Emma Robinson-Tomsett
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Ordering the berth
The spaces of journeying
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Train and ship space was divided according to passenger class. In the earliest decades of the railways entire trains were designated as one class only, a practice echoed across Europe. The division of train and ship space created a hierarchy of spatial quality. Following their division into classes, journey spaces were further divided by functionality although the variety of spatial functionality was higher on ships than on trains owing to the greater amount of space available on the former. These spaces were given meaning partly through the function and name assigned to them by ship and rail companies. Steerage accommodation was particularly divided according to gender. On nineteenth-century emigrant vessels journeying to Australia, single women were berthed in their own compartment. Unaccompanied married women were also berthed with these women. Some women took practical action to make their living spaces homely.

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Women, travel and identity

Journeys by rail and sea, 1870–1940

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