About This Book
A detailed policy and technical study of establishing regular transatlantic steamship lines, reviewing past French attempts and competing British services and summarizing legislative proposals and private projects. It outlines a centralized network concentrated at western and southern ports with specific routes, ship types, timetables, and cargo-handling practices, and presents cost, revenue, and operational estimates. The analysis weighs economic and strategic consequences for trade, ports, rail links, industry, and national maritime strength, warns of risks from poor organization, and argues for coordinated, financially and technically sound implementation.
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