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Description

Showing the Thames Tunnel in the Year it Was Opened

Highly detailed map of London, centered on the Thames and extending from Greenwich Reach and Bromley to Kensington Gardens and St. Marleybone. This map was issued by the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (an atlas publisher's) in 1843.

The map is remarkable for its tremendous detail. All major avenues and crossroads are named, as well as a vast majority of the cross-streets. Important buildings, such as hospitals, inns, theatres, and prisons, are all indicated.

The map presents a still-small London. Pimlico and Chelsey are still being developed. Canary Wharf is all but empty.

19th-century London was a time of massive change. The arrival of the railways had been built soon, and Waterloo, King's Cross, and St. Pancras still had yet to be built. The Thames Tunnel, opened to the public in 1843, is shown between Southwark and the Docks.

Condition Description
Minor foxing and toning, particularly at the edges.