Created from original Stanford’s Library Atlas, showing Central London in 1891 at street-level.
This work features 4 sheets at a very detailed scale of six inches to the mile, providing a fascinating glimpse of Mid Victorian London.
This unique map of the capital and its surrounding area shows the true underlying landscape that has helped shape and form this iconic city.
Bacon Street Map 1902
London Railways Map 1897
A street map of London 1843
A very detailed street map of London first published a century ago as the expansive Victorian era finally drew to a close.
Of all the great innovations of the nineteenth century it was the railways that contributed the most. In London new railway lines ran to the docks of an Empire that straddled the globe.
An early coloured street map of London published so that passengers in Hansom cabs could check that they were being taken by the shortest route.
Booth London Poverty Maps
East 1889
Booth London Poverty Maps
West 1889
Booth London Poverty Maps
East & West 1889
Out of Stock
Out of Stock
Out of Stock
Map of Victorian London (East) coloured street by street to show the lifestyle of the inhabitants from the wealthy upper classes to the vicious and semi-criminal lowest class.
Map of Victorian London (West) coloured street by street to show the lifestyle of the inhabitants from the wealthy upper classes to the vicious and semi-criminal lowest class.
A set of two maps -Victorian London (East) and Victorian London (West). coloured street by street to show the lifestyle of the inhabitants.
Holborn & the City 1873
Whitechapel, Spitalfields & The Bank 1873
Holborn & the City, Whitechapel, Spitalfields & The Bank - 1873
Three maps showing how the area developed across the years. The maps each cover the same area of central London, stretching from the British Museum eastward to Guildhall, and from Clerkenwell Road southward to Waterloo Bridge.
Three maps showing how the area developed across the years. The maps each cover the same area of central London. The area covered runs from Moorgate eastward to Bedford Street, and from Worship Street and Quaker Streetr southward to The Tower..
Six maps showing how the area developed across the years. Stretching from the British Museum eastward to Bedford Street, and from Clerkenwell Road southward to the river Thames.