For centuries, the history of road travel in England and Wales has been shrouded in tales of hardship, discomfort, and danger. Yet, emerging research now dismantles long-held assumptions, shedding light on the transformative impact of the turnpike toll road system during the eighteenth century. A comprehensive study analyzing nearly 100 travelers’ diaries from the mid-1600s to 1820 reveals that turnpikes were not merely administrative innovations but catalysts for dramatically improved, safer, and more efficient road travel well before the nineteenth century’s celebrated engineering milestones.
The turnpike system, originally established through Acts of Parliament starting in 1663, aimed to address the dire state of the country’s roads. Prior to these reforms, maintenance fell largely to local parishes, which were perpetually underfunded and ill-equipped to manage the increasing demands of travel and commerce. Turnpike trusts—managed by local gentry and community leaders—were empowered to collect tolls, reinvest these revenues, and oversee dedicated road maintenance on small stretches. Over time, these trusts collectively managed the majority of inter-urban highways, creating a decentralized yet effective system for road improvement.
The pioneering study, led by researchers from UC Irvine and Cambridge University, harnessed advanced mapping technologies alongside textual analysis to digitize and evaluate nearly 350,000 miles of documented journeys. By applying a scoring system to descriptions of road quality recorded in diaries spanning nearly two centuries, the study provides an unprecedented empirical assessment of road user experience. Maintaining rigorous technical standards, the researchers differentiated between turnpike and non-turnpike roads, allowing for a sophisticated comparative analysis glaringly absent in prior scholarship.
Perhaps most notably, the data indicate that road quality witnessed substantial improvement by 1760, markedly earlier than the previously assumed dawn of the nineteenth century innovations typified by engineers such as Telford and McAdam. Roads in the 1760-1820 period were found to be 78% more likely to be classified as “at least acceptable” compared to the earlier epoch, an indication of widespread and systemic enhancements in road infrastructure. This improvement is believed to even understate the true progression, as travelers’ increasing expectations likely raised the benchmark for satisfactory road conditions over time.
The qualitative insights derived from diaries offer nuance often absent in purely quantitative studies. Travelers expressed vivid dissatisfaction with pre-turnpike conditions using terms such as “execrable,” “insufferable,” and “totally impassable,” while improved roads inspired descriptors like “smooth,” “well-pitched,” and “as garden gravel.” These evocative accounts vividly illustrate the evolution from perilous, unpleasant travel to journeys characterized by comfort, safety, and reliability.
Speed, while an important metric in historical transportation narratives, emerged as a secondary concern for users who prioritized comfort and safety. The shift from 77% of journeys undertaken on horseback prior to 1760 to a dominance of wheeled vehicles by 1820 coincided with a doubling of stagecoach speeds from 4 to 8 miles per hour and a significant increase in private carriage travel speeds as well. However, travelers’ diaries consistently highlighted their desire to avoid discomfort and hazards over simply arriving more quickly, underscoring a complex interplay between infrastructure improvements and user priorities.
The regional impact of turnpikes was profound and equitable. Areas historically plagued by substandard roads—namely the Southwest, Wales, and the North of England—experienced the most significant gains. Before turnpiking, these regions were notorious for roads that were impassable or edge cases for wheeled transport. The extension and maintenance of turnpike toll roads in these neglected areas fostered regional economic integration and mobility, underpinning burgeoning industrial activity in the North and enabling affluent tourists to explore scenic regions such as Wales and the Lake District.
An often understated but critical element in the success of the turnpike system was public acceptance. Despite inevitable opposition manifesting in isolated toll riots, the research indicates that drivers and riders largely embraced toll roads due to the tangible improvements they delivered. Unlike contemporary skepticism surrounding road tolls, eighteenth-century travelers recognized tolls as modest contributions relative to the high costs of travel borne by private carriage owners and stagecoach operators. Moreover, the system’s transparency and dedication of funds to maintenance engendered trust and community support.
From a technical perspective, turnpike roads were often engineered using local materials and construction methods tailored to specific geographies and traffic demands. For instance, roads constructed with flint or gravel not only provided improved load-bearing characteristics but also enhanced drainage and surface durability, mitigating problems of mud, ruts, and flood-induced impassability. These improvements contributed directly to vehicle speed stability and reduced wear on horses and carriages, reducing operating costs and expanding access to distant markets and social engagements.
The diary evidence also challenges the conception that nineteenth-century road engineers alone initiated dramatic infrastructural transformations. Instead, eighteenth-century turnpikes laid the groundwork by establishing standards for basic road quality—filling potholes, clearing stones, and repairing ruts—that met travelers’ expectations without excessive expenditure. The groundwork was thus fertile for the later innovations by Telford and McAdam, which built upon a now-established network of fundamentally improved roads.
Importantly, the improved road network facilitated a wave of social and economic change integral to the Industrial Revolution. Reduced freight rates lowered barriers to the movement of goods, enabling increased internal trade and fostering regional specialization. Simultaneously, safer and more comfortable roads allowed faster and more reliable movement of people and ideas, supporting the circulation of capital and innovation critical to industrial growth.
The diaries that informed this research encompass a wide cross-section of travelers, including notable figures such as Daniel Defoe, Anne Lister, philanthropist Jonas Hanway, and travel writer Celia Fiennes. This diversity enriches the dataset, offering perspectives from locals and foreigners, elites and professionals, thereby ensuring the findings reflect lived realities rather than narrow elite experiences.
In conclusion, this meticulously detailed historical and technical investigation reasserts the significance of turnpikes as a vital infrastructural innovation in pre-railway Britain. By elevating the voices of road users—those who directly experienced the changing quality of roads—the study situates turnpikes not only as engines of economic progress but as enablers of human mobility and societal connectivity. The legacy of eighteenth-century turnpikes, often overshadowed by later engineering feats, deserves renewed recognition as a foundational chapter in Britain’s transport history.
Subject of Research: The impact of the turnpike toll road system on road quality, travel speed, comfort, and safety in England and Wales between 1660 and 1820.
Article Title: A better ride: New evidence on travel and the quality of roads in England and Wales, 1660-1820
News Publication Date: April 8, 2026
Web References:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0014498326000094?via%3Dihub
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eeh.2026.101748
References:
D. 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
Image Credits: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Keywords: turnpike roads, eighteenth-century England, Wales, road travel, transportation history, toll roads, road quality, travel diaries, Industrial Revolution, infrastructure improvement, transportation speed, travel safety

