The first “good road map” of Barbados
Road Map of Barbados. Compiled from Admiralty Charts 502 and 2485,
with additions and corrections November 1952 by R. Bruce Moulder, B.A. Revised 1956.
SKU: 24379
America 全部商品 Caribbean
标签: barbados; lady cartographer, quickcheck, quickcheck25, Rare Maps of the Americas
Type: 地图
ANDERSON, Margaret Swainson
Glasgow, Scotland,
Robert MacLehose & Co.,
1956.
Folding lithographed map, with additional colour printing, together with 8pp index, green paper wrappers.
600 by 480mm. (23.5 by 19 inches).
24379
To scale:
notes:
notes:
A detailed roadmap of Barbados, including an inset of Bridgetown. The roads are marked in a bold red, and features useful to the visitor or traveller, such as hotels and petrol stations, are keyed on the lower right.
The present example is the revised, 1956, edition of the map, with additional details including the "Coconut Creek Club", on the west coast of the island, and the Police Training School, just below Seawell Airport in the south-east.
Marga...
The present example is the revised, 1956, edition of the map, with additional details including the "Coconut Creek Club", on the west coast of the island, and the Police Training School, just below Seawell Airport in the south-east.
Marga...
A detailed roadmap of Barbados, including an inset of Bridgetown. The roads are marked in a bold red, and features useful to the visitor or traveller, such as hotels and petrol stations, are keyed on the lower right.
The present example is the revised, 1956, edition of the map, with additional details including the "Coconut Creek Club", on the west coast of the island, and the Police Training School, just below Seawell Airport in the south-east.
Margaret Swainson Anderson (1902-1952) was known to her family as "Ba". On leaving Girton College, Cambridge, in 1924 "she taught for a year at Malvern Girls' College before becoming assistant lecturer in Geography at the Victoria University of Manchester. She returned to Cambridge in 1928 as a demonstrator in the Geography Department. She spent a sabbatical term in 1931 in South America. In 1933 she went to Barbados to marry Frank Anderson, whose family had for many years been friends and neighbours in Cambridge. They spent several years in Barbados while he worked for the Barbados Telephone Company. While in Barbados Margaret Anderson helped to found the Barbados Museum and Historical Society. She also produced the first good road map of the island and, in collaboration with a Commander Wynne, she produced a chart of part of the harbour. Margaret and Frank returned to London in 1936 and in 1937 their daughter Margaret [known as Nan] was born. On the outbreak of war Margaret returned to Cambridge and worked as a Plotter, Eastern Regional HQ, Civil Defence, 1939-40. In 1944 she began to direct studies in Geography at Girton and also became a staff fellow and a university lecturer in Geography. Her publications include 'Systematic Geography: Part I World Relations', George Philip & Son 1937, and 'Geography of Living Things', English Universities Press 1951. Harriet Steers wrote in her obituary for Margaret Anderson (see GCPP Anderson 1/1) that her "approach to geographical work was in many ways unique because of her grip of, and interest in, the Natural Sciences. It was this distinction in geographical technique which led to the hope in Cambridge of a further and thorough treatment of Biogeography in the Tripos course". During the 1940s and early 1950s Margaret Anderson lived at Old Victoria Farmhouse in Hardwick, where she kept animals and poultry, her wide knowledge of flowers and birds adding to her enjoyment of life in the country. Margaret Anderson died on 15 September 1952 at the age of 50. At the time of her death her latest book, an anthology of travel, was in galley proof: it was published with the title 'Splendour of Earth' by George Philip and Son Ltd in 1954, including her own introduction dating from circa June 1952" (University of Cambridge online).
The present example is the revised, 1956, edition of the map, with additional details including the "Coconut Creek Club", on the west coast of the island, and the Police Training School, just below Seawell Airport in the south-east.
Margaret Swainson Anderson (1902-1952) was known to her family as "Ba". On leaving Girton College, Cambridge, in 1924 "she taught for a year at Malvern Girls' College before becoming assistant lecturer in Geography at the Victoria University of Manchester. She returned to Cambridge in 1928 as a demonstrator in the Geography Department. She spent a sabbatical term in 1931 in South America. In 1933 she went to Barbados to marry Frank Anderson, whose family had for many years been friends and neighbours in Cambridge. They spent several years in Barbados while he worked for the Barbados Telephone Company. While in Barbados Margaret Anderson helped to found the Barbados Museum and Historical Society. She also produced the first good road map of the island and, in collaboration with a Commander Wynne, she produced a chart of part of the harbour. Margaret and Frank returned to London in 1936 and in 1937 their daughter Margaret [known as Nan] was born. On the outbreak of war Margaret returned to Cambridge and worked as a Plotter, Eastern Regional HQ, Civil Defence, 1939-40. In 1944 she began to direct studies in Geography at Girton and also became a staff fellow and a university lecturer in Geography. Her publications include 'Systematic Geography: Part I World Relations', George Philip & Son 1937, and 'Geography of Living Things', English Universities Press 1951. Harriet Steers wrote in her obituary for Margaret Anderson (see GCPP Anderson 1/1) that her "approach to geographical work was in many ways unique because of her grip of, and interest in, the Natural Sciences. It was this distinction in geographical technique which led to the hope in Cambridge of a further and thorough treatment of Biogeography in the Tripos course". During the 1940s and early 1950s Margaret Anderson lived at Old Victoria Farmhouse in Hardwick, where she kept animals and poultry, her wide knowledge of flowers and birds adding to her enjoyment of life in the country. Margaret Anderson died on 15 September 1952 at the age of 50. At the time of her death her latest book, an anthology of travel, was in galley proof: it was published with the title 'Splendour of Earth' by George Philip and Son Ltd in 1954, including her own introduction dating from circa June 1952" (University of Cambridge online).
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bibliography:
provenance:
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