately, it was the working-class visitors who turned it into south Wales's most beloved tripper resort.

ISBN: 9781786835864

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

288 pages