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John Thornton was a respected and prominent chartmaker in London in the latter part of the seventeenth century. He was one of the final members of the Thames School of chartmakers and served as the hydrographer to the Hudson's Bay Company and the East India Company. He produced a large variety of printed charts, maps, and atlases in his career, but he was also a renowned manuscript chart maker. Born in London in 1641, he was apprenticed in the Drapers Company to a chartmaker, John Burston. After being made free of the company (1665), he was part of the combine that took over John Seller’ English Pilot in 1677. Thornton was trusted by the naval and navigational establishment of the day; one of his clients was Samuel Pepys, naval administrator and diarist. Thornton died in 1708, leaving his stock to his son, Samuel, who carried on the business.

Samuel, born in ca. 1665, also had apprenticed in the Drapers Company and was made free a year after his father’s death. He continued the business until 1715, when he died. His stock then passed to Richard Mount and Thomas Page.

Place/Date:
London / 1702 circa
Size:
20.5 x 17 inches
Condition:
VG
Stock#:
54443
Place/Date:
London / 1734
Size:
21 x 17 inches
Condition:
VG
Stock#:
47319

Archived

Place/Date:
London / 1711
Size:
21 x 17.5 inches
Condition:
VG+
Stock#:
0248gh
Place/Date:
London / 1711
Size:
20.5 x 17 inches
Condition:
VG+
Stock#:
52631
Place/Date:
London / 1723 circa
Size:
21.5 x 17.5 inches
Condition:
VG+
Stock#:
36058