Peter Walker
gone but not forgotten
Has anyone written already about the new copy of the first edition of the 1" Ordnance Survey maps, just published by Cassini Publishing Ltd, which seems to be an arm of the OS office at Southampton, since it is printed by them at Southampton. Although the original maps were only 1 inch to the mile, they are enlarged about 2.5 times, and seamlessly spliced together to match the area covered by the modern 1:2500 'Explorer' map, with the modern grid faintly superimposed in blue.
Being that much enlarged all the detail becomes much clearer to see, and the quality of reproduction is up to OS standard. The publishers rightly make a disclaimer about surveying accuracy, and warn that grid references used on modern maps may not quite fit the old maps, but they have terrific detail.
The original maps copied were dated 1831 to 1835, so the the most notable features are the road, canals and rivers - not the Tame Valley Canal from Salford Bridge to Bescot of course, as that was built in the 1840s.
In the past it has been possible to refer to the 'Village Atlas' published by the Aldermasn Press in 1989, but the reproduction was much poorer.
The price of the new map may seem a bit steep at £6.49, but I think it's well worth it, being a map nutter.
Peter
Being that much enlarged all the detail becomes much clearer to see, and the quality of reproduction is up to OS standard. The publishers rightly make a disclaimer about surveying accuracy, and warn that grid references used on modern maps may not quite fit the old maps, but they have terrific detail.
The original maps copied were dated 1831 to 1835, so the the most notable features are the road, canals and rivers - not the Tame Valley Canal from Salford Bridge to Bescot of course, as that was built in the 1840s.
In the past it has been possible to refer to the 'Village Atlas' published by the Aldermasn Press in 1989, but the reproduction was much poorer.
The price of the new map may seem a bit steep at £6.49, but I think it's well worth it, being a map nutter.
Peter