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Polytechnic Touring Association

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226:, President of the Polytechnic, invited him to take over the management of the tours. He did this very successfully, expanding the range of tours to include southern Europe but continuing to focus on Switzerland as the primary PTA destination. Kynaston Studd was PTA chairman until his death in 1944; Ronald Studd, as well as being PTA Managing Director, was on the Polytechnic Board of Governors. The PTA offices remained on Polytechnic premises until 1950 and the agency made annual donations to the Polytechnic to support its work. 27: 135:) to arrange UK and foreign holidays for students and members of that institution. The PTA became an independent company – though still with close links to the Polytechnic – in 1911. Later it changed its name to Poly Travel, before being acquired in 1962 along with the firm Sir Henry Lunn Ltd. A few years later, the two firms were merged and eventually rebranded as 213:
The name 'Polytechnic Touring Association' emerged around the year 1900, although its organisation was still within the Polytechnic. Its trips claimed to pioneer cheaper travel, making it accessible to less affluent middle-class and lower middle-class travellers. Its office was adjacent to the main
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Polytechnic building. The tours were initially organised within the general administration of the Polytechnic, though after the Scheme of Administration in 1891, there was pressure from the auditors to separate out the accounts and administration. Robert Mitchell remained the driving force until
171:. In 1888 a party of boys from the Polytechnic School toured Belgium and Switzerland to see the mountains they were learning about in geography lessons. In 1889 arrangements were made for Polytechnic parties to visit the 371: 381: 44: 266: 376: 222:
The continued expansion of the firm after 1918 was due largely to the leadership of Commander Ronald G Studd: when he left the Navy in 1921 his father, Sir
194:: more than 1,000 people made the month-long journey. By 1894 the Continental tours had more than 3,000 participants, increasing to 12,000 by 1903. The 186:
which were to become the most famous centre for the Polytechnic Touring Association. A notable achievement was the organisation of a series of trips to
143:). The PTA was one of a number of British travel agencies formed in the latter part of the 19th century, following on from the pioneering efforts of 386: 91: 63: 230: 70: 366: 297: 110: 77: 191: 276: 175:. In subsequent years, the tours were opened up to those who were neither students nor members of the Polytechnic. Cruises to 229:
When the Creative Tourist Agents Conference was formed, Ronald Studd became chairman; he was also the first vice-chairman of
48: 59: 172: 322: 271: 132: 207: 84: 156: 37: 163:, but increasing numbers meant that this became impractical. In 1886 trips for members were arranged to 234: 323:"Tourist Photographers and the Promotion of Travel: The Polytechnic Touring Association, 1888–1939" 298:
http://archivesearch.westminster.ac.uk/CalmView/Record.aspx?src=CalmView.Catalog&id=PTA%2f1%2f2
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when it was created in 1950. In 1962 Poly Travel (as it had been renamed in 1958) was acquired by
345: 337: 246: 199: 140: 314:"Polytechnic Touring Association - University of Westminster › Records and Archives" 238: 223: 360: 349: 313: 215: 128: 183: 341: 182:
In 1894 the Director of Education Robert Mitchell (1855-1933) acquired chalets by
195: 164: 144: 26: 202:. Polytechnic employees acted as guides. However, in 1896-97, the travel firm 242: 160: 136: 155:
Members of the Polytechnic had taken holidays at the homes of its founder,
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which emerged from the efforts of the Regent Street Polytechnic (now
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regarding the tours being subsidised by governmental grants.
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and eventually merged the firms to form the travel retailer
51:. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. 198:"Ceylon" was purchased in 1896 for cruises of the 8: 372:Hospitality companies established in 1911 111:Learn how and when to remove this message 382:British companies disestablished in 1962 258: 377:British companies established in 1911 159:(1845-1903), including Holly Hill in 7: 49:adding citations to reliable sources 14: 267:"Polytechnic Touring Association" 60:"Polytechnic Touring Association" 237:, who also acquired the firm of 25: 206:sent several complaints to the 125:Polytechnic Touring Association 36:needs additional citations for 1: 387:1962 mergers and acquisitions 342:10.1080/17514517.2015.1091178 16:Defunct British travel agency 403: 367:University of Westminster 272:University of Westminster 133:University of Westminster 208:Department for Education 330:Photography and Culture 321:Dominici, Sara (2015). 219:after World War One. 192:World's Fair in 1893 45:improve this article 204:Thomas Cook and Son 139:(and later on as 121: 120: 113: 95: 394: 353: 327: 317: 300: 295: 289: 288: 286: 284: 279:on 19 April 2013 275:. Archived from 263: 247:Thomson Holidays 214:entrance of the 200:Norwegian fjords 173:Paris Exhibition 141:Thomson Holidays 116: 109: 105: 102: 96: 94: 53: 29: 21: 402: 401: 397: 396: 395: 393: 392: 391: 357: 356: 325: 320: 312: 309: 304: 303: 296: 292: 282: 280: 265: 264: 260: 255: 179:began in 1892. 153: 117: 106: 100: 97: 54: 52: 42: 30: 17: 12: 11: 5: 400: 398: 390: 389: 384: 379: 374: 369: 359: 358: 355: 354: 336:(3): 297–323. 318: 308: 305: 302: 301: 290: 257: 256: 254: 251: 245:(rebranded as 239:Henry Lunn Ltd 235:Harold Bamberg 224:Kynaston Studd 152: 149: 119: 118: 33: 31: 24: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 399: 388: 385: 383: 380: 378: 375: 373: 370: 368: 365: 364: 362: 351: 347: 343: 339: 335: 331: 324: 319: 315: 311: 310: 306: 299: 294: 291: 278: 274: 273: 268: 262: 259: 252: 250: 248: 244: 240: 236: 232: 227: 225: 220: 217: 216:Regent Street 211: 209: 205: 201: 197: 193: 189: 185: 180: 178: 174: 170: 166: 162: 158: 150: 148: 146: 142: 138: 134: 130: 129:travel agency 126: 115: 112: 104: 101:December 2019 93: 90: 86: 83: 79: 76: 72: 69: 65: 62: –  61: 57: 56:Find sources: 50: 46: 40: 39: 34:This article 32: 28: 23: 22: 19: 333: 329: 293: 281:. Retrieved 277:the original 270: 261: 228: 221: 212: 184:Lake Lucerne 181: 157:Quintin Hogg 154: 124: 122: 107: 98: 88: 81: 74: 67: 55: 43:Please help 38:verification 35: 18: 196:steam yacht 190:to see the 165:Switzerland 145:Thomas Cook 361:Categories 253:References 249:in 2005). 71:newspapers 350:194975592 243:Lunn Poly 161:Hampshire 137:Lunn Poly 283:11 March 169:Boulogne 307:Sources 188:Chicago 151:History 85:scholar 348:  177:Norway 127:was a 87:  80:  73:  66:  58:  346:S2CID 326:(PDF) 92:JSTOR 78:books 285:2013 231:ABTA 167:and 123:The 64:news 338:doi 47:by 363:: 344:. 332:. 328:. 269:. 147:. 352:. 340:: 334:8 316:. 287:. 114:) 108:( 103:) 99:( 89:· 82:· 75:· 68:· 41:.

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"Polytechnic Touring Association"
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travel agency
University of Westminster
Lunn Poly
Thomson Holidays
Thomas Cook
Quintin Hogg
Hampshire
Switzerland
Boulogne
Paris Exhibition
Norway
Lake Lucerne
Chicago
World's Fair in 1893
steam yacht
Norwegian fjords
Thomas Cook and Son
Department for Education
Regent Street

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