Thrilled that Vehicles to Vaccines has been published by APS Books.
The book is a quest to discover what happened to British manufacturing in the decades after the Second World War. People say that we don’t make things any more. Is this true?
I try to answer this question by exploring what happened in manufacturing sectors and to major manufacturing companies. I seek out manufacturing heroes, and try to map out where we are as the twenty-first century gets underway.
In 1951, the Festival of Britain was celebrating British manufacturing; we built ships, wonderful aircraft like the Viscount and cars a plenty. Seventy years later a British company and a British University teamed up to produce a vaccine that saved thousands of lives from Covid.
It has been a period of astonishing change, from a third of the working population employed in manufacturing to now just one tenth. Britain now ranks eighth among the world’s top manufacturing nations.
This book seeks to explore what has changed: the story of British manufacturing from steam trains to semiconductors; from cotton mills to 3D printing; from ocean liners to satellites.
The book is the sequel to How Britain Shaped the Manufacturing World which explored the story of British manufacturing through the prism of the Great Exhibition of 1851
It is now available to buy on Amazon.
The image was kindly provided by Hone-All Precision Ltd and is of their Joes & Shipman machine, with upgrades, still in use.
