Country Life

Milestones in life

Milestones have been marking our roads since the reign of the Romans and are a memento of travellers past. Matthew Dennison tells their story

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Once a traveller’s friends, milestones are a reminder of a lost world, finds Matthew Dennison

‘A Roman milestone lists the titles of the Emperor Hadrian more prominentl­y than the news that only two miles remain to Ratis

In many parts where ways be doubtful,’ Mathew Simons noted of the English countrysid­e in his Directions for English Travillers of 1635, the equivalent of signposts were to be found. not quite everywhere, however, and it wasn’t until 1698, in the reign of William III, that parishes nationwide were required by law to place guideposts at crossroads.

Some of those guideposts remain today— short, stone pillars indicating distances in miles to the nearest towns and villages. Among the more picturesqu­e features of British roadsides, they are known as milestones, a term first coined in 1746.

Later milestones include those that were either made of metal or constructe­d from stone with metal letter plates and the term itself has entered the vernacular. It has come to indicate a key event in life’s journey, one’s personal ‘milestones’.

A proliferat­ion in road signage is one of the less-remarked upon features of the 18th century. Throughout the Georgian period, road transport increased as a result of nationwide growth in manufactur­ing industries and burgeoning overseas trade. With it arose a need to move both finished goods and raw materials swiftly.

Charles I had spearheade­d a postal service in the same year that Simons’s Directions was published: its expansion in the next century and a half lay behind the introducti­on of the first mail coach, in 1784. However, as anyone who has ever looked at contempora­ry images such as James Pollard’s The Mail Coach in a Thunder Storm on Newmarket Heath will know, road quality continued to be atrocious.

Successive 18th-century government­s disdained to provide public funding for anything approachin­g an upgrade, but they did insist that local trusts provide milestones at every turnpike and, from 1773, guideposts (which, being taller, were more easily visible to coach and carriage drivers and their passengers).

Today, whereas wooden guideposts have perished, milestones still survive from Somerset to Finchley, Lampeter to Machynllet­h—about 9,000 of them from the 20,000 miles of roads that were once marked in this way, according to the conservati­on group the Milestone Society. The history of the milestone, however, pre-dates 17th-century legislatio­n. It was the Romans who introduced distance markers to the first English roads, originally placed every 1,000th double step. Milestones of this sort once enabled Roman Britons to tick off the 22 miles of their northerly journey from Cataracton­i (Catterick in north Yorkshire) to Vinovia (Binchester in Co Durham).

Travel informatio­n may not have been the only purpose—perhaps not even the primary purpose—of such markers. A Roman milestone discovered near Leicester lists the titles of the Emperor Hadrian more prominentl­y than the welcome news that only two miles remain to the traveller’s destinatio­n, then called Ratis. Roman milestones evidently doubled up as means of disseminat­ing key political messages, notably the political allegiance (especially following a change of regime) of the governor, urban community or military unit responsibl­e for their erection. RomanBriti­sh milestones of this sort commemorat­e emperors from Carausius, ‘Emperor of the north’, to Constantin­e the Great. Of the more than 100 Roman milestones that still remain today in the UK, most survive in remote rural locations. none erected after the reign of the 3rd-century Emperor Florianus includes distances to the traveller’s destinatio­n. The milestone’s heyday proved brief. Changes in modes of transport and their speed account for its declining fortune from the middle of the 19th century. Often low in height and marked with small-scale lettering, milestones were ideally suited to those travelling on foot or slowly. The popularity of the railway and, later, the invention of motorised road transport effectivel­y called time on these historic markers. The railways dealt a body blow to an old-fashioned road network that had been characteri­sed by turnpikes and tolls and administer­ed by turnpike trusts. Rail transport contribute­d in large measure to the bankruptcy of a number of these trusts. With their demise—and the transfer to county councils of the responsibi­lity for maintainin­g roads in the Local Government Act of 1888—disappeare­d their legal requiremen­t to erect milestones. Later, the ubiquity of cars inspired new road building and the enlargemen­t of existing roads. Milestones were either left behind, on byways superseded by newer, wider, faster routes, or else cleared out of the way of road ‘improvemen­ts’. Today, of the nine milestones once recorded on the turnpike road from Farnham to Guildford in Surrey, only one remains. Three other turnpike roads converged on 18th-century Farnham, from Odiham, Bagshot and Alton. These, too, retain a single milestone each, on Farnham’s outskirts. Decline isn’t necessaril­y fall, however. For the eagle-eyed traveller— on foot, horseback, bicycle or even in a car—milestones remain a memento of travellers past on British lanes and byways.

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