James Imray

(1803 - 1870)

James Imray was a chartmaker and publisher, with a shop selling books, maps, charts and instruments.

He was apprenticed in the Stationers’ Company to William Lukyn in 1818. In 1835 he entered into partnership with Michael Blachford to continue the chart-publishing business of Robert and William Blachford. In the 1841 census, he is recorded as a stationer, living in Brixton with his wife, son and two servants; in the 1851 Census, however, Imray referred to himself as a chart-publisher.

This was an interesting, and important period for Imray. He was declared bankrupt in February 1843, and made four pitiful dividend payments between 1846 and 1850, and yet he also took control of the partnership in 1846, presumably buying out Blachford. Once he had control of the firm, it went from strength to strength, such that, on his death, the firm could be described as “the leading private chart publisher of the day”, while probate valued his estate at under £35,000. The firm continues to the present, trading as Imray, Laurie, Norie and Wilson, bringing together the rival businesses of Richard Holmes Laurie (direct heir of Robert Sayer and Laurie and Whittle), John William Norie and Charles Wilson.

Imray achieved an enormous output of important material that brought him great commercial success, even in the face of competition from the official Admiralty Hydrographic Office, the Royal Navy’s chart-publishers. Imray, and his rivals, routinely issued their charts mounted on a blue backing paper, hence the generic term “blue-backed charts” to describe the output of these independent chartmakers.