Maps of Hackney

Maps of Hackney

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Essex (New Series 1913-) n LXXVII.16 (includes: Hackney; Leyton) - 25 Inch Map

1 : 2500 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Essex (New Series 1913-) n LXXVII.16 (includes: Hackney; Leyton) - 25 Inch Map

1 : 2500 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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London (Edition of 1894-96) XXXI (includes: Hackney; Leyton) - 25 Inch Map

1 : 2500 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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London III.90 - OS London Town Plan

1 : 1056 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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London III.100 - OS London Town Plan

1 : 1056 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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London III.89 - OS London Town Plan

1 : 1056 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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London III.99 - OS London Town Plan

1 : 1056 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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London III.80 - OS London Town Plan

1 : 1056 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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London III.79 - OS London Town Plan

1 : 1056 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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London III.88 - OS London Town Plan

1 : 1056 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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London III.98 - OS London Town Plan

1 : 1056 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Insurance Plan of London North & North-East District Vol. E: sheet 27

1 : 480 This detailed 1899 plan of London is one of a series of thirteen sheets in an atlas originally produced to aid insurance companies in assessing fire risks. The building footprints, their use (commercial, residential, educational, etc.), the number of floors and the height of the building, as well as construction materials (and thus risk of burning) and special fire hazards (chemicals, kilns, ovens) were documented in order to estimate premiums. Names of individual businesses, property lines, and addresses were also often recorded. Together these maps provide a rich historical shapshot of the commercial activity and urban landscape of towns and cities at the time. The British Library holds a comprehensive collection of fire insurance plans produced by the London-based firm Charles E. Goad Ltd. dating back to 1885. These plans were made for most important towns and cities of the British Isles at the scales of 1:480 (1 inch to 40 feet), as well as many foreign towns at 1:600 (1 inch to 50 feet). Chas E Goad Limited Chas E Goad Limited
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Essex LXXIII.NW - OS Six-Inch Map

1 : 10560 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Essex nLXXVII - OS Six-Inch Map

1 : 10560 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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London Sheet G - OS Six-Inch Map

1 : 10560 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Middlesex XII - OS Six-Inch Map

1 : 10560 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Insurance Plan of London North & North-East District Vol. E: Key Plan

1 : 21120 This "key plan" indicates coverage of the Goad 1899 series of fire insurance maps of London that were originally produced to aid insurance companies in assessing fire risks. The building footprints, their use (commercial, residential, educational, etc.), the number of floors and the height of the building, as well as construction materials (and thus risk of burning) and special fire hazards (chemicals, kilns, ovens) were documented in order to estimate premiums. Names of individual businesses, property lines, and addresses were also often recorded. Together these maps provide a rich historical shapshot of the commercial activity and urban landscape of towns and cities at the time. The British Library holds a comprehensive collection of fire insurance plans produced by the London-based firm Charles E. Goad Ltd. dating back to 1885. These plans were made for most important towns and cities of the British Isles at the scales of 1:480 (1 inch to 40 feet), as well as many foreign towns at 1:600 (1 inch to 50 feet). Chas E Goad Limited Chas E Goad Limited
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London III.78 - OS London Town Plan

1 : 1056 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Essex LXXIII - OS Six-Inch Map

1 : 10560 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Plan showing the sewers in Tower Hamlets, 1843

From 1807, the East End was supplied with water pumped from the River Lea at Bow by the East London Waterworks Company. This was not, however, the continuous flow of water we take for granted today. Dr John Simon wrote, in 1849, of the thousands who "wholly depend on their power of attending at some fixed hour of the day, pail in hand, beside the nearest standcock; where, with their neighbours, they wait their turn; sometimes not without a struggle, during the tedious dribbling of a single small pipe. Household rubbish was piled into heaps in the street and outdoor toilets drained into cesspits. The survey of sanitation in Bethnal Green made by Hector Gavin in 1848 paints a sorry picture. Knightly Court was typical of the streets he visited: "In it there are two privies in a beastly state, full, and the contents overflowing into the court. There is one dust reservoir. One stand-tap supplies the seven houses; two cases of severe typhus lately occurred here, one died." This map of 1843 shows the distribution of sewers through the East End. They carried only surface water, contaminated with decayed rubbish from the streets and excrement from overflowing cesspits, and discharged it directly into the Thames - from which water companies pumped their drinking water. James Beek
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TQ38 - OS 1:25,000 Provisional Series Map

1 : 25000 Topographic maps Ordnance Survey Ordnance Survey
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Stratford - Le - Bow

1 : 21120 This plan of north east London extends from the Isle of Dogs and Wapping at the bottom, to 'Layton Stone' and Epping Forest at the top. Field boundaries infilled with stripes depict tilled land. Major settlements are drawn in red ink. North of Stoke Newington, to the top left, a road is plotted as a series of fixed points pricked off with dividers and joined by ruled pencil lines. These protractions were made directly from the Ordnance Survey field books. Pencil rays intersect across the map, evidence of measurements taken by the surveyor between fixed triangulation points. Poplar Gut is outlined in red at the Isle of Dogs, the beginnings of the development of the West India Docks.
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London [11], uit: Geognostische Karte des Oesterreichischen Kaiserstaates mit einem grossen Theile Deutschland's u. Italien / hauptsachlich nach ... Haidinger's geognostischer Karte dieses Staates bearb. von Josef Scheda

1 : 3000000 titelvariant: General-Karte von Europa in 25 Blättern; Annotatie: Bijlage bij: General-Karte von Europa in 25 Blättern. - 1:2.592.000. - 1845-1847 Scheda, Joseph Wien : K.K. Militär. Geografisch. Institut
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MOGG'S LONDON AND ITS ENVIRONS Drawn from The latest Surveys

The radius of the red circle on this map (above St. Paul's) extends for three miles around the Post Office. The Post Office was erected on the site of St Martin-le-Grand. Designed by Sir Robert Smirke, it was opened in 1829. Coloured roads represent omnibus routes. Buses gradually replaced hackney coaches after the hackney's monopoly ended in1832. The site of the 1851 Great Exhibition in Hyde Park is indicated. Mogg, E.S.
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Laurie and Whittle's New map of London with its environs, &c. Including the Recent Improvements.

From Great Britain
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A new map of London and its environs : from an original survey extending 8 miles east and west, 6 1/4 miles north & south, in which all new and intended buildings, improvements, &c. are carefully inserted

1 : 17150 Thompson, Mr Reeves & Hoare
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Plan of the roads and main objects on the eastern part of London : as connected with the tunnel excavating under the Thames from Rotherhithe to Wapping

1 : 48000 Brunel, Marc Isambard, Sir, 1769-1849 H. Teape & Son
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DAVIES'S MAP OF THE BRITISH METROPOLIS CONTAINING THE BOUNDARIES OF THE BOROUGHS THE RAILWAYS, STATIONS & All MODERN IMPROVEMENTS

This is the second edition of a map published twice in the same year, differing from the first edition only in the publisher's imprint. The development of the railways is evident here. The boroughs and the county-court districts are marked in red capitals. Rees Davis, Benjamin
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London : drawn and engraved expressly for the post office directory

1 : 253440 Kelly's Directories Ltd Kelly & Co. Ltd., Post Office Directory Office
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CRUCHLEY'S New Plan of LONDON and its ENVIRONS

This map is the 11th edition of Cruchley's 'New Plan'. It was altered on each publication, recording the many developments than spanned this period, particularly railway expansion. In this edition the Waterloo and Bricklayers Arms stations are shown, as are Battersea and Victoria Parks. Prior to the establishment of his own business, Cruchley worked for the Arrowsmiths map-publishing firm. Consequently the words “from Arrowsmiths" appear in his imprint on many of his early maps. George Frederick Cruchley
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