MASSIVE SAVINGS JUST FOR YOU!
VIEW DEALS

Capital And Steam Power



Capital and Steam Power is a book that was written by John Lord in 1923. It is about the relationship between capital and steam power in the 1800s. Lord's book is based on the Boultori and Watt papers, which were kept in Birmingham. Lord's book is considered to be the best short account of the significance of this classic engineering partnership. Tawney and Ashton both reviewed Lord's book and bot... more details
Key Features:
  • Detailed account of the relationship between capital and steam power in the 1800s
  • Based on the Boultori and Watt papers, which are considered to be the best short account of the significance of this classic engineering partnership
  • Reviewed by Tawney and Ashton, who both found it to be scholarly and intelligent


R680.00 from Loot.co.za

price history Price history

   BP = Best Price   HP = Highest Price

Current Price: R680.00

loading...

tagged products icon   Similarly Tagged Products

Description
Capital and Steam Power is a book that was written by John Lord in 1923. It is about the relationship between capital and steam power in the 1800s. Lord's book is based on the Boultori and Watt papers, which were kept in Birmingham. Lord's book is considered to be the best short account of the significance of this classic engineering partnership. Tawney and Ashton both reviewed Lord's book and both found it to be scholarly and intelligent.

When it appeared in 1923, John Lord's Capital and Steam Power 1750-1800 was the first book to be based on the voluminous Boultori and Watt papers in Birmingham since the hey-day of Samuel Smiles. Although Lord's conclusions have been modified and corrected on various points, this book still remains the best short account of the significance of this classic engineering partnership which bulks so large in the history of technology and of the Industrial Revolution in Britain. Mr. Lord's Capital and Steam Power 1750-1800 is an important contribution to economic history ...His introductory sketch of economic conditions from 1700 to 1750 and his concluding summary of the main results of the developments which he has described, without having the same novelty as his central theme, are scholarly and intelligent. R. H. Tawney, Economica, February, 1924 His study of the application of steam to industry is a useful piece of research. T. S. Ashton, The Economic Journal, December, 1924
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.