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L. T. C. Rolt

Lionel Thomas Caswall Rolt (usually abbreviated to Tom Rolt or L. T. C. Rolt) (11 February 1910 – 9 May 1974[1][2]) was a prolific English writer and the biographer of major civil engineering figures, including Isambard Kingdom Brunel and Thomas Telford. He is also regarded as one of the pioneers of the leisure cruising industry on Britain's inland waterways, and was an enthusiast for vintage cars and heritage railways. He played a pioneering role in both the canal and railway preservation movements.

Tom Rolt
BornLionel Thomas Caswall Rolt
(1910-02-11)11 February 1910
Chester, England
Died9 May 1974(1974-05-09) (aged 64)
Resting placeStanley Pontlarge
Occupation
  • Engineer
  • technical assistant
  • writer
NationalityBritish
EducationCheltenham College
Period1944–1974
GenreIndustrial history, Biography, Ghost stories
SubjectRailways, waterways, industrial history
Notable worksNarrow Boat, Winterstoke (1954), Railway Adventure, Red for Danger, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, Thomas Telford, George and Robert Stephenson, The Landscape Trilogy (autobiography)
Notable awardsHon MA Newcastle University, Hon MSc University of Bath
SpouseAngela Orred (1939–1951)
Sonia Smith (1952–1974)
ChildrenRichard (1953), Timothy (1955)
RelativesLionel Rolt (father)
Website
www.ltcrolt.org.uk

Biography edit

Early life edit

Tom Rolt was born in Chester to a line of Rolts "dedicated to hunting and procreation". His father Lionel had settled back in Britain in Hay-on-Wye after working on a cattle station in Australia, a plantation in India, and joining (unsuccessfully) in the Klondike Gold Rush of 1898. However, Lionel Rolt lost most of his money in 1920 after investing his capital in a company which failed, and the family moved to a pair of stone cottages in Stanley Pontlarge in Gloucestershire.[3]

Rolt studied at Cheltenham College and at 16 took a job learning about steam traction, before starting an apprenticeship at the Kerr Stuart locomotive works in Stoke-on-Trent, where his uncle, Kyrle Willans, was chief development engineer. His uncle bought a wooden horse-drawn narrow flyboat called Cressy and fitted it with a steam engine. Then (having discovered the steam made steering through tunnels impossible) he replaced that with a Ford Model T engine. This was Rolt's introduction to the canal system.

Cars edit

After Kerr Stuart went into liquidation in 1930, Rolt became jobless and turned to vintage sports cars, taking part in the veteran run to Brighton, and acquiring a succession of cars including a 1924 Alvis 12/50 two seater 'ducks back' which he was to keep for the rest of his life.[4]

Rolt bought into a motor garage partnership next to the Phoenix public house in Hartley Wintney in Hampshire (their breakdown vehicle was an adapted 1911 Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost) and together with the landlord of the Phoenix, Tim Carson, and others, formed the Vintage Sports-Car Club in 1934. He also founded and helped create the Prescott hill climb. His 1950 book Horseless Carriage contains a diatribe against the emergence of mass production in the English car industry, claiming that "mass production methods must develop towards the ultimate end [of automatic procreation of machines by machines], although by doing so, they involve either the supersession of men by machines or a continual expansion of production".[5] His preference for traditional craftsmanship helps to explain his subsequent career.

Cressy edit

In 1936, Kyrle Willans bought back Cressy, which he had earlier sold, and several trips on the waterways convinced Rolt that he wanted a life afloat. He persuaded Angela Orred to join him in this idyll. She was a young blonde in a white polo-necked sweater, who had swept into his garage in an Alfa Romeo in 1937 and been caught up in the vintage car scene. Rolt bought Cressy from his uncle and set about converting her into a boat that could be lived on, the most notable addition being a bath.

 
Chester memorial plaque

By the summer of 1939, Rolt and Angela decided to defy her father's reluctance and married in secret on 11 July. Work on Cressy was completed at Tooley's Boatyard in Banbury, and on 27 July Rolt and his wife set off up the Oxford Canal.

War edit

The outbreak of the Second World War intervened and Rolt, a pacifist at heart, immediately signed up at the Rolls-Royce factory at Crewe, working on the production line for the Spitfire's Merlin engine. He was saved from the tedium of the production line by the offer of a job in a bell foundry at Aldbourne, Wiltshire. The Rolts headed south in Cressy through storms, reaching Banbury a day before the canals were finally frozen over for the winter. The following March they negotiated the River Thames in flood and headed up the River Kennet to reach Hungerford, near Aldbourne, where Rolt worked for more than a year.

The Rolts' first four-month cruise was described in a book which Rolt initially called Painted Ship. Despite sending the manuscript to many publishers, he had to put it aside, as it was felt that there was no market for books about canals. It was not until a magazine article he wrote came to the attention of the countryside writer H. J. Massingham that Rolt had the break which led to the book finally being published, in December 1944, under the title Narrow Boat.

Inland Waterways Association edit

Narrow Boat was an immediate success with critics and public, leading to fan mail arriving at the Rolts' boat at Tardebigge where they were then moored.

Two of the letters Rolt received were from Robert Aickman and Charles Hadfield who were both to figure prominently in the next phase of his life, that of a campaigner. He invited Aickman and his wife Ray to join them on Cressy and Aickman later described that trip as "the best time I have ever spent on the waterways". It was on this voyage they decided to form an organisation that a few weeks later, in May 1946, at Robert's London flat, was named the Inland Waterways Association, with Aickman as chairman, Hadfield as vice-chairman and Rolt as secretary.

This was a critical period for the waterways, which were nationalised in 1947 and faced an uncertain future. The traditional life which Rolt had so movingly described was faced with extinction. He pioneered direct action on the Stratford-upon-Avon Canal which stopped British Waterways from closing it, organised a hugely successful Inland Waterways Exhibition, which started in London but toured the country, and proposed the first boat rally at Market Harborough. Aickman, who had a private income, was working full-time on the campaign, whilst Rolt, who had only his writing to support him, and was still living aboard Cressy, struggled to meet all his commitments. Eventually he fell out with Aickman over the latter's insistence that every mile of canal should be saved, and in early 1951 Rolt was expelled from the organisation he had inspired.

By this time also he had decided to bring his life on Cressy to an end and return to his family home in Stanley Pontlarge. Angela departed to continue the mobile life, joining Billy Smart's Circus.

Talyllyn Railway edit

A letter Rolt had sent to the Birmingham Post in 1950 resulted in the formation of the Talyllyn Railway Preservation Society, and he now threw himself into that, becoming chairman of the company which operated the railway as a tourist attraction. "By the time the fateful letter terminating his IWA membership arrived, he was already busy issuing and stamping passengers' tickets from the little station in Towyn".[6] His time at Talyllyn gave rise to the 1953 book Railway Adventure, which was the basis of the popular Ealing comedy film The Titfield Thunderbolt.

Rolt married again, to Sonia Smith (née South), a former actress. During the war she had become one of the amateur boat-women who worked the canals and had married a boatman. She had been on the council of the IWA. They had two sons, Tim and Dick, and continued to live in Stanley Pontlarge until Rolt's death in 1974.

Author edit

Rolt became a full-time writer in 1939.[7] The 1950s were Rolt's most prolific time as an author. His best-known works were biographies of Isambard Kingdom Brunel, which stimulated a revival of interest in a forgotten hero,[8][9] George and Robert Stephenson, and Thomas Telford. His classic study of historic railway accidents, Red for Danger, became a text book for numerous engineering courses. Rolt produced many works about subjects that had not previously been considered the stuff of literature, such as civil engineering, canals and railways. In his later years he produced three volumes of autobiography, only one of which was published during his lifetime.

Rolt also published Sleep No More (1948) a collection of supernatural horror stories featuring ghosts, possession and atavism.[10] These were modelled after the work of M. R. James, but used industrial settings such as railways instead of James' "antiquarian" settings.[10][11] The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural described Sleep No More as "An exceptionally original collection of ghost stories ... Rolt had the special talent of combining folkloric spontaneity with artful sophistication."[12] Several of Rolt's stories were anthologised; they were also adapted as radio dramas.[10] His "Winterstoke" (1954) is a unique perspective on the development of modern Britain from the Feudal system via the dissolution of the monasteries.

Achievements and honours edit

 
The Tom Rolt locomotive

He was vice-president of the Newcomen Society, which established a Rolt Prize;[13] a trustee and member of the Advisory Council of the Science Museum; a member of the York Railway Museum Committee; an honorary MA of Newcastle; an honorary MSc of the University of Bath (1973)[14] and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He was a joint founder of the Association for Industrial Archaeology, which has an annual Rolt lecture. He helped to form the Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust.

A locomotive Tom Rolt on the Talyllyn Railway, the world's first preserved railway, was named in his memory in 1991.

 
Plaque at Bridge 164 on the Oxford Canal, Banbury

Rolt observed the changes in society resulting from the industrial-scientific revolution. In the epilogue to his biography of I. K. Brunel he writes two years before C. P. Snow makes similar statements about the split between the arts and sciences:

Men spoke in one breath of the arts and sciences and to the man of intelligence and culture it seemed essential that he should keep himself abreast of developments in both spheres. ... So long as the artist or the man of culture had been able to advance shoulder to shoulder with engineer and scientist and with them see the picture whole, he could share their sense of mastery and confidence and believe wholeheartedly in material progress. But so soon as science and the arts became divorced, so soon as they ceased to speak a common language, confidence vanished and doubts and fears came crowding in.

He set out these ideas more fully in his book High Horse Riderless, a classic of green philosophy.

A bridge (no. 164) on the Oxford Canal in Banbury bears his name (in commemoration of his book Narrow Boat), as does a centre at the boat museum at Ellesmere Port in Cheshire. A blue plaque to Rolt was unveiled in at Tooley's Boatyard, Banbury on 7 August 2010 as part of the centenary celebrations of his birth.[15]

Bibliography edit

Rolt's work (arranged by topic in rough chronological order) includes:[16]

Waterways edit

  • Narrow Boat (1944, Eyre & Spottiswoode)
  • Green and Silver (1949, George Allen & Unwin)
  • The Inland Waterways of England (1950, George Allen & Unwin)
  • The Thames from Mouth to Source (1951)
  • Navigable Waterways (1969, Longmans; rpt. 1973 by Hutchinson ISBN 0-09-907800-7)
  • From Sea to Sea: The Canal du Midi (1973, Allen Lane)

Railways edit

  • Lines of Character (1952, Constable), with Patrick Whitehouse
  • Railway Adventure (1953, Constable)
  • Red for Danger: A History of Railway Accidents and Railway Safety (1955, The Bodley Head)
  • Patrick Stirling's Locomotives (1964, H. Hamilton)
  • The Making of a Railway (1971, Evelyn)

Biography edit

Industrial history edit

From the period of 1958 onwards, Rolt was commissioned by many engineering companies to document their history. Many of these are unpublished internal documents; only the published works are listed here.

  • Holloways of Millbank: The First Seventy-Five Years (1958)
  • The Dowty Story (Part I, 1962; Part II, 1973)
  • A Hunslet Hundred: One Hundred Years of Locomotive Building by the Hunslet Engine Company (1964)
  • Rolt, L. T. C. (1965), A Short History of Machine Tools, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: MIT Press, OCLC 250074. Co-edition published as Rolt, L. T. C. (1965), Tools for the Job: a Short History of Machine Tools, London: B. T. Batsford, LCCN 65080822.
  • The Mechanicals: Progress of a Profession (1967)
  • Waterloo Ironworks: A History of Taskers of Andover, 1809–1968 (1969)
  • Victorian Engineering (1970)
  • The Potters' Field: A History of the South Devon Ball Clay Industry (1974)

Autobiography edit

  • Landscape with Machines (1971, Longman), first part of autobiography ISBN 0-582-10740-7
  • Landscape with Canals (1977), second part of autobiography
  • Landscape with Figures (1992), retitled third part of his autobiography
  • The Landscape Trilogy (2001), gathers all three parts of autobiography in one volume

Other edit

  • High Horse Riderless (1947, George Allen & Unwin), personal philosophy
  • Sleep No More (1948), ghost stories
  • Worcestershire (1949, Robert Hale), County Books series
  • Horseless Carriage: The Motor Car in England (1950)
  • Winterstoke (1954), history of a fictional Midlands town
  • The Clouded Mirror (1955), travel essays[17]
  • The Aeronauts: A History of Ballooning, 1783–1903 (1966; rpt. 2006 as The Balloonists: The History of the First Aeronauts)
  • Two Ghost Stories (1994)

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ His death was recorded in The Times No 59086, 11 May 1974
  2. ^ Slater, J.N., ed. (July 1974). "Notes and News: Death of L. T. C. Rolt". Railway Magazine. London: IPC Transport Press Ltd. 120 (879): 364. ISSN 0033-8923.
  3. ^ Ian Mackersey (1985). Tom Rolt and the Cressy Years. London: M & M Baldwin.
  4. ^ . National Railway Museum. Archived from the original on 8 March 2010. Retrieved 24 June 2010. It is now in the National Railway Museum at Shildon
  5. ^ Rolt, L T C (1950). Horseless Carriage. London: Constable. p. 120.
  6. ^ David Bolton (1990). Race Against Time. Methuen. p. 93.
  7. ^ "L.T.C. Rolt Collection". University of Bath.
  8. ^ "Local Heroes". BBC History Magazine. Retrieved 24 June 2010.
  9. ^ In 1958, Rolt gave the first Brunel lecture in the newly renamed Brunel College of Technology, later to become Brunel University (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 June 2012. Retrieved 12 January 2011.
  10. ^ a b c Hughes, William (2013). Historical Dictionary of Gothic Literature. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 212. ISBN 978-0810872288.
  11. ^ Neil Wilson, Shadows in the Attic: A Guide to British supernatural fiction, 1820-1950 British Library, London, 2000. ISBN 0712310746. (p.433-4)
  12. ^ Jack Sullivan, The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and The Supernatural. New York, Viking, 1986. ISBN 0670809020 (p. 355).
  13. ^ "The Newcomen Rolt Prize". Retrieved 9 May 2017.
  14. ^ . University of Bath. Archived from the original on 25 May 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2014.
  15. ^ "L. T. C. (Tom) Rolt (1910–1974)". Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Scheme. 2 June 2011. Retrieved 10 March 2012.
  16. ^ Rogerson, Ian (1994). L.T.C. Rolt: a bibliography. M & M Baldwin. ISBN 0-947712-04-6.
  17. ^ "In praise of... LTC Rolt". Guardian.

External links edit

  • L. T. C. Rolt website

rolt, rolt, redirects, here, locomotive, same, name, rolt, locomotive, british, official, east, india, company, president, surat, governor, bombay, from, 1677, 1681, thomas, rolt, lionel, thomas, caswall, rolt, usually, abbreviated, rolt, february, 1910, 1974,. Tom Rolt redirects here For the locomotive of the same name see Tom Rolt locomotive For the British official of the East India Company President of Surat and Governor of Bombay from 1677 to 1681 see Thomas Rolt Lionel Thomas Caswall Rolt usually abbreviated to Tom Rolt or L T C Rolt 11 February 1910 9 May 1974 1 2 was a prolific English writer and the biographer of major civil engineering figures including Isambard Kingdom Brunel and Thomas Telford He is also regarded as one of the pioneers of the leisure cruising industry on Britain s inland waterways and was an enthusiast for vintage cars and heritage railways He played a pioneering role in both the canal and railway preservation movements Tom RoltBornLionel Thomas Caswall Rolt 1910 02 11 11 February 1910Chester EnglandDied9 May 1974 1974 05 09 aged 64 Resting placeStanley PontlargeOccupationEngineer technical assistant writerNationalityBritishEducationCheltenham CollegePeriod1944 1974GenreIndustrial history Biography Ghost storiesSubjectRailways waterways industrial historyNotable worksNarrow Boat Winterstoke 1954 Railway Adventure Red for Danger Isambard Kingdom Brunel Thomas Telford George and Robert Stephenson The Landscape Trilogy autobiography Notable awardsHon MA Newcastle University Hon MSc University of BathSpouseAngela Orred 1939 1951 Sonia Smith 1952 1974 ChildrenRichard 1953 Timothy 1955 RelativesLionel Rolt father Websitewww wbr ltcrolt wbr org wbr uk Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Cars 1 3 Cressy 1 4 War 1 5 Inland Waterways Association 1 6 Talyllyn Railway 1 7 Author 2 Achievements and honours 3 Bibliography 3 1 Waterways 3 2 Railways 3 3 Biography 3 4 Industrial history 3 5 Autobiography 3 6 Other 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Tom Rolt was born in Chester to a line of Rolts dedicated to hunting and procreation His father Lionel had settled back in Britain in Hay on Wye after working on a cattle station in Australia a plantation in India and joining unsuccessfully in the Klondike Gold Rush of 1898 However Lionel Rolt lost most of his money in 1920 after investing his capital in a company which failed and the family moved to a pair of stone cottages in Stanley Pontlarge in Gloucestershire 3 Rolt studied at Cheltenham College and at 16 took a job learning about steam traction before starting an apprenticeship at the Kerr Stuart locomotive works in Stoke on Trent where his uncle Kyrle Willans was chief development engineer His uncle bought a wooden horse drawn narrow flyboat called Cressy and fitted it with a steam engine Then having discovered the steam made steering through tunnels impossible he replaced that with a Ford Model T engine This was Rolt s introduction to the canal system Cars edit After Kerr Stuart went into liquidation in 1930 Rolt became jobless and turned to vintage sports cars taking part in the veteran run to Brighton and acquiring a succession of cars including a 1924 Alvis 12 50 two seater ducks back which he was to keep for the rest of his life 4 Rolt bought into a motor garage partnership next to the Phoenix public house in Hartley Wintney in Hampshire their breakdown vehicle was an adapted 1911 Rolls Royce Silver Ghost and together with the landlord of the Phoenix Tim Carson and others formed the Vintage Sports Car Club in 1934 He also founded and helped create the Prescott hill climb His 1950 book Horseless Carriage contains a diatribe against the emergence of mass production in the English car industry claiming that mass production methods must develop towards the ultimate end of automatic procreation of machines by machines although by doing so they involve either the supersession of men by machines or a continual expansion of production 5 His preference for traditional craftsmanship helps to explain his subsequent career Cressy edit In 1936 Kyrle Willans bought back Cressy which he had earlier sold and several trips on the waterways convinced Rolt that he wanted a life afloat He persuaded Angela Orred to join him in this idyll She was a young blonde in a white polo necked sweater who had swept into his garage in an Alfa Romeo in 1937 and been caught up in the vintage car scene Rolt bought Cressy from his uncle and set about converting her into a boat that could be lived on the most notable addition being a bath nbsp Chester memorial plaqueBy the summer of 1939 Rolt and Angela decided to defy her father s reluctance and married in secret on 11 July Work on Cressy was completed at Tooley s Boatyard in Banbury and on 27 July Rolt and his wife set off up the Oxford Canal War edit The outbreak of the Second World War intervened and Rolt a pacifist at heart immediately signed up at the Rolls Royce factory at Crewe working on the production line for the Spitfire s Merlin engine He was saved from the tedium of the production line by the offer of a job in a bell foundry at Aldbourne Wiltshire The Rolts headed south in Cressy through storms reaching Banbury a day before the canals were finally frozen over for the winter The following March they negotiated the River Thames in flood and headed up the River Kennet to reach Hungerford near Aldbourne where Rolt worked for more than a year The Rolts first four month cruise was described in a book which Rolt initially called Painted Ship Despite sending the manuscript to many publishers he had to put it aside as it was felt that there was no market for books about canals It was not until a magazine article he wrote came to the attention of the countryside writer H J Massingham that Rolt had the break which led to the book finally being published in December 1944 under the title Narrow Boat Inland Waterways Association edit Narrow Boat was an immediate success with critics and public leading to fan mail arriving at the Rolts boat at Tardebigge where they were then moored Two of the letters Rolt received were from Robert Aickman and Charles Hadfield who were both to figure prominently in the next phase of his life that of a campaigner He invited Aickman and his wife Ray to join them on Cressy and Aickman later described that trip as the best time I have ever spent on the waterways It was on this voyage they decided to form an organisation that a few weeks later in May 1946 at Robert s London flat was named the Inland Waterways Association with Aickman as chairman Hadfield as vice chairman and Rolt as secretary This was a critical period for the waterways which were nationalised in 1947 and faced an uncertain future The traditional life which Rolt had so movingly described was faced with extinction He pioneered direct action on the Stratford upon Avon Canal which stopped British Waterways from closing it organised a hugely successful Inland Waterways Exhibition which started in London but toured the country and proposed the first boat rally at Market Harborough Aickman who had a private income was working full time on the campaign whilst Rolt who had only his writing to support him and was still living aboard Cressy struggled to meet all his commitments Eventually he fell out with Aickman over the latter s insistence that every mile of canal should be saved and in early 1951 Rolt was expelled from the organisation he had inspired By this time also he had decided to bring his life on Cressy to an end and return to his family home in Stanley Pontlarge Angela departed to continue the mobile life joining Billy Smart s Circus Talyllyn Railway edit A letter Rolt had sent to the Birmingham Post in 1950 resulted in the formation of the Talyllyn Railway Preservation Society and he now threw himself into that becoming chairman of the company which operated the railway as a tourist attraction By the time the fateful letter terminating his IWA membership arrived he was already busy issuing and stamping passengers tickets from the little station in Towyn 6 His time at Talyllyn gave rise to the 1953 book Railway Adventure which was the basis of the popular Ealing comedy film The Titfield Thunderbolt Rolt married again to Sonia Smith nee South a former actress During the war she had become one of the amateur boat women who worked the canals and had married a boatman She had been on the council of the IWA They had two sons Tim and Dick and continued to live in Stanley Pontlarge until Rolt s death in 1974 Author edit Rolt became a full time writer in 1939 7 The 1950s were Rolt s most prolific time as an author His best known works were biographies of Isambard Kingdom Brunel which stimulated a revival of interest in a forgotten hero 8 9 George and Robert Stephenson and Thomas Telford His classic study of historic railway accidents Red for Danger became a text book for numerous engineering courses Rolt produced many works about subjects that had not previously been considered the stuff of literature such as civil engineering canals and railways In his later years he produced three volumes of autobiography only one of which was published during his lifetime Rolt also published Sleep No More 1948 a collection of supernatural horror stories featuring ghosts possession and atavism 10 These were modelled after the work of M R James but used industrial settings such as railways instead of James antiquarian settings 10 11 The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural described Sleep No More as An exceptionally original collection of ghost stories Rolt had the special talent of combining folkloric spontaneity with artful sophistication 12 Several of Rolt s stories were anthologised they were also adapted as radio dramas 10 His Winterstoke 1954 is a unique perspective on the development of modern Britain from the Feudal system via the dissolution of the monasteries Achievements and honours edit nbsp The Tom Rolt locomotiveHe was vice president of the Newcomen Society which established a Rolt Prize 13 a trustee and member of the Advisory Council of the Science Museum a member of the York Railway Museum Committee an honorary MA of Newcastle an honorary MSc of the University of Bath 1973 14 and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature He was a joint founder of the Association for Industrial Archaeology which has an annual Rolt lecture He helped to form the Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust A locomotive Tom Rolt on the Talyllyn Railway the world s first preserved railway was named in his memory in 1991 nbsp Plaque at Bridge 164 on the Oxford Canal BanburyRolt observed the changes in society resulting from the industrial scientific revolution In the epilogue to his biography of I K Brunel he writes two years before C P Snow makes similar statements about the split between the arts and sciences Men spoke in one breath of the arts and sciences and to the man of intelligence and culture it seemed essential that he should keep himself abreast of developments in both spheres So long as the artist or the man of culture had been able to advance shoulder to shoulder with engineer and scientist and with them see the picture whole he could share their sense of mastery and confidence and believe wholeheartedly in material progress But so soon as science and the arts became divorced so soon as they ceased to speak a common language confidence vanished and doubts and fears came crowding in He set out these ideas more fully in his book High Horse Riderless a classic of green philosophy A bridge no 164 on the Oxford Canal in Banbury bears his name in commemoration of his book Narrow Boat as does a centre at the boat museum at Ellesmere Port in Cheshire A blue plaque to Rolt was unveiled in at Tooley s Boatyard Banbury on 7 August 2010 as part of the centenary celebrations of his birth 15 Bibliography editRolt s work arranged by topic in rough chronological order includes 16 Waterways edit Narrow Boat 1944 Eyre amp Spottiswoode Green and Silver 1949 George Allen amp Unwin The Inland Waterways of England 1950 George Allen amp Unwin The Thames from Mouth to Source 1951 Navigable Waterways 1969 Longmans rpt 1973 by Hutchinson ISBN 0 09 907800 7 From Sea to Sea The Canal du Midi 1973 Allen Lane Railways edit Lines of Character 1952 Constable with Patrick Whitehouse Railway Adventure 1953 Constable Red for Danger A History of Railway Accidents and Railway Safety 1955 The Bodley Head Patrick Stirling s Locomotives 1964 H Hamilton The Making of a Railway 1971 Evelyn Biography edit Isambard Kingdom Brunel A Biography 1957 Longmans Thomas Telford 1958 Longmans The Cornish Giant The Story of Richard Trevithick Father of the Steam Locomotive 1960 Lutterworth Press George and Robert Stephenson The Railway Revolution 1960 Longmans Great Engineers 1962 G Bell James Watt 1962 Batsford Makers of Britain series Thomas Newcomen The Prehistory of the Steam Engine 1968 David amp Charles Industrial history edit From the period of 1958 onwards Rolt was commissioned by many engineering companies to document their history Many of these are unpublished internal documents only the published works are listed here Holloways of Millbank The First Seventy Five Years 1958 The Dowty Story Part I 1962 Part II 1973 A Hunslet Hundred One Hundred Years of Locomotive Building by the Hunslet Engine Company 1964 Rolt L T C 1965 A Short History of Machine Tools Cambridge Massachusetts USA MIT Press OCLC 250074 Co edition published as Rolt L T C 1965 Tools for the Job a Short History of Machine Tools London B T Batsford LCCN 65080822 The Mechanicals Progress of a Profession 1967 Waterloo Ironworks A History of Taskers of Andover 1809 1968 1969 Victorian Engineering 1970 The Potters Field A History of the South Devon Ball Clay Industry 1974 Autobiography edit Landscape with Machines 1971 Longman first part of autobiography ISBN 0 582 10740 7 Landscape with Canals 1977 second part of autobiography Landscape with Figures 1992 retitled third part of his autobiography The Landscape Trilogy 2001 gathers all three parts of autobiography in one volumeOther edit High Horse Riderless 1947 George Allen amp Unwin personal philosophy Sleep No More 1948 ghost stories Worcestershire 1949 Robert Hale County Books series Horseless Carriage The Motor Car in England 1950 Winterstoke 1954 history of a fictional Midlands town The Clouded Mirror 1955 travel essays 17 The Aeronauts A History of Ballooning 1783 1903 1966 rpt 2006 as The Balloonists The History of the First Aeronauts Two Ghost Stories 1994 Gallery edit nbsp Oxford Canal Banbury Bridge 164 carrying Compton Road over canal nbsp Closeup of bridge parapet showing name Tom Rolt Bridge nbsp Plaque attached to retaining wall of Tom Rolt Bridge on mooring side of canal nbsp Bridge over the Shropshire Union Canal at Chester nbsp Blue Plaque at Tooley s BoatyardSee also edit nbsp United Kingdom portal nbsp Transport portalCanals of the United Kingdom History of the British canal systemReferences edit His death was recorded in The Times No 59086 11 May 1974 Slater J N ed July 1974 Notes and News Death of L T C Rolt Railway Magazine London IPC Transport Press Ltd 120 879 364 ISSN 0033 8923 Ian Mackersey 1985 Tom Rolt and the Cressy Years London M amp M Baldwin Vehicles of all descriptions welcome National Railway Museum Archived from the original on 8 March 2010 Retrieved 24 June 2010 It is now in the National Railway Museum at Shildon Rolt L T C 1950 Horseless Carriage London Constable p 120 David Bolton 1990 Race Against Time Methuen p 93 L T C Rolt Collection University of Bath Local Heroes BBC History Magazine Retrieved 24 June 2010 In 1958 Rolt gave the first Brunel lecture in the newly renamed Brunel College of Technology later to become Brunel University The First Brunel Lecture PDF Archived from the original PDF on 15 June 2012 Retrieved 12 January 2011 a b c Hughes William 2013 Historical Dictionary of Gothic Literature Rowman amp Littlefield p 212 ISBN 978 0810872288 Neil Wilson Shadows in the Attic A Guide to British supernatural fiction 1820 1950 British Library London 2000 ISBN 0712310746 p 433 4 Jack Sullivan The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and The Supernatural New York Viking 1986 ISBN 0670809020 p 355 The Newcomen Rolt Prize Retrieved 9 May 2017 Honorary Graduates 1966 to 1988 University of Bath Archived from the original on 25 May 2016 Retrieved 27 April 2014 L T C Tom Rolt 1910 1974 Oxfordshire Blue Plaques Scheme 2 June 2011 Retrieved 10 March 2012 Rogerson Ian 1994 L T C Rolt a bibliography M amp M Baldwin ISBN 0 947712 04 6 In praise of LTC Rolt Guardian External links editL T C Rolt website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title L T C Rolt amp oldid 1184121248, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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