Product description
The third monograph in a series deals with Czech motoring and its development up to the times when it began to develop in our country. This volume focuses on motoring associations in the Czech lands and how they integrated into the everyday life of motorcyclists and car drivers and how they advocated for their rights and at the same time took care of their comfort. If the 19th century is called the century of steam, the 20th century must be called the century of gasoline. Cyclists, and after them motorcyclists and car drivers, freed themselves from the dictates of timetables and returned long-distance transport to the roads and highways, which, however, had in the meantime been usurped by the rural population. As soon as cyclists were accepted, motorists appeared on noisy machines that unnerved farm animals, especially horses. The increasing attacks on individualistic travelers led motorists, at first especially car drivers, to establish associations to amplify their voice in a society represented by monarchs on horseback. Even before motoring became a social phenomenon, members of car clubs fought for the smooth coexistence of motorists and drivers and against numerous restrictions from the authorities.
Softcover, format 16.5 × 24 cm, 346 pages
Published by the Technical Museum in Brno