Victorian Hampstead
Map of the Borough of Hampstead
- 作者: LOWE, Charles H.,
- 出版地: London,
- 出版商: Sprague & Co. Ltd.,
- 发布日期: 1900.
- 物理描述: Large lithographed plan, dissected and mounted on linen, folding into original publisher's brown cloth covers, upper cover detached, decorated in blind, lettered in gilt.
- 方面: 1000 by 1320mm (39.25 by 52 inches).
- 库存参考: 11434
笔记
The plan shows the Borough of Hampstead divided into wards, which are numbered and marked by a red line: Hampstead Heath; Belsize Ward; Adelaide Ward; Central Ward; West End Ward; Kilburn Ward; Priory Ward. Charles H. Lowe was the Borough Surveyor for Hampstead in the early twentieth century.
The population of Hampstead doubled in size between 1871 and 1891. The expansion of the London railways, especially the North London Line in 1860, made it more accessible from the City, attracting both residents and visitors. As a result of this migration, the area underwent substantial redevelopment. During the 1880s Fitzjohns Avenue was connected to Hampstead High Street, creating a new transport nexus; the slums in central Hampstead were cleared; and the area gained two important hospitals - the Mount Vernon TB and the Hampstead General. In 1889 Hampstead became part of Greater London and in 1900, the year this map was made, it became a metropolitan borough, gaining its first council and mayor. The area had already begun to attract the literary and political figures which would make it a byword for radical thought - Lord Byron and Percy Shelley shared a cottage on the heath - and by the late eighteenth century it was home to a varied group of intellectuals including George du Maurier (grandfather of Daphne), the painter Walter Field, and Sir Henry Cole, a founder of the V&A.
Rare: No examples recorded by OCLC
The population of Hampstead doubled in size between 1871 and 1891. The expansion of the London railways, especially the North London Line in 1860, made it more accessible from the City, attracting both residents and visitors. As a result of this migration, the area underwent substantial redevelopment. During the 1880s Fitzjohns Avenue was connected to Hampstead High Street, creating a new transport nexus; the slums in central Hampstead were cleared; and the area gained two important hospitals - the Mount Vernon TB and the Hampstead General. In 1889 Hampstead became part of Greater London and in 1900, the year this map was made, it became a metropolitan borough, gaining its first council and mayor. The area had already begun to attract the literary and political figures which would make it a byword for radical thought - Lord Byron and Percy Shelley shared a cottage on the heath - and by the late eighteenth century it was home to a varied group of intellectuals including George du Maurier (grandfather of Daphne), the painter Walter Field, and Sir Henry Cole, a founder of the V&A.
Rare: No examples recorded by OCLC
参考书目
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