They had tanks, airplanes and much more advanced technology in WWII, carriages were obviously accessible but obsolete at the time.
Mostly walking, on horses, carriages. The were no cars back then.
Carriages
No
Evacuees of London, England during World War II, most of them children, were sent to towns and cities that were north of London, England. Many citizens of London, England stayed in underground shelters overnight during the bombings. They had to leave them during the day and then stand in line to get back into them at night.
"Back in London" is correct.
No. In the 1900s they had cars. They had elephants, camels, donkeys, horses and carriages.
They rode horses, carriages, and the wind. They as well walked!
Nowhere near. He was well-known in the London theatre crowd during his lifetime, but now he is known to everyone all over the world. Nobody was that famous back then.
The number of people in London in 1665 who died where about one in three. Over the 4 centuries that the back death occurred, around 400-700 million people world wide died.
Boats are believed to have been invented before horse-drawn carriages. The earliest evidence of boats dates back to around 10,000 BCE, while horse-drawn carriages emerged later, around 2000 BCE. Boats were likely developed as a means of transportation over water, while carriages were created for land travel, marking different advancements in transportation technology.
Which Georgia, US or Europe? In any case, yes. Cars were invented in the 1800's, but did not come into common use until after the First World War ended in 1918.
He pretty much goes all over the world but most of the time he goes back and forth between London and the US