People
You are here: Home - People
All too often, Britain's roads are taken for granted. They're just strips of tarmac that get us where we're going. But behind every road is a small army of politicians, planners, engineers, skilled workers and even protestors. This section of CBRD brings some of those figures into the spotlight to reveal the people who had a major impact on our road network.
Click a name to read more. The list is arranged alphabetically by surname.
Daniel 'Swampy' Hooper
Britain's most famous anti-road protestor, who shot to fame in the mid-1990s and came to represent the whole environmental movement.
Harry Yeadon
A civil engineer, working principally in the North West of England, responsible for many of the area's motorways.
Coming soon
- William Rees Jeffreys
Responsible for introducing road numbering to the UK and influential in all aspects of road transport in the early 20th century. - Sir James Drake
County Surveyor and Bridgemaster for Lancashire in the 1950s and 60s, Drake was instrumental in the creation not just of Lancashire's road network, but the motorway construction programme in general. - Ernest Marples
Minister of Transport through the early days of motorway-mania, who also introduced many features of the modern road network. - Barbara Castle
Late 1960s Minister of Transport who famously could not drive.
Visitors to this section of CBRD might also enjoy Histories.

