I suspect that the big difference is really to do with car ownership. The 1970s was probably the last decade when a good proportion of holiday makers went on holiday by public transport.
When you do not have personal transport you are more likely to spend all your free time in the resort and using its facilities, you may take a few bus rides to places further afield but generally you and your holiday money stays put in the same resort.
When you have a car the place you stay is not where you spend your time it is a base for travelling further afield to other attractions in the area. This goes away to explain rocketing membership of the National Trust, English Heritage and the attraction of country parks, attractions like Longleat etc. When this happens resort based attractions lose custom, visitors may be staying in seaside resorts and lying on the sand and swimming if the weather is nice but they are not wandering up and down the prom, especially if it is a cold windy day, or using funfairs, they are off and away to somewhere miles away, eating in a country pub, shopping in a small inland town.
Should the Judge in the teenagers rape case be struck off ?
US: ICE at work - an Insight. 😡
Robert Kenyon, Reform's candidate for Makerfield. Would you let him in your house?



