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Welcome to

MAPCO : Map And Plan Collection Online








MAPCO's aim is to provide genealogists, students and historians with free access to high quality scans of rare and beautiful antique maps and views.

The site displays a variety of highly collectable 18th and 19th century maps and plans of London and the British Isles, and also 19th century maps and engravings relating to Australia.

The MAPCO website is updated regularly, with new maps being displayed every month. Check back regularly to see what has been added.

Enjoy the MAPCO website. It is free!




~ LATEST UPDATE! ~


Map Of London 1868, By Edward Weller, F.R.G.S.

@ london1868.com



Click Here To View The Map Of London 1868, By Edward Weller, F.R.G.S.


Edward Weller's Map Of London 1868 is now on display! This map was published in 1868 by G.W. Bacon & Co. from their premises at 337 Strand.

This is one of the largest maps to be displayed on the MAPCO website. The detail is stunning! Cassell, Petter & Galpin, who had previously published the map in 1863, declared that their "large map of London, as well as being the largest, is universally admitted to be the best map of London ever produced".

This highly detailed map is on a very large scale of 9" to 1 Statue Mile.

Do take a look at this wonderful map. The detail is truly stunning!

Please note that his map has its own domain name, which is quite easy to remember. It is:

london1868.com

However, the map is still part of the MAPCO collection and the MAPCO : Map And Plan Collection Online website.

Enjoy this truly wonderful map!








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~ RECENT UPDATE! ~


Thomas Moule's Environs Of London 1837


Click Here To View Thomas Moule's Environs Of London 1837



Thomas Moule's Environs Of London 1837 is now online!

This beautiful map was taken from Moule's "English Counties Delineated" published in 1837. Moule's maps are highly regarded as the most attractive of all of the county maps of the period, with the Environs of London being one of the rarest.

The map is embellished with engraved views of New London Bridge (top left - completed 1831); Suspension Bridge at Hammersmith (top right - completed 1827); Triumphal Arch, Hyde Park Corner (bottom left - completed 1828); and New Post Office (bottom right - completed 1829). Note that over a period of 3 years from 1968 New London Bridge was moved stone by stone to Lake Havasau, Arizona, U.S.A.

I hope you enjoy this beautiful map!




For More Free London Maps Visit

Visit Old London Maps

Committed To Displaying Free High Quality 16th To 19th Century London Maps & Views



 



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