A Map of the County of Essex
From an Actual Survey made in MDCCLXXII, MDCCLXXIII and MDCCLXXIV by John Chapman and Peter Andre.
London,
1777-[June 1785].
Folio (440 by 390 mm), index map, and 25 double-page engraved map sheets, all with fine original hand-colour, some minor offsetting, modern half calf over marbled paper boards.
1975
notes:
Chapman and André's survey of Essex was one of the most celebrated of the nineteenth century large-scale maps with a wealth of detail matched by extraordinary accuracy, even when checked against large-scale contemporary estate maps. Minor roads were depicted on a map of the county for the first time with bridges, milestones and turnpike gates, whilst on the long coastline every creek, wharf, quay, ferry, duck decoy and cliff is shown. The countryside is extensively delineat...
bibliography:
provenance:
Jean Dominique Cassini II
The explosive island of Krakatoa
The Half-Length Seasons
The only known examples of instruments made for an unpublished quarto edition of ‘Dell’Arcano del Mare’
Coastal shoreham
The transit of Halley’s comet in 1758
Rubens by Hollar
“Ingenieur-Mechanicien pour les Globes et Spheres”
Smith's rare geological survey of Kent
"All Smell is Disease"
The reasons for night and day
The final Frost Fair
Views of Albury
The young Charles II
Speed’s map of Oxfordshire 


