Hmmm... I wonder what resources you were consulting. There's tons
of historical stuff on the web. The place to start, as usual, is:
http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/TheProject.html
aka
http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/TheProject
Note the sections:
<DT>Project background</A> <DD><A HREF="Summary.html" NAME="z73">Summary</A>,
<A HREF="Talks/General.html" NAME="z74">Illustrated talk</A>,
<A HREF="People.html" NAME="z75">People</A>,
<A HREF="History.html" NAME="z76">
History</A>, why the <A HREF="http://www.cern.ch/CERN/People/Robert/PersonalData.html#GreenWs">W's are green</A>
I maintain something of a history of the HTML spec at:
http://www.hal.com/%7Econnolly/html-spec/notes/PubHistory.html
>Also lists or graphs of statistics about the web would be of great help.
Hmmm... MERIT maintains stats on the Internet, including the Web.
Joseph Hardin gave a talk about the size of the web, including some
impressive graphs showing exponential growth. I don't where these
live, though.
Dan