Chronology

Full chronology version

1900

George Eastman introduces the 'Brownie' camera. Simple in design and inexpensive to buy, this camera heralds the concept of taking snapshots.

1900

The population of Las Vegas, the United States’ most popular gaming cities, is just 22!

1900

The Prinzessin Victoria Louise is built exclusively for luxury cruising; the first of its kind. She is designed by general manager of Hamburg-America Line, Albert Ballin.

1900

The Polytechnic Touring Association emerges as an organisation within the Polytechnic, offering cheaper travel to less affluent customers.

1900

America has fewer than 10,000 hotels across the country.

Cycle Camping. The Official Organ of the Association of Cycle Campers, March 1906

1901

Thomas Hiram Holding forms the world's first camping club, the Association of Cycle Campers. This eventually becomes the Camping and Caravanning Club.

1901

New Zealand becomes the first country to officially dedicate a government department to tourism. The 'Department of Tourist and Health Resorts' is born.

[Front Cover - The Excursionist, No.4 May 3, 1904]

1902

The Thomas Cook Excursionist periodical, which has published details of trips offered and advertisements for hotels, clothing and transport since 1851, publishes its last issue. It is replaced by the Traveller's Gazette magazine, which publishes until 1939.

1902

Leap-the-Dips, the world’s oldest operating roller coaster, is built at Lakemont Park, Altoona.

1902

Crater Lake National Park is established in Oregon, USA.

1902 - 1904

Captain Robert Falcon Scott becomes the first explorer to see the dry valleys of the Arctic.

1903

Henry Lunn organises the first winter sports package tours of the Alps with the Public School Alpine Sports Club.

1903

Wind Cave National Park is established in South Dakota, USA.

1903 - 1906

Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen traverses the Northwest Passage.

Illuminated Towers, Luna Park

1903 - 1947

Coney Island’s famous theme park, Luna Park is opened by Frederic Thompson and Elmer Dundy, attracting 40,000 patrons on its opening evening. The park is nicknamed ‘Electric Eden’ because of the 250,000 lights illuminating the domes, towers and spires. The park burns down in 1947, but is re-created and re-opened in 2010.

Grand Theatre, Blackpool

1904

Grand Theatre in Blackpool is built.

1904

2,151,570 miles of rural public roads exist in the US, but 93% of these are dirt tracks.

Miniature Railway, Dreamland

1904 - 1911

Dreamland amusement park is opened by Senator William Reynolds on Coney Island. It is the biggest of the three original Coney Island amusement parks and is destroyed by fire in 1911.

1905

The 'Pleasure Beach' name is first advertised in Blackpool.

1905

Der Wandervogel [The Migratory Bird] organisation is formed in Berlin to give access to mountaineering for the working classes.

1906

The Antiquities Act is passed in the US, making it possible for the President to declare landmarks or objects as national monuments.

1906

John Fletcher Dodd’s Socialist Holiday Camp opens in Caister near Great Yarmouth, Norfolk. It offers holidays to the working men of London.

1906

Devils Tower in Wyoming is declared by President Theodore Roosevelt as the first National Monument.

The Story of Mesa Verde National Park

1906

48,966 acres of land are set aside by Congress to create Mesa Verde National Park, Colorado. The park contains some of the best preserved prehistoric remains in America.

1906

The Ritz in London is opened. The hotel is the first steel framed building of significance in London and includes bathrooms for every room, double glazing, a ventilation system and brass beds.

1907

Ellsworth Statler opens his first permanent hotel, Hotel Buffalo in New York, offering rooms for a very cheap price, which led to the slogan “a room and a bath for a dollar and a half”.

1907

The first Scout camp takes place on Brownsea Island, near Poole, England.

The Plaza, New York Badge

1907

New York City Plaza Hotel opens. Amenities on offer to guests include telephones and pincushions.

1907

The Caravan Club of Great Britain and Ireland is founded by a group of wealthy men inspired by Dr William Gordon Stables and his touring caravan.

The Camper's Handbook

1908

Thomas Hiram Holding publishes The Campers Handbook.

Ford Model T photographed in Salt lake City, 1910

1908

Henry Ford begins production of the Model T 'Tin Lizzie' motor car, making automobile ownership a reality for the 'average' American for the first time.

1908

The first Gideon Bible appears in the Superior Hotel, Montana.

1909

100,000 Americans now own an automobile.

1909

The first Radisson Hotel is built in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Founded by heiress Edna Dickerson, the hotel is named after the 17th century French explorer Pierre-Esprit Radisson.

1909

The first cinema opens in Brighton.

1909 - 1911

Polish inventor Kazimierz Proszynski builds the Aeroscope, the first hand-held operated film camera.

1910

The Goring is built in Belgravia, London. Still owned and operated by the Goring family, the 69 rooms boast en-suite facilities and central heating.

1910

The Ritz in Madrid is inaugurated, at the behest of King Alphonse XIII.

1910

The American Hotel Protective Association is formed in Chicago by 60 hotel operators. Its purpose is to protect hotels from check forgers, undesirable lodgers and criminal activity.

1910

Glacier National Park is established in Montana, USA.

Machu Picchu in the Peruvian Andes, thought to be the last retreat of the Incas in their flight from the invading Spanish. It was rediscovered in 1911 by an American.

1911

Machu Picchu is officially discovered by the first Westerner, American Hiram Bingham. It eventually develops into a popular tourist destination.

Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen

1911 - 1912

Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen becomes the first man to reach the South Pole.

1911

Dreamland amusement park on Coney Island is destroyed by a fire. The fire is caused by renovation work underway to allow the park to compete with the more popular Luna Park. An electrical fault on the ride "Hell's Gate" causes the illuminations to explode and land on a a kicked-over bucket of hot pitch and the park swiftly goes up in flames. Many of the surrounding buildings burn down and 60 animals featured in the amusements are killed, despite rescue attempts.

The Midget City

1911

Samuel Gumpertz opens the Dreamland Circus Sideshow at Coney Island. A collection of human oddities are displayed such as midgets, giants, bearded ladies, fat ladies, skeleton men, albinos, legless men and women, pinheads and even a Bentoc head-hunting chief.

1911

The Municipal Bath House is constructed on Coney Island. The bath house comprises of changing rooms and 12,000 lockers which can be rented from fifteen to twenty-five cents, providing cheap conveniences for working class families.

Blackpool's New Illuminations (1936)

1912

The first Blackpool Illuminations are staged on Princess Parade in May to mark the first Royal visit to Blackpool. Princess Louise officially opens a new section of promenade that is decorated with approximately 10,000 bulbs. The event is such a success that the council stage the light show every year.

1912

Local legislation restricts the number of beach stalls allowed on the sands of Weston-Super-Mare to 50 due to crowding in previous years.

1912

Stenson Cooke, secretary of the AA, suggests using the star rating of brandy tasting to rate hotels, implementing the 3-star hotel classification system.

1912 - 1917

Commercial radio broadcasts now operate from New York.

1913

The Casino is built in Blackpool for a cost of £13,352.

1913

The Lincoln Highway is formally opened on 31 October. It forms one of the first transcontinental highways in the United States, running from Times Square, New York to Lincoln Park, San Francisco and is 3,389 miles long.

1914

Blackpool in Lancashire, the world’s first working class seaside resort, has around four million visitors every summer.

1914 - 1918

Britain declares war on Germany on 4 August 1914 beginning the First World War. Approximately 38 million people die in one of the deadliest conflicts in human history.

1914

Bournemouth lifts its ban on Sunday trains, allowing more working class patrons to travel for the day to its beaches.

1915

The prehistoric site of Stonehenge is auctioned off in a public auction. Cecil Chubb purchases it for £6,600 and later gifts it to the British government.

1915

In February, German declares an area encompassing the entire coastline of Britain as a war zone. Ships within this area are now liable to search and attack.

1915

The German Embassy in New York releases a statement, published in 50 American newspapers, warning against travel on the Lusitania's return voyage to Great Britain. The notice read: "TRAVELLERS intending to embark on the Atlantic voyage are reminded that a state of war exists between Germany and her allies and Great Britain and her allies; that the zone of war includes the waters adjacent to the British Isles; that, in accordance with formal notice given by the Imperial German Government, vessels flying the flag of Great Britain, or any of her allies, are liable to destruction in those waters and that travellers sailing in the war zone on the ships of Great Britain or her allies do so at their own risk."

September 13, 1907: Lusitania arriving in New York on her maiden voyage

1915

The RMS Lusitania is torpedoed and sunk by a German U-Boat off the coast of southern Ireland, resulting in the death of 1,198 passengers and crew. The resulting British propaganda worked to help turn public opinion in the United States against Germany, as over 100 of the fatalities were American citizens, contributing to the United States declaration of war against Germany in 1917.

1915

The South Bay Bathing Pool at Scarborough, England is opened, making it one of the earliest lidos in the UK. Lidos create a safe and luxurious swimming environment for holiday makers and ensure swimming and participation in water-themed entertainment continues even when the sea is rough.

Rocky Mountain National Park

1915

Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado is established.

1915

The first modern British passport is issued. It includes a description of the passport holder, a photograph and is required to be renewed every two years.

1915 - Present

Universal Studios founder Carl Laemmle begins charging tourists 25 cents to tour the studios and watch the filming. A chicken boxed lunch is available for a nickel extra. This is stopped soon afterwards due to the noise, but Universal Studios theme park is opened in 1964. Parks in Orlando (1990), Japan (2001) and Singapore (2011) follow. In 2014, approximately 40.1 million guests visited Universal Studios theme parks, making it the third-largest amusement park operator in the world.

1916

The original 'Nathan’s Famous' opens on the corners of Surf and Stillwell Avenues on Coney Island. This small hotdog stand goes on to become an iconic American food brand.

Bath Abbey and Grand Pump Room

1916

Field Marshall Viscount French opens the latest additions to the Royal Baths in the city of Bath, which now offers deep and reclining baths, a selection of douches, natural vapour baths and a room especially equipped to allow for the inhalation of the radioactive gases given off by the Springs.

1916

President Woodrow Wilson creates the National Park Service, an agency that manages all US national parks.

1916

One million automobiles are now on US roads.

1916

The Haleakalā National Park is established in Hawaii, USA.

1916

The Hawaii Volcanoes National Park is established in Hawaii, USA.

1916

The Lassen Volcanic National Park is established in California, USA.

1916

Congress pass the Federal-Aid Road Act of 1916 to create the Federal-Aid Highway Programme, but progress halts as America enters the First World War.

1917

The American Hotel Protective Association is renamed the American Hotel Association and branches out into legislation, education and hotel promotion.

1917

Denali National Park is established in Alaska, USA.

1917

President Woodrow Wilson requests Congress ratify a declaration of war against Germany. Congress agree on 4 April and the United States of America enters the First World War.

1918

The American Travel Control Act of 22 May 1918 permits the president, when the United States are at war, to proclaim a passport requirement. President Wilson issues this on 18 August 1918, three months before the end of the First World War, but the passport requirement lingered until 3 March 1921.

1918

The First World War comes to an end on the 11 November 1918.

1919

John Miller patents his design for the underfriction roller coaster, revolutionising roller coaster design and allowing for higher drops and faster speeds.

1919

The first direct air crossing of the North Atlantic is completed by Captain John Alcock DFC and Lieutenant A. Whitten Brown, between Newfoundland and Ireland. The journey takes 15 hours and 57 minutes between 14 and 15 June.

1919

On 10 November the first item of international airmail is carried by Transport and Travel on flight DH4A G-EAHF. An Airmail pennant is pinned to the rudder.

1919

Thomas Cook is the first travel agency to offer pleasure trips by air.

1919

Acadia National Park is established in Maine, USA.

1919

Grand Canyon National Park is established in Arizona, USA.

1919

Zion National Park is established in Utah, USA.

1919

The Italian State Tourist Office is created to help facilitate domestic and international tourism.

1919

Barcelona opens a Ritz. The bathrooms boast hot and cold running water.

1919

Conrad Hilton buys The Mobley, a hotel in Cisco, Texas, and the history of the famous hotel chain begins.

1920

Prohibition introduced in the United States.

1920

1.2 billion passengers travel around the US by railroad.

1920 - 1923

The British government pass the 'Railways Act' (1921), relinquishing their war time control of the railway by helping to create 'The Big Four' mainline companies; GWR (Great Western Railway), LMS (London, Midland and Scottish railway), LNER (London and North Eastern Railway) and Southern Railways (South of London). The Act comes into effect on 1 January 1923.

1920 - 1928

Numbers of American tourists visiting Europe increases rapidly.

1920 - 1929

Leading American department stores such as Marshall Field's, Wanamaker's and Bullock's capitalise on leisure travel mobility and host American Express travel booths instore.

1920 - 1938

The average miles clocked by American tourists increases from 67,639,906,000 to 228,775,184,740. Around 83% can be attributed to the increased use of automobiles.

East Coast of Florida. America's Winter Vacation Land

1920 - Present

Americans from northern and mid-western states begin travelling to Florida and warmer southern states for the winter. They are nicknamed "snowbirds".

Plymouth Rock

1921

"Plymouth Rock" is returned to its original position on the shoreline in Plymouth, Massachusetts and established as a tourist attraction, after being moved around Plymouth since its identification in 1741.

Postcards of Hot Springs National Park, Arkansas [Trip to Hot Springs, Arkansas, 22 October 1940]

1921

Hot Springs National Park is established in Arkansas, USA.

1921

The Bureau of Public Records provide funding for paved two-lane interstate highways. This is made possible by the Federal Highway Act of 1921.

1921

The Railways Act 1921 groups all existing UK railways into the 'big four' companies: Great Western Railway; London, Midland and Scottish Railway; London and North Eastern railway and Southern Railway.

1922

Arnold Lunn, the son of Henry Lunn, invents the slalom skiing race, further commercialising and developing the sport.

A Thomas Cook safari in 1951

1922

Thomas Cook & Son organises the first full tour of the length of the African continent. It lasts five months and includes a month long safari.

"That was a good dive!" The spectators around a Swimming Pool at Prestatyn Holiday Camp were too engrossed in the Boys' Diving Competition to notice the cameraman.

1922

Prestatyn, North Wales opens a lido outdoor pool on the seafront to encourage holiday makers.

1922

The British Broadcasting Corporation is formed and commercial radio programming begins.

1923

The Big Dipper in Blackpool opens. The world famous roller coaster costs £25,000 to build.

Open Air Bath, South Shore, Blackpool

1923

Blackpool spends £75,000 opening a lido outdoor pool. It is 376ft by 172ft (116m x 53m).

1923

Coco Chanel returns from a holiday cruise around the South of Cannes with a sunburn and inadvertently starts a new trend for tanned skin and sunbathing.

1923

La Mamounia opens in Marrakech, Morocco. Designed by architects Marchisio and Prost and including some beautiful gardens, the hotel is frequented by Winston Churchill.

1923

"Human Fly" Harry F. Young is hired to climb the Hotel Martinique in New York to promote a silent movie, "Safety Last." Young, wearing a placard saying “Safety Last” loses his grip and sadly falls nine storeys to his death in front of a huge crowd.

1924

The American Hotel Association now covers multiple states including Washington, Montana, Ohio, Illinois, Mississippi, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Delaware, New York, Pennsylvania, California, and New Hampshire. Rooms cost five cents.

1924

Thomas Cook and Son is incorporated as Thomas Cook and Son Ltd.

1925

The first 'motels' appear in California.

1925

The first hotel to officially carry the Hilton name opens in Dallas, Texas. As air conditioning has yet to be invented, no guest rooms face the western sun.

1925

The first commercial radio broadcasters are now on air.

1926

Thomas Cook and Son opens its new headquarters in Berkeley Street, London.

1926

Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen, American Lincoln Ellsworth and Italian engineer Umberto Nobile sight the North Pole in the airship Norge.

1926

Sir Frances Towle founds the 'Come to Britain' movement, to encourage tourism. London is a special focus, particularly the roles to be played by the private sector, such as hotels.

1926

Shenandoah National Park is established in Virginia, USA.

A Guide Book to Highway 66

1926

The famous US Route 66 is opened on 11 November. It runs from Chicago, Illinois to Santa Monica, California, covering a distance of 2,448 miles. US 66 becomes a major route for those migrating to the West of the United States.

1927

Hotel Statler, Boston becomes the first hotel to offer guests free radio programmes, private baths and free morning newspapers.

You'll never forget your ride on the Cyclone!

1927

The world famous Cyclone roller coaster opens on Coney Island.

1927

Cold running water and air-conditioning in public areas are two of the new features for the Hilton at Waco, Texas.

The Shrine of Democracy, Mt. Rushmore National Memorial

1927 - 1941

Gutzon Borglum and 400 workers begin the long project of carving the Mount Rushmore monument. After his death in 1941 his son, Lincoln Borgum, finishes it in that year.

1928

The two surviving Cook brothers sell Thomas Cook and Son to Compagnie Internationale des Wagons-Lits. It becomes a subsidiary of the international hotel and travel logistics company, which also operates the Orient Express.

1928

The Peninsula Hong Kong opens to the public. The hotel holds the world record for the largest single orders of Rolls-Royce cars. The company expands across Asia, Europe and the United States, with 10 hotels in operation.

1928

Playland in Rye, New York opens. Designed by a New York architectural firm, under direction of Frank Darling, it is the first fully planned amusement park built from the ground up.

1928

The 'Flying Scotsman' locomotive completes the first non-stop service between London and Edinburgh, reducing total journey time to just 8 hours.

1928

Bryce Canyon National Park is established in Utah, USA.

1929

Arches National Park is established in Utah, USA.

1929

Western Hotels are formed through a merger with 17 hotels in the Pacific Northwest.

1929

Grand Teton National Park is established in Wyoming, USA.

1929

The 'Travel Association of Great Britain and Ireland' is founded in April with the aim to increase both tourism to the United Kingdom and the demand for British goods.

1929

Professor Sir Frederick Ogilvie publishes his first economic study of international travel to and from Britain. It estimates that 692,000 people from overseas visited Britain during 1929, while approximately one million British residents travelled abroad.

1929 - 1936

Financial pressures of the Great Depression cause 88% of American hotels to go into some form of receivership.

1930

The '99' Flake, a smaller version of the traditional Flake bar, is produced by Cadbury especially for ice creams. It leads to the launch of the '99' ice cream, which quickly gains popularity at seaside destinations in the UK.

1930 - 1939

Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia organise cheap holidays on a huge scale for party members and youth members, creating a link between political ideas and mass tourism.

1930

Bertram Hutchings Caravans Ltd launches the 'Winchester' caravan, dubbed the 'Rolls Royce of Caravans'.

Touraide - Lake Michigan. Conoco Travel Bureau, Denver Colorado. Prepared especially for Evelyn B. Fronell

1930

First 'Touraide' published, offering customers a personalised selection of maps and information for self-determined road trips across America.

1930

American Airways, Inc is created from Aviation Corporation airline subsidiaries.

1930

Carlsbad Caverns National Park is established in New Mexico, US.

1930 - 1939

The Bureau of Public Records help state and local governments create as many road-building projects as possible to provide jobs during the Great Depression.

1931 - Present

The State of Nevada legalises commercial casino gambling. The first gaming licence is issued to Mayme Stocker for her Northern Club, a hotel and bar that had been operating since 1920 in Las Vegas. The club is still in operation as La Bayou. Over the next 70 years, approximately 76 casino hotels have been built in Las Vegas.

1931

Originally opened in 1927, the Riverside Hotel in Reno becomes famous in 1931 for divorces and gambling after favourable legislation was passed in Nevada for both. There are now approximately 21 casinos in ‘The biggest little city in the world’.

1931

The second Waldorf-Astoria hotel opens on Park Avenue, and is the tallest and largest hotel in the world.

1931

Captain Harry Warner establishes Hayling Island's first holiday camp at Northney, beginning his successful involvement with seaside resorts.

The Romance of Scotland

1931

The National Trust for Scotland for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty (often known as just 'The National Trust for Scotland') is established and given statutory power to preserve and run historic sites, landscapes and nature reserves in Scotland.

First escorted tour by air to Switzerland: Photograph of the passengers

1932

Polytechnic's first escorted tour by air to Switzerland leaves on 14 May 1932.

1932

The Anspach Travel Bureau is founded by brothers Herman and Robert Anspach. It specialises in up-scale leisure travel.

1932

Cunard Line introduce 'deferred payment plans' to make leisure travel via steamship more affordable for teachers and office workers.

1933

Prohibition repealed in the United States.

1933

Hastings and St Leonards open an amphitheatre-style outdoor lido in June to cater for demand in outdoor bathing. It is 330 ft by 90 ft.

Death Valley. Sunshine and Scenery. Furnace Creek Inn, Furnace Creek Ranch

1933 - 1937

On 11 February 1933 an area of 2,500 square miles in Death Valley, California is made a national monument. A further 478 square miles are added on 26 March 1937.

1933 - 1939

The National Socialist political regime in Germany sees an increase in travel opportunities aimed at the masses through state organised recreation.

1933 - 1942

The Civilian Conservation Corps is founded as part of the New Deal program. The mandate expands from conserving forestry and agricultural areas to building recreational areas in state parks.

1934

The merger between Cunard Line and White Star Line is completed on 10 May 1934.

Seventy-five years of achievement, seventy-five years of progress

1934

Pullman celebrate their Diamond Jubilee.

1934

American Airways, Inc becomes American Airlines, Inc.

America's first diesel-powered steamline train was a zephyr!

1934

Burlington reveals the Pioneer Zephyr, America's first diesel-powered streamlined passenger train.

1934

Hotel Statler, Boston installs the first central system to control air conditioning in every public room.

The Flying Scotsman

1934

The 'Flying Scotsman' becomes the first locomotive in the UK to be recorded reaching 100mph.

1934

Everglades National Park is established in Florida, USA.

1934

Great Smoky Mountains National Park is established in North Carolina and Tennessee, USA.

1935

Santa Claus Town opens in Santa Claus, Indiana. This park features attractions based on the Santa Claus legend and is often cited as the first 'true' theme park in the world.

1935

The US Congress pass the Historic Sites Act, which outlines programmes for research and inventory of historic sites.

1936

American Airlines, Inc becomes the first airline to fly the Douglas DC-3 as a commercial service.

1936

The maiden voyage of the R.M.S. Queen Mary carries 2,000 passengers between Southampton and New York, taking only five days to cover the distance.

1936

The first chair lift is installed at a ski resort in Sun Valley, Idaho, US.

1936

Billy Butlin opens his first holiday camp in Skegness. Even this first camp is enormous, accommodating over 2,000 guests, and offers a week’s holiday for a week’s pay.

1937

The Marriot family begin delivering boxed lunches from their famous Hot Shoppes chain to the passengers at Hoover Airport; debuting the concept of in-flight catering.

1937

Hotel brand Sheraton is founded in Springfield, Massachusetts by Ernest and Robert Henderson. Within two years, they begin expanding, buying three hotels in Boston and several properties from Maine to Florida.

1938

The Holidays with Pay Act is introduced by the British Government, giving workers the right to one weeks' paid holiday a year.

1938

Steam locomotive 'The Mallard' breaks the world speed record for a steam locomotive, reaching 126mph.

1938

Olympic National Park is established in Washington, USA.

Skiing in the 1930s

1938

Sestriere, one of the first single-purpose ski resorts, is built in the Northwest Italian Alps by Giovanni Agnelli, the head of Fiat Automobiles. By 1938 it has two hotel towers and a lift network that provides access to 74 downhill runs. Ski holidays had been dependent on local village communities with the capacity for summer tourists, but this caused development of ski resorts all over the world with every aspect of a skiers journey and holiday operated by the resort.

1939

Billy Butlin opens his second holiday camp in Clacton.

1939

The US tourist trade is valued at $5.5 billion, with the average American spending 7% of their annual wages on leisure travel.

1939

Quality Courts motels are formed by seven motel operators.

1939

'American Airlines, Inc' begins trading on the New York Stock Exchange.

1939 - 1945

Germany invades Poland on 1 September 1939, beginning the Second World War. It is estimated that approximately 75 million people die as a result.

1939 - 1945

As World War II breaks out, Billy Butlin’s holiday camps in Clacton and Skegness are taken over by the military. Butlin also gives up his new camp in Yorkshire in 1940, plus two others in Ayr and Pwllheli, but buys them back from the government after the war. After 1945, Butlin re-opens five holiday camps almost immediately.

1939 - 1945

Passports are once more required by US citizens under the Travel Control Act of 1918.

1940

Isis Royale National Park is established in Michigan, USA.

1940

Kings Canyon National Park is established in California, USA.

1940

Butlins sets up leave centres for British troops returning home from the front lines to provide entertainment and relaxation.

1940 - 1949

5,784 hotels belong to the American Hotel Association. A total of 600,000 rooms. Rooms now cost 15 cents.

1940

The Paris headquarters of the Wagon-Lits company are seized by the occupying forces in France and its British assets, including Thomas Cook, are requisitioned by the British Government.

1941

On 11 November, the United States of America declare war on Germany.

1941

New Jersey department store Bamberger's offer store credit for vacation travel.

1941

Mammoth Cave National Park is established in Kentucky, USA.

1941

Rainbow Bridge at Niagara Falls is completed to carry both pedestrians and automobiles

1941 - 1945

Half of 'American Airline, Inc's' fleet transfers to the Air Transport Command to support the war effort. The remaining planes see increased use due to a jump in demand for domestic flights.

1942

Thomas Cook & Son Ltd is sold by the British Government to the proprietors of Hay's Wharf Cartage Co Ltd (a subsidiary of the four mainline railway companies in the UK) to prevent its bankruptcy.

1942

On 16-17 January 1942, Winston Churchill flies from Bermuda to Plymouth, becoming the first British Prime Minister to take a transatlantic flight.

1943

Hilton buys the Roosevelt and Plaza hotels in New York, making Hilton the first coast-to-coast hotel group.

1944

The stretch of the south coast between the Wash and Lands End in the UK becomes a protected area for reasons of operational security. All non-residents are banned from going within 10 miles of the coast.

1944

Coney Island's Luna Park is partially destroyed by a fire and closes for good.

1944

Big Bend National Park is established in Texas, USA.

1945

The seaside resort of Morecombe, England hosts its first Super Swimming Stadium, which sees the first contest of the Miss Great Britain beauty pageant.

Burlington Route Mississippi Scenic Line

1945

Burlington launches America's first vista-dome passenger carriages.

1945

World War Two comes to an end, with Japan signing documents of surrender on 2 September 1945.

1945

The first major motion picture filmed entirely in a hotel and outside Hollywood's studios, 'Weekend at The Waldorf' featuring Ginger Rogers, grosses $4,366,000 and is ranked number seven at the box office.

1945 - 1950

'American Airlines, Inc' launches their trans-Atlantic division, American Overseas Airlines (AOA), running America's first European service.

1946

Best Western Motels is founded by M. K. Guertin. The innovative concept begins as a referral system; an informal link between properties with each hotel recommending other establishments to travellers.

1946

War time restrictions on flights come to an end.

1946

The Aspen Skiing Corporation is founded in Apsen, Colorado and the city quickly develops into a well known ski resort. 

1946

American Hotel Association rates triple, with smaller hotels charging 50 cents a room, medium-sized hotels 75 cents and larger hotels $1 per room.

1946

Westin Hotels debuts the first guest credit card.

1946

Curtis Publishing Company begin 'Holiday' magazine to capitalise on America's new love of vacation travel.

1946

Heathrow becomes the new civil airport in London, replacing the old grass airfield at Croydon. The site of the airfield, chosen after the government requisitioned land around the ancient village of Heath Row, had been used by the RAF during the war. 63,000 passengers pass through the airport in its inaugural year.

1946

Hilton Hotels Corporation is formed.

1946 - 1947

Intercontinental Hotel Corporation is formed. To bolster international air travel and encourage tourism in Latin America, President Roosevelt and former President of Pan American Airways agree to create a government funded subsidiary of Pan Am that would build luxury hotels. The first of these hotels opened in Belém, Brazil in 1947.

1946 - 1949

Fred Pontin opens his first camp at Brean Sands near Burnham-on-Sea. The first years profit is a healthy £17,000 and the company is floated on the London Stock Exchange. By 1949, Pontin is operating six camps in the UK.

1947

New York City's Roosevelt Hilton becomes the first hotel in the world to install televisions in guest rooms.

1947

Sheraton Corporation of America becomes the first hotel chain to be listed on the New York Stock Exchange.

1947

Plymouth Plantation, a Living History Museum, is opened in Plymouth, Massachusetts. It features a recreation of an early Plymouth settlement and an American Indian homesite.

1947

Edward Land demonstrates his first Instant Camera to stunned audiences at the Optical Society of America on the 21st February

1947

The National Council for Historic Sites and Buildings is established in the US to support the preservation of historic sites.

1948

The first television broadcast in 625-line standard occurs in Moscow.

British Railways

1948

The railways become nationalised in Britain with the formation of British Railways.

1948

Thomas Cook & Son Ltd is nationalised alongside the railways and becomes part of the British Transport Commission.

1948

The first Instant Camera, designed by Edward Land, is sold for $87.95 at a department store in Boston.

1948

American Airlines introduces both the Family Fare Plan, enabling families to travel together at reduced rates and a scheduled coach service as an economical alternative to first class travel.

1949

The National Trust for Historic Preservation is established in the US at the request of the founders of the National Council for Historic Sites and Buildings. It acts to take ownership of historic sites and buildings to ensure their preservation.

1949

Middleton Tower Holiday Camp near Morecambe gets a full makeover. It now looks like an ocean liner on land and can accommodate 3,000 visitors; a number rivalling Butlins.

1949

Conrad Hilton buys the Waldorf Astoria, New York.

1949

Hilton International is born with the opening of the Caribe Hilton in Puerto Rico. Legendary barman Ramon "Monchito" Marrero creates the Pina Colada here.

1950 - 1955

Black and white television sets are placed in hotel lobbies and other public places across the US.

1950 - 1959

The American Hotel Association create their first universal credit card. This eventually becomes the American Express card.

1950 - 1959

The first hotel 'chain' opens in California and the TraveLodge is born.