Index to Sheetlines 69 to 119 and CCS website
Sheetlines author index
Abbott, Victor
Early work of OS in and near
Ivybridge 111/22-28
Addiscott, Peter
2009
AGM 85/57
Ambler,
John
OS and mapping of tram routes 117/30-44
Proposed and mystery tunnels 104/40-43
Anderson,
Bernard
Disappearing wind
turbines on OS maps 116/24-29
Visit to Cheshire
archives and local studies 113/2
Visit to Durham Records
Office 112/17
Visit to John Rylands
Library Manchester 111/32
Anderson,
Bernard and Stebbing, Deborah
London area AD map – has
the mystery been solved 112/21
Map evidence for the London balloon apron 1917-1918 114/2-7
Andrews,
David
Errors
and experiences 102/17-20
Hiding awkward things
under the bed 102/29
In
defence of GPS and SatNav 79/65-66
The
meaning of the mereing 106/28-29
Merely
a question of boundaries 103/31-39, 105/34-41
Merely clarifications 111/29-31
More about ha-has on OS maps 96/31-32
Not so definitive maps 108/18-21
OS & AA 109/40-41
Scaling the depths – a wet walk 104/2-38-29
Some
comments on ‘Interpreting the 1:2500 County Series’ 79/18
Andrews, David and Bishop, Paul
Ha-has
– the last laugh 97/48-49
Andrews,
JH
Ordnance Survey maps: a concise guide for
historians [review] 73/54
Andrews,
John
A more puzzling trig point 69/53-54
Andrews,
KS
Bloody
Old Britain [review] 83/47-49
Covering
post-war Scottish Populars 84/33-41
Cutting
the cloth – when did they do it? 75/24-25
Grassholm
Island and The Smalls 72/42-45
A
guide to the Ordnance Survey one-inch Seventh Series [review] 71/57-58
In
vino veritas tabularum 83/58
Missing
red plate – a gripping mystery 81/56-57
New Popular one-inch maps – more on the covers 82/17-21
One-inch
New Popular map covers distinguished 76/14-28
The Royal Geographical Society, London
72/8
The
spread of Welsh on Seventh Series one-inch maps
74/17-23
Thumbnail
sketches on one-inch map covers from 1945
78/38-42, 79/10-16, 80/47-52, 86/44-48 91/31-35
Trig
pillar building party 71/16
Andrews,
KS, and Welham, PS
The New Popular index
damaged, mended and improved 87/44-9
More New Popular
printings and other discoveries 88/25-32
Andrews,
KS, and Wheeler, RC
One-inch Seventh Series
maps – surveying the covers 70/11-21, 74/51
Archer,
David
- see also Wheeler, R C
Alan
Godfrey celebrates 79/55-56
Alan
Godfrey look-alikes 82/11-14
Alan Sillitoe (1928-2010) 88/9-10
A candidate for the source of the Popular
and Fifth Edition cover design? 70/57
Campbell Kennedy 115/51
Cathy
Bull 85/2
Cyril
Everard 76/3
John
Dennett’s papers 79/8-9, 84/20-28
Engraved maps 87/7-11
Fox
hunting 98/63
It would be nice to
meet and chat about maps 94/52-55
Kerry musings 69/46-7, 70/55-6, 71/63-64, 72/56-57, 73/56-58, 74/48-50, 76/59-61, 77/70-71, 78/63-74, 79/61-63, 80/65-67, 81/54-55, 82/56-58, 83/51-53, 84/52-55, 85/51-54, 86/53-55, 87/51-53, 88/47-49, 89/54-57,
90/60-62,
91/65-70, 92/56,
93/47-50, 94/56-58, 95/55-57, 96/49-51, 97/51-53, 98/60-62, 99/59-61, 100/59-62, 101/60-62, 102/45-48,
103/56-59, 104/59-61, 105/62-64, 106/55-58, 107/58-60, 108/55-57, 109/62-65, 110/52-55, 111/55-57, 112/57-59, 113/49-52, 114/49-52 115/48-52 116/59-61 117/56-59 118/60-62, 119/61-63
New
one-inch series 72/50
No more OS maps as we know them? 89/33-35
Ordnance Survey of Wales 89/22
Scotland in Roman times 107/8-11
Ascott,
Kevin
A
mound’s a mound for a’ that! 81/58
Ashill,
Eddie
Visit
to No 1 AIDU, RAF Northolt 84/5-7
Aucott,
Paula, Fleet, Chris and Southall, Humphrey
The GB1900 project –
from the horse’s mouth 111/46-48
Baily,
Brian
Ordnance Survey data
collection and mapping of tidal features
90/4-17
Barber,
Martyn
Aerial
photography and the Ordnance Survey 76/6-13
Barton,
John
Bench marks 70/60-61
Batchelor,
Bill
A double trig point 69/20
Local
meeting – Redbourn 113/4
The National Archives of Ireland 70/37-39
Biddiscombe,
Brian
Irish
Railway Record Society, Dublin 73/32
‘Prehistory’
73/26-27
Trinity
College Dublin’s Glucksman Map Library 70/42-43
Binns,
David
Map
addict [review] 86/49
Bird,
Graham
Authentic Map Directories 72/62
London
2012 maps 96/44
London – a life in maps 77/4
A
mystery atlas 72/61
Bishop,
Paul
– see also Andrews, David and Bishop, Paul
– see also Bishop, Paul and Munro, David
– see also Bishop, Paul and Oliver, Richard
– see also Bishop, Paul and Thomson, Gavin
– see also Mitchell, Doug and Bishop, Paul
Gordon’s Edinodunensis 110/50
Hiding awkward things
under the bed 102/29
The internal divisions
and size of buildings 105/27-33
Merely rivers 112/18
The moving story of
river boundaries 104/37-38
OS Books of Reference (Area books) 109/13-22
Over-cooking lime kilns 106/32-33
Scotland’s rivers and mountains
115/16-19
The thickness of internal walls
108/42-44
The West Highland Way – sculptures
and maps 115/26-28
Bishop
Paul and Munro, David
Further comment on OS
mapping of limekilns in Scotland 101/42-47
Bishop,
Paul and Oliver, Richard
More about ha-has on OS
maps 96/32-35, 97/48-49, 98/63
Re-drawing of OS First
Edition 1:2500 sheets for later First Edition printing 106/43-49
Representation of ha-has
on OS six-inch mapping 95/6-15
Bishop,
Paul and Thomson, Gavin
How OS depicted
limekilns in Scotland’s Central Belt 98/19-31
Blake,
Ronald
Airfield mystery map
117/48
Charting the
aeronautical landscape 99/19-39, 101/4-28
Airfields on maps 100/42-46
Bland,
Pete
OS national GPS network
95/5
Bleasdale,
TC
Missing
red plate – a gripping mystery 81/56
Board,
Christopher
–
see also Jarvis, Gerry
Air photo mosaics 71/24-35
Charles
Close Society annual general meeting, chairman’s report 76/33-34
Disposal of Ordnance Survey Record
Map Collection 86/5
Ground-breaking
developments at Ordnance Survey 85/10-11
Maps
of Cheshire, Macclesfield 76/5
O’Brien, CIM (obituary) 104/57-58
On
reading ‘Kerry musings’ 75/46
The
Ordnance Survey International Collection 74/3-4
Uncle
Joe’s view of Croydon 73/59
Board,
Christopher, Jarvis, Gerry, and Davies, John
Copenhagen 83/7-9
Bove,
Damien & Delano-Smith, Catherine
Can you trust a facsimile?
The Ordnance Survey and the Gough map 119/49-55
Brawn,
David
Discovery Walking guides
109/55-57
Broomfield,
Phil
The mystery of Gars-bheinn 73/60-62
Southampton’s
Gas Monument 76/65
Two
pillars on a reservoir 72/59
Why
two trig points? 70/58-59
Brown,
Nigel
In defence of GPS and SatNav
79/66
Unfolding
the Aldershot Command 85/55-56
Buckle,
Alfred
Working at Ordnance
Survey in 1930s 106/37-40, 107/35-37
Burgess,
Tony and Deadman, Derek
Ordnance Survey and hunt
maps 108/34-41
Burry,
Steve and Maiden, Matt
Ordnance Survey maps now printed by
Butler, Tanner & Dennis 92/3-5
Byard,
Roger
Adding to Addington 101/29
Carnt,
Roger
Confrontation at
Latterwood 99/40-41
What the papers say 93/35
Carrol,
Ray
C roads in Kesteven
106/50-51
Cartmell,
Anthony
Response to recent OS
consultation 88/6-7
Digital mapping 87/39-43
Challis,
David Milbank
Campbell Ballantyne 1932-2010 90/3
Engraved
maps – another opinion 90/49-51
Gill Sans typefaces leave a marked
impression on OS maps 108/2-8
The Railways of Great Britain: a
historical atlas [review] 71/66-67
Chasseaud,
Peter
Military maps – the one-inch series of
Great Britain and Ireland
[review] 72/52-55
Chilton,
Steve
-
see also
Shepherd, Ifan DH & Chilton, Steve
Ordnance Survey and
OpenStreetMap 91/20-27
Clayton,
Don
Not in them thar hills! 74/52
Close,
Col. CF
Re-wiring a theodolite diaphragm 77/56
Roman
England on the map 81/40
Clutton-Brock,
Oliver
Visit to the Badley Library 74/5
Clynes,
Rob
Mapping international
sporting events 96/36-37
Cole,
John
[see also A large scale
contributor 93/45-46]
1:1250 survey methods –
corrections 69/54
1:25,000
First Series, Regular Edition – further notes
69/31-34
Air
Wars 82/50-56
Amendments
to provisional list of 1:2500 bypassed plans
71/9
Another
party poser 99/55
Boundaries and rivers 106/36
But for the grace of God … 72/60
Chain
of events 84/29-32
Civil
War battlefields 83/39-41 88/36
Cornish Explorers – B editions 71/15-16
The
early years of the National Grid fifty-inch map (continued) 81/36-39
The
early years of the National Grid twenty-five inch map (continued) 80/58-60
Fool’s gold 76/61
Following
Alan to Looe 72/48-49
Further
exploration 78/44-45
In passing 86/24
Jenny
Twigg and her daughter Tib 75/19
Let
consistency be the goal! 70/61-62
Locations and methods: 1:1250
National Grid maps 1944-57 108/46-49
More battles 88/36
The National grid six-inch and
1:10,000 scales 92/29-31
New
editions, sweeps, and did the broom do its job?
85/24-26
Not
in them thar hills! 73/52
The
old Town Series: 1:500, 1:528 and 1:1056 (continued) 82/15-16
Observations
on positional accuracy improvement of 1:2500 mapping of Cornwall 110/19
Ordnance Surveys for HM Land
Registry 101/52-56
A persistent error 87/29-30
Popular
maps, principal stations 102/30-33
Post-war 1:2500 Provisional Edition
maps of Birmingham 84/44-45
Provisional perplexity 102/43-44
The principal problem 69/50-52
Regular
revision 91/52-53
Revision points revisited 98/16-17, 98/63
Survey methods: corrections and
additions 73/53
Testing the enhancement 72/46, 74/34-35
Tidal tales 73/24
Touring midst the tors 89/13-15
Uncommon boundary mereings on the OS
large scale map 70/8-9
An
unusual collection 77/66-67
Updating
the update 77/57-58
What went wrong on sheet 16? 103/45
Collier,
Peter
The military map of UK
and its impact on OS 99/44, [see also 100/11-22]
Cook,
Andrew S
‘Great
Britain is a collector of islands and peninsulas’ 76/57-58
Mystery airfields map [Letter]
118/58
Cornish,
Jack
Don’t lose you way:
putting historical rights of way back on the map 113/13-18
Corrie,
Philippa J
Blanket
coverage? 73/24, 75/46
Depiction
of M1 on half-inch Leicester sheet
94/59
The far-distant Oxus 69/49-50
Missing Horse! 82/62
Cottrell,
Mike
– see also Seeley, John
M40 Junction 4 / A404 Handy Cross
Improvement Scheme 79/66
Cruickshank,
JL
The
Armistice was not the end of the war 114/24-29
Britannia’s
Roads: an introduction to the strip maps of John Ogilby’s Britannia [review]
116/64-65
German military maps of UK &
Ireland of World War II 69/15-16
‘German-Soviet friendship’ and the
Warsaw Pact mapping of Britain and Western Europe 79/23-43
How big a map does it take to build
socialism? 89/5-12
Kaiser Bill thought he knew where
you lived 77/5-20
Keiran Wade, the man who shows the
Russians the way! 92/40
Khrushchev preferred Bartholomew’s
maps 87/31-34
Kiwi topographic maps 112/3
More on UTM Grid system 102/22-28
Ordnance
Survey motoring atlas of GB 91/6-19
Palestine of the Crusades 71/10-15
Preliminary
study of the Soviet topographic maps of the UK and their sources 119/30-43
Surveying
the administrative boundaries of Lancashire and Yorkshire after the 1841
Ordnance
Survey Act 92/6-22, 93/38
Teaching
OS map-reading as a foreign language 94/23-32
The Reichsamt für Landesaufnahme
and the Ordnance Survey 72/9-22, 73/39-52, 78/62
The
use of Ordnance Survey data by commercial publishers – and some implications of
the present situation 96/8-13
Under
every leaf: how Britain played the greater game from Afghanistan to Africa
[book review] 96/42-44
Виды
из Москвы – Views from
Moscow 82/37-49
Cruz,
Tinho da
Save the map! 95/5
Cubitt,
Alan
Uncle Joe’s view of Croydon 73/59-60
Dancy,
John
Object name books 75/20-23
Darling,
Andrew
Annotations – irritants or
enhancements? 115/33-36
The Antique Maps
of Cornwall and Isles of Scilly [review] 114/56
Ivor Gurney’s Map Therapy 119/56-58
Riddles of the sands 118/50-55
Davidson,
Jean
Dating early
Bartholomew half-inch maps 73/22
Davies,
John
– see also Board,
Christopher
Airfields on maps 100/42
Brewer’s Britain & Ireland [review]
75/45
Chaps
on maps 82/59
Comrade Baranow, the bouncing Czech, Penkilan
Head and the World Map 78/32-33
Disconcerting
displacements 75/34
East German
mapping 80/69-70
Epping Forest – the official
map 90/46, 114/54
Exploring
Explorer House 96/6-7
Fair Maid to Custom Made – CCS
visits 116/2
Fifty Maps and the Stories They Tell [review] 115/56-57
Fingerprints all over it 71/50-51
Foulshiels
– birthplace of Mungo Park 80/67
Google
doesn’t always know best 84/59
Hadrian’s Wall 89/18
An historical atlas of Pembrokeshire [review] 115/58
A
history of 20th century in 100 maps [review] 102/49
I’m a rambler from Manchester way 113/23-24
The light in the middle of the
tunnel 100/10
London 2012: why not walk it? 95/16-17
London model 74/4
London
National Park city map [review] 111/60
London Show and Tell 117/2
London’s Transport Museum 70/6
Manchester:
Mapping the City [review] 114/53
Mapping
the new world [book
review] 99/64
Mapping
the Olympic Park 98/44-45
Mapping
the roads [book review] 98/64
Maps on the move 91/59
No bridge at
Hullbridge 115/40
Tenerife
Hikers map [map review] 109/55
The makers of the blueback
charts 80/5
Measure
of Manhattan [book review]
97/56
October weekend in Conwy 83/10-11
On the web 86/4
OS explore 80/61-62
OS
Greenspace 110/35-37
Pole Hill and the meridians 74/41-42
Puddleducks tearoom 110/38
Railways
of Kingston-upon-Thames [review] 111/60
ReCycled
Wire 108/53
Russian mapping of Britain – recent
discoveries 77/51
Russian
maps now widely available 78/50
Scotland: Defending the Nation [review]
114/53
The Selden Map of China [review] 115/56-57
Slovenia, June 2007
79/44
Soviet
Cold War maps of London and Ordnance Survey 114/23
Soviet military mapping study
day 74/13-16
Soviet
military city plans of British Isles 89/23-24
The Struve geodetic arc 96/30
The tale of the Hagstrom
gift-wrap 69/41-42
Talking Maps [review] 115/56-57
Times
Atlas of London [review] 92/52-53
UKHO
and AIDU 101/57
Uncle Joe goes worldwide 75/43-44
Uncle Joe knew where you lived 72/26-38, 73/6-20,
Visit to Alan Godfrey Maps 76/45
Visit to Defence Geographic Centre,
Feltham 73/3-4
Visit to FWT 84/46-47
Visit
to Isle of Man 82/8-9
Visit
to Snowflake Software 79/4-5
Walk
London [review] 116/62
What three words? A new approach to
geo-location 105/26
Why North is up [review] 116/63
de
la Mare, Aidan
A
map in my collection [OSNI Lough Erne] 89/30-32
A picture of the land
90/29-35
Crossed lines
85/15-20
Fudge 84/57
Hunting with dogs and the Ordnance Survey 97/38-42
Map collecting – the endgame 87/37-38
Shooting towers and speed track 97/33-35
Dean,
Richard
The
Dale Dyke Dam disaster 94/46-47
Dealing with
cartoholism 93/43-44
Error and Efficiency – a
cautionary tale on large-scale accuracy 101/48-50
Manchester ship canal
and early large scales revision 91/28-30
Off the rails – again
74/33
Ordnance Survey on the rails 106/4-11
Deadman,
Derek
see
also Burgess, Tony and Deadman, Derek
A map in my collection 112/40
Ordnance Survey British
Army training maps 116/18-22
OS covers and titles 111/13-21, 114/30-32 118/59
Delaney,
Gary
Loc8 codes – directions made easy 90/38-40
Donachie,
Fraser
Flappers
and sleepers 83/55
Down, Emma & Mitchell, Rose
Early
Military Map Surveyors of the Board of Ordnance
118/20-26
Dunn,
Stuart
Mapping the past on the
web 104/51-55
Corpse roads: an enigma and a
preserved error? 119/26-29
Dryburgh,
Peter
Local authority revision
of OS large-scale plans 103/44
du
Noyer, George Victor
Lough Dan, County
Wicklow 92/41
Eckersley,
Roger
An
anomaly on the Cromford & High Peak Railway
76/63-64
Fair, Alan
Proposed and mystery tunnels 104/40-43
Visit to The National Archives 86/17
Fenner,
Robert
Brightling and the principal
triangulation 115/3-7
Ferguson,
Paul
Postcodes in Ireland 89/16-18
Fielden,
Ed
A
co-ordinated approach: the County Series, the National Grid and other
co-ordinate transformation stories
80/40-46
British racing green –
reincarnation of the OS ‘Quarter-inch’ Road map 107/44-45
Cover up: recent
changes to OS leisure map covers 88/33-35
Feeling blue 87/35-36
Latest map
printings 90/44
Observations on
BT&D map printings 92/32-33
OS efficiency
review 87/50
Scotland
Tourist Map – the one that got away
82/24
Tour goes astray 83/24-26
Fielding,
David
On reading ‘Kerry musings’ 75/46
Fleet,
Chris
Additions to the NLS Online resource 115/20-22
Bartholomew’s
half-inch series 89/25-29
Historical Ordnance
Survey maps of Scotland go online 83/50
More large-scale maps
online at NLS 102/34
More OS-related
mapping at NLS 104/27
New NLS online maps 93/4-9
New online OS maps and
related resources at NLS 112/54
New website for OS
25-inch mapping of Scotland (1855-1882)
85/11-12
Ordnance
Survey digital data system goes live in the Legal Deposit Libraries 81/4-5
OS six-inch maps of
E&W now on NLS website 99/43
OS County Series – NLS
records listing project 98/32-33
Recent additions to
NLS online OS maps series 98/59
Fowler, John
Asked and answered 104/39
Francis-Jones,
Anthony
Meeting and chatting
95/52
Changing the map – a
brief introduction to Definitive map modification orders 97/20-22
Tanks on Dartmoor 104/49
Washed out 103/52
Freeman,
Michael
Shuckburgh’s papers at
National Library of Wales 110/30-34
Fry,
Philip,
No
more ‘quarter inch’ ... but a great app 102/54-55
Ordnance
Survey Ireland, Phoenix Park 70/40-41
Foster,
G
The
chain gang 83/35-37
Fowler,
John
What makes a good
society? 101/58
Gibson,
Peter
Wirral
woman shares map reading 83/56
Godfrey,
Alan
Adventures
into colour 83/42-45
Gordon,
Alan
Ordnance Survey Apprentice
Tradesmen Boys RE 116/48-51
Greaves,
Mark
Is Britain on the move? 107/2-3
Haigh,
Peter
The day we went to
Aberdeen by way of Wick 78/49
Expectations
doubly confounded 78/65
How
unusual is this cover variant? 77/73
Ingleborough cave 114/16
Lows of Britain 117/49-50
The mountains of Freshfield forest
117/23
Scaling
the heights [review] 114/59
The
Three peaks challenge [map review] 110/44-5
A
York Minster bench mark 85/39-44
Yorkshire
Dales trigpointing walks [review] 99/64
Hall,
Debbie
Discovery in the
Bodleian Map Room: OS Unpopular Edition 1918-19
93/2-3
Hall,
Stephen JG
A minor mapping mystery: the
Evan Water Aqueduct (and some other unusual bridges) 118/27-36
Hann,
Roly
Cyberspace or
bust! 73/25
Dealer’s
diary 69/38-41, 70/28-32, 71/18-22
Dealer’s
diary – an occasional update 79/51-54
In praise of trig points 92/59
A
map collector’s lament 74/53
Ordnance
Survey pre-war map cover design 81/48-50
The
Postbridge code – a mystery solved?
77/80
Harmer,
John
Meeting and chatting
95/54
Harold,
Robert
OS series held by
National Library of Scotland 95/20-24
Who drew Westmorland
man? 96/48
Harper,
Richard
Bringing the past into the digital
age 90/23-28
Hellyer,
Roger
– see also Oliver,
Richard
Albert Eaves 91/58
Cambridge University Library Map
Room reopens 82/26
Cartographic
discoveries during a week in Washington
69/5-10
Cartographic
discovery 82/10
How and where 100/47-51
The Lightning Cities and Road Map Company
Ltd 105/7-25
A lost map of Salisbury Plain? 95/25-32
Old Series, new information? 95/2
Ordnance Survey catalogues – a
proposal for a union list 80/53-58
Hellyer,
Roger, and Oliver, Richard
Blind
stamp query 110/43
Can anyone help? 80/64
Henderson,
Merryn
Framing the argument 111/58
Henry,
John
Bodleian
Library, University of Oxford 83/4-6
British Library visit 98/50-51
CCS visit to Dublin 92/37-39
CCS visit to Gotha 92/34-36
CCS visits Liverpool 98/46-49
The ups and downs of bench marks 69/35-36
Visit to Lovell Johns 83/3
Henwood,
Bill
Airfields on maps
100/45
Benchmarks in Bronte-land
107/29
The Black Letter Prayer
Book – a revelation? 116/41-43
River basins 114/19
Rivers and their
catchment basins 113/37-41
Ruins, ridges and reservoirs 74/24-27
An unnecessary
distraction? 84/13-16
An uphill struggle: the contoured
map of the Thames basin 114/20-22
When is a National Park not a
National Park? 73/23
Women
reading maps 84/58
Herbert,
Francis
Arnhem revisited 89/38-39
Ordnance Survey catalogues 82/59-60
The
Royal Geographical Society 73/60
Higgins,
David
Hold your (gas) fire! 70/62
Higley,
Chris
– see also Walker,
Peter
The
2008 AGM at Kingston 82/22
…
and that’s it from me! 85/64
Cardiff:
revisions for defence – and attack 115/23-25
Coastal
graffiti 76/63
Editorial
76/1
From
Squaw Tit to Whorehouse Meadow [review]
77/69
Historic town plans of Lincoln 1610-1920 [review]
73/65
Living
on the edge 77/59-65
Miles
Kington 81/50
Ordnance Survey index diagrams 85/27-38, 86/25-36
Oxbridge ramblings 88/17-24
Pictures
never lie? 93/16-19
Reburial of the World war One dead 101/2-3
The
Red Atlas: how the Soviet Union secretly mapped the world [review] 110/58
The Ordnance Survey Office – two
Edwardian views 84/18
The
secrets of Kineton 79/19-22
Timeline Historical Map Series,
sheet 189, Ashford and Romney Marsh [review] 74/45-47
UK
civil air charts 81/13-14
Visit to Digimap, Guernsey 86/9-12
Who,
what, which, why, where? 74/42
Whoops! 79/76
Hill,
Des
Visit to OS Headquarters at Southampton 72/5-7
Hines, Bill
Thomas Colby’s book collection 106/12-20
Hodson,
Yo
Cambell Ballantyne
1932-2010 [obituary] 90/2
Christopher Board OBE 72/1
The early days 100/2-4
Maps
of the Witham Fens from the thirteenth to the nineteenth century [review]
85/51
Roger
Fairclough [obituary] 85/3-4
Walter Purvis Smith [obituary]
114/61
Holden,
Roger N
CD-ROM
Review 80/62-64
Hollamby,
Ken
AA
Touring map of Scotland 97/28-30
The Great Map, the military
survey of Scotland [review] 81/51-52
Historic town plans of Lincoln, 1610-1920 69/3-4
Ley
hunting with Watkins 95/43-45
Mapping of Saddleworth: volume 1,
... 1771-1894 [review] 81/51-52
Maps
of War [review] 81/51-52
Rams
and pumps 95/51
Visit to Landmark Information
Group’s Exeter Offices 79/3-4
Hooper,
Lionel
The railways of Great Britain: a historical
atlas [review] 70/52-53
Horne,
Mike
An unusual surviving railway
pier 100/27-32
Iddiols,
Frank
The Fundamental bench mark
(and others) at Windsor Castle 116/54-56
Isaksen,
Leif
Disputing the Roman map
115/8
Ivory,
Michael
Women
reading maps 85/55
Jameson, Keith
River basins 114/18
Janes, Andrew
– see Jarvis, Gerry
Jaques,
Peter
Authentic Map Directories 70/62
Jarvis,
Gerry
–
see also Board, Christopher
The Badley Library 71/5
Blanket
coverage 74/52
The
British Geological Survey, Keyworth
71/4-5
Geodetski
Zavod Slovenije (GZS) 79/49
London
maps 76/44
Ordnance
Survey of Northern Ireland 73/27-28
Surveying
like it used to be 75/1
Visit
to Ludlow 78/8
Visit
to RAF Duxford 74/6-8
Wired for maps 73/4-5
Jarvis,
Gerry, with Board, Christopher
Larkhill Military
Railway 71/6-9
Jarvis,
Gerry and Janes, Andrew
Visit
to the Royal Air Force Museum, Hendon 85/13-14
Jasieniecki,
George
Puzzle
corner 83/55
Jeffery,
Nick
Geological
Survey of Northern Ireland 73/29
Public
Record Office of Northern Ireland
73/31-32
Visit
to Quickmap, Luton 81/11-12
Jervis,
Tony
High
Peak Junction 77/72
Right
way up? 79/64
Jewitt,
Crispin
WOOGs, WOOSies &
WOMAT – the War Office archive 102/41-42
Johns, Gavin
The use by the GWR of OS
maps in preparing land plans 105/44-53
Jones,
Barbara
Struve revisited 97/23-27
Kendrick,
John
Aerial secrets 72/58-59
Kennet,
Paul
Not so secret tower 106/27
Kent,
Alexander
Expedition
to Riga 76/39-44
Geodetski
Inštitut Slovenije 79/50-51
Maps
from the past 94/17-21
Ordnance
Survey and cartographic style 87/19-28, 88/11-16
Visit
to Priaulx library, Guernsey 86/11
Kimber,
David
Cannock Chase map 92/51
The motorway achievement, volumes
1 & 2 [review] 73/55-56
Not
the M1 95/18-19
The Willenhall Historic Map
Gallery 70/10
King,
John
A central London
cartographic meander 109/2-11
City of London
cartographic meander 111/2-12
OS ‘Free maps for
schools’ scheme 89/19
Cassini map teaching set [review] 89/5-53
Legible London on paper
110/57
London 2012 – more maps 97/31-32
London stories 107/26-28
Kirby,
Jack
The future is
digital? A review of two mapping apps 102/56-62
Mapping the Ocean Gateway
118/37-43
Langdill,
John
High
Peak Junction 77/72
Lee,
Martin
Off
the rails – again 75/48
The principal problem 69/50
Lilley,
Keith D
Surveying the surveyors: the
landscape legacies of the Ordnance Survey 113/6-12
Livingston,
Helen and Frank
Disputing the Roman map
115/8
The site of Wyndham
Chapel 117/45-47
Logan,
Niall
An ancient alignment – the
Baldernock parish boundary stones 116/30-40
MacKay,
James
Not the M1 95/18
MacKenzie,
Kenneth
Whoops
again! 81/58
Maiden,
Matt
-see Burry, Steve
Mais,
Alan K
Spot
the mistake! 85/59
Marriott,
Paul
The
largest printed Ordnance Survey map ever … probably! 81/14-15
Marris,
David
Norfolk airfields 78/34-37
Marshall,
Ann
Brian Friel’s Translations and the Ordnance Survey of
Ireland 1824-1846 92/42-48
Mason,
Bill
High
Peak Junction 77/72
Matthews,
Ron
OS
family tree – September 1951 80/68
McCarthy,
Pat
Crewe
Borough Council 81/40
Don’t ‘lose your
way’109/53
Meeting and chatting
95/53
Nantwich – large scale plans 84/57-58
Railways,
canals and more 75/33
Townlands
and rights of way 74/52
McConnell,
Mark
OS data in A-Z Adventure
atlases 96/17-19
McGrath,
Karen
Use of OS data by
commercial publishers 95/3-5
McIvor,
Malcolm C
Caledonian conduits
107/30
Wirral’s stone circles –
or were they? 95/47-60, 111/66
Mellor,
Michael
Uncle Joe’s view of Croydon 73/59
Millea,
Nick
Agas to OS: Oxford’s
changing townscape in old maps and new 112/51-53
Nigel James (1953-2013) 98/43
Mills,
Dennis, and Wheeler, Rob
Interpreting the 1:2500 County
Series 78/45-48
Mitchell,
Doug and Bishop Paul
Limekilns – still a
burning issue 107/20-22
Mitchell,
Rose
Men of 16 Survey company
95/32
Mitchell, Rose
& Down, Emma
Early Military Map Surveyors of the
Board of Ordnance 118/20-26
Morgan,
Nina
Ordnance Survey maps
that changed the world 96/14-16
Mumford,
Ian
‘A
brief record …’ 84/55-56
Monochrome to
polychrome at the Ordnance Survey in the nineteenth century 69/21-29
Used
maps 71/65
Muir,
Fergus
A more puzzling trig
point 72/62
Visit to Cambridge University Map Library 75/10
Noble,
Chris
A
glimpse at the history of social policy seen through the Ordnance Survey
one-inch maps 77/21-26
Repairs
to cloth maps 76/63
Nolan,
Mike
The 1943 South Downs
map 110/24-25
A map too far? Arnhem 1944 90/52-58
American target perspective maps of
second world war 105/54-58
The BCS Historical Military Mapping
Special Interest Group 73/2
The
British system & Modified British system 107/52-55
‘A brief record …’ and campaign
situation maps 84/7-12
Combined
Ordnance Survey maps 108/22-23
The Defence Surveyors’ Association
website 84/50
GEOREF 80/20-25
Grid colours on military maps 98/34-37
The introduction of UTM grid on
military maps: a sixty year retrospect 96/20-29, 98/52-53
The haven of rest and the Imperial
Geographical Service 91/54-57
Mystery
photographs 106/30-31
Puzzle corner 75/36
The
Target-Area Designator grid 81/34-35
The Vandyke process 93/20-25
Wei-hai-wei
(the majestic guardian of the sea)
76/52-56
O’Brien,
CIM
Brian W Adams, 1924 - 2005 75/2-4
The
World Map 1:2,500,000 79/64
O’Leary,
Rodney
George Petrie 1790-1866, the rediscovery of
Ireland’s past
[review] 71/60-61
Irish
Historic Towns Atlas No. 15 Derry-Londonderry [review] 77/68
Irish historic towns
atlas – latest developments 98/54-55
The Irish Ordnance Survey (history,
culture and memory)
[review] 71/58
Maps
and map-making in local history [review] 71/59
The Royal Irish Academy 70/41-42
Surveying
Ireland’s past [review] 71/59-60
O’Loughlin,
Thomas
The
Auto-Mapic map of Great Britain 104/30-34
A brief record of the advance of
the Egyptian Expeditionary Force …
83/12-23
Petermann’s
Planet volume I [review] 112/61
Petermann’s
Planet volume II [review] 113/55
Re-inventing the romer 111/50-54
Das Geheimnis des Karten-Wunders, Schwerte [review]
111/59
Oliver,
Richard
– see also Bishop, Paul
– see also Hellyer,
Roger
– see also Thornber,
Iain
A,
B, C and M: road numbers revealed [review]
81/53
Accountancy
and opacity: another Select Committee and the Ordnance Survey 81/6-7
The
archives of the Valuation of Ireland 1830-1865 [review] 113/56-58
Asked and answered 104/39, 105/59-61
The Baker Committee of 1892 100/11-22
Bench-marks on postcards 74/39-40
British map engravers [review] 92/52-53
Bus
stations on early one-inch Seventh series sheets 105/43
The
Cassini Old Series and Past and Present issues
78/51-56
The
Concise guide – a concise history 97/10-12
The
consumption of Ordnance Survey maps by Government departments in 1884 82/28-36
The
consultation of the future of Ordnance Survey
87/4-6, 88/3-5
Cycle and Leisure Map Cornwall, Cycle and
Leisure Map Devon [review]
74/45
The
earliest Bender? 94/49, 96/54
‘Edition codes’ and identifications
on Ordnance Survey maps 83/27-34
A few new maps 78/61-62
A few notes on map lettering 95/33-42
Filling the gap: a short place-name
excursion 94/33-45
Great instrument station 99/42
Grid colours 99/56-58
Hiding awkward things
under the bed 102/29
Intelligence
revealed: maps, plans and views at Horse Guards and the War Office [review] 93/5-54
Is there an optimum size for
topographic maps? 109/42-52
John Harwood Andrews (1927-2019)
[obituary] 107/23-25
John Beer (1930-2010) [obituary] 89/3-4
The landscape of London [review] 88/50-51
Last year’s wine in new bottles
103/2
The later Ordnance Survey half-inch
maps; some points of detail 92/23-28
London
area AD: a mystery map 102/36-40
Lord Salisbury and disagreeable
countries 83/54
MacGillycuddy’s
Reeks and Killarney [review] 102/50-53
Map of a nation [review] 89/40-50
Mapping the windmill – CCS latest
book 96/4-5
Maps
in those days [review] 91/60-61
More 1:100,000 sheet lines 74/36-39
Newlyn Tidal Observatory [review] 114/57
The Ordnance Survey Act, tidelines
and the growth of a myth 91/36-51
The Ordnance Survey and the mapping
of tram routes: some preliminary observations 116/5-17,
The
Ordnance Survey and Modern Irish literature [review] 107/61
The Ordnance Survey’s earlier years:
a new history 99/2-4
OS mapping from AA and AZ 94/19-15
Paul Baker: not quite as
expected… 71/40-49
Photo-zincography and
helio-zincography 90/41-44
Primary
trigs in Wales [book review] 96/52-53
Reproduction and influence: two
recent publications 105/42
Scotland:
mapping the nation [book review] 95/58-59
The ‘shading’ of buildings on the
1:2500/1893-1912: its ‘meaning’ 83/37-38
Sheet lines, sizes and style: a
Scottish problem solved? 81/16-29
The
sheet sizes and Delamere sheet lines of the one-inch Old Series 77/27-51
Sheetlines
and the Society’s website 82/61
A
survey party pose(r) 75/26-27
Ticking the boxes? Sustrans
cycle-touring mapping 104/19-26
Two interesting maps for OS225 107/4-7
Underground features on later 19th
century OS six-inch mapping 113/19-21
Unfair competition or an overstocked
market? 102/3-4
Unfinished
business: the lost Ordnance Survey two-inch mapping of Scotland, 1819-1828 and
1852 78/9-31, 79/67
The
‘Withycombe’ style 96/38-51
What they had for
lunch in 1956 106/52-53
Why the Ordnance
Survey needs its history 80/6-13
Writing notes for the
Godfrey Edition 93/26-35
Oliver,
Richard, and Hellyer, Roger
The
one-inch Old Series: more discoveries – yet more questions 80/26-39
Owen,
Elaine
Revision Points and
Timepix 109/58-61
Parker,
Mike
The hills are stuffed
with OS lawyers 89/36-37
The nine lives of John Ogilby [review] 108/50-51
Old series to Explorer [review] 91/62-64
Parsons,
David J
The Charles Close Society publications
policy 75/31-32
OS 60 inch to 1 mile town plans of
Manchester & Salford 1844-49 [CD review] 71/61-62
Paterson,
Walter
LAM-fold
maps 74/53
Size matters 69/48
What’s
in a name? 84/58
Pendray,
Keith
The principal problem 69/50
Perkins,
Chris
Cultures
of everyday map collecting 76/29-32
One-inch engraved maps of Ordnance Survey
from 1847 [review] 86/50
Perry,
Bill
OGS Crawford’s annotated
maps, 107/23-25
Porter,
Richard T
DOS
/OSD series numbers 84/42-43
H
E M Newman 78/65
Hall
and Yolland – original correspondence 83/56
Mapping
river basins 112/42
‘New one-inch series’ and parish
boundaries 73/21
Not
in them thar hills! 75/47
An
Ordnance Survey art society and its members
85/45-50
An
Ordnance Survey staff association 85/58
Our
Society 73/62
Poetic
licence 72/49
A
rubber stamp in the Ordnance Survey, 1877
84/59
A
survey party pose(r) 78/43
Surveyor’s name on an OS map 88/41-43
Theodolite diaphragms 80/70
William
Driscoll Gosset 82/63
Prest,
Frank
The Badley Library, Royal School of
Artillery, Larkhill 70/4-5
The
Surveying and Mapping Authority of Slovenia
79/46-47
Preston-Jones,
Ann
St Agnes Beacon 119/18-25
Purchase,
David
Exploring missing territory 71/67
Size
matters 69/48-49
Quinn,
Brian
Cassini
Publishing Ltd 82/22-24
Quinnell,
Norman
The archaeological revision
of the Isles of Scilly, 1978 118/3-18
Radway,
Trevor
A trainee’s lot: The OS in the 1950s
Richardson,
Alan
Evidence of a Roman map
of Britain 114/36-47
Richardson,
Michael
Map art on Irish covers and other material 91/2-5
Mapping of caves in Co Clare, Ireland 112/46-50
Risby,
Jon
New
maps 69/57-60, 70/63-68, 71/68-72,
72/63-68, 73/63-68, 74/54-60, 75/48-56, 76/68-72, 77/74-80, 78/67-72, 79/70-75,
80/71-76, 81/59-69, 82/64-68, 83/59-64, 84/60-64, 85/60-64, 86/56-59
The
Trafalgar Way [map review] 72/51-52
Robertson,
Andrew
Puzzle
corner 83/55
Surrey
Ordnance Survey historical maps [review]
91/62
Rowe,
Langdon
But for the grace of God…! 70/44-45
Cannibalism
and unsavoury additives! 72/25
Rowley,
Rev. EP
Internet
access and e-mail 85/58
Samson,
Tom
Ordnance Survey air maps and air traffic
control 71/38-40
Sargent,
Eric
Ley-lines from paper
maps 103/40-43
Saunders,
WN
Wynnstay Hall and the
School of Military Survey 106/21-23
Savage,
Shelly
An anthropologist investigates the wives of the
surveyors of Directorate of Overseas Surveys 98/57-58
Seeley,
John
Charles Close Society weekend at
Harmston 75/11-13
Defence
College of Intelligence, Royal School of Military Survey 82/4-7
Defence
Surveyors’ Association annual seminar 2011
93/39-40
Queen’s University Belfast 73/30-31
Seeley,
John, and Cottrell, Mike
Visit to Ordnance Survey 78/5-7
Shannon,
Bob
My great, great
grandfather was a leveller and contourer 88/37-41
Shaw,
Matthew
Historical map series
online 109/37-39
Shearer,
John
Stanley
Cursiter and his contribution to mapping 93/10-15
Shepherd,
DH & Chilton, Steve
Where have all the
(Martello) Towers gone 103/7-30
Shirreffs,
Bill
The Antonine Wall
[map review] 83/47
Walks
around Grantown-on-Spey [map review] 79/63
Shirt,
David
A
helping of Roseberry Topping 81/8-9
On the road with Enwall 86/18-22
Smith,
JR
Struve revisited 97/23-27
Sowan,
Paul W
Revision points revisited 98/18
Spencer,
Michael
Bing Maps and Ordnance
Survey 110/28-29
Disputing the Roman map
115/10
Local meeting – Wall,
Staffs 113/4
The GB 1900 project
110/48-9
Mere questions 110/14-17
Odd rocks in the Outer
Hebrides 114/8-15
Ordnance Survey Puzzle Book [review] 114/54
OS tidal observatories at Felixstowe and Dunbar 115/41-45
Rivers and their
catchment basins 113/37-38
Use of metric measurements in
Victorian times 116/23
Spencer-Smith,
Geoffrey
Revision points revisited 98/18
Steele,
Graham
National and University Library [of
Slovenia] 79/48-49
Stevens, Tim
OS maps and motor sport 101/50-52
Stubbs, Peter
OS Custom Made 110/18
Why the Blue Ensign? 46/48
Sutherland,
Ann
Dating
maps 74/51
Swarbrick,
Tony
Seaplanes on Mersey 101/30
Swindell,
Paul
Foulshiels
– birthplace of Mungo Park 79/69
Northumberlandia, the lade of the
north 99/18
Taylor,
Anne
CCS archives catalogue on Janus 94/4-9
The mystery traveller 99/54
News from the Archives 98/3-4
Visit
to the National Library of Latvia in central Riga 76/39
Taylor,
Kate
UK Hydrographic Office, Taunton 70/7-8
Taylor,
Roger
Not
in them thar hills! 75/48
Thornber,
Iain and Oliver, Richard
Colby’s camps 90/18-22
Tinker,
Dot
Somerset mapped [review] 107/62-63
Turner,
Andrew
A
line-side fire? 83/58
Upfield,
Mick
Survey of Bicester Pioneer
Square 107/13-19
Waight,
E C
Archaeological field investigation 69/53
The Tale of King Orry and the
Ordnance Survey 83/53-54
Walthall,
Peter
Bartholomew
1:100,000 maps 81/57
Walker,
David L
see also Walker David L and Webb, Adrian
Balta Sound and the
figure of the earth 99/5-17
A fresh look at the
initial triangulation 1795-1811 117/9-22
James Gardner –
surveyor, computer, publisher 101/31-38
The initial
triangulation of Scotland from 1809 until 1822 98/5-15
Reviewing the evidence 114/48
Scotland: mapping the islands [review] 108/52
Struve revisited 97/23-27
The Ordnance Survey and Airy’s figure of the Earth119/6-17
Ox Rock missing from OS maps for 100
years 110/26-27
The troubled progress of
the Scottish triangulation 1823-1858 104/5-18
A view of the Grampians
observed in 1818 published 1820 100/23-26
Use of OS for planning rural sewage 107/32-34
Walker
David L and Webb, Adrian
Some collaboration
between OS and Hydrographic office in 19th Century 102/5-16
Walker,
Peter and Higley, Chris
Visit
to Cambridge University Library 97/5-7
Warburton,
Peter
Creag Doire nan
Nathrach et al 79/57-60
A guide to the Ordnance Survey one-inch
Third Edition maps, in colour
[review] 70/53-54
Leith
Hill 70/57-58
A
map in my collection [Scotland from
Keith Johnson’s Royal Atlas] 78/57-60
Nor
any drop to drink 100/37-39
Off the map 70/22-26
Please
Sir, I swapped it 69/45
Reservoir Dogs 75/28-30
Up the airy mountain – a
gallimaufry 86/39-43
A
Viking saga 72/39-41
Wirral
woman shares map reading 83/56
Watson,
Lez
Burton-on-Trent Borough 1878 – boundary
markers 118/44-49
Landranger covers 72/62
OS 1:50,000 (Landranger) map cover designs 108/9-17
Watt,
David
Ann
Sutherland: an unforgettable map curator [obituary] 113/53-54
Col AD Yudin and others
– the personalities behind Soviet city military plans 117/27-29
Response to recent OS
consultation 88/6
Soviet military mapping 74/9-12
Visit
to Jāņa sēta map shop and publishing house in central Riga 76/40
Webb,
Adrian
see Walker David L and Webb, Adrian
Webster,
Diana
OS
mapping of SW Scotland circa 1820 79/67-68
Wheeler,
RC
- see also Andrews, K S, and Mills, Dennis
Airfields on maps 100/46
Arnhem 1944 – were the maps good
enough? 87/11-18
ARP revision, 1938 100/33-36
A Bavarian comparison 110/39-42, 111/49
Black work at Counter Drain 90/48
Bogus
Bognor; the early states of the 1:25,000 Provisional Edition 86/13-17
Brown Hills 115/14-15
Buying an Ordnance Map, 1825 69/36-37
Charter
Bounds on the 1:25,000 Provisional Edition
85/21-23
Coloured
urban roads on the one-inch Third Edition
71/22-23
Committee news 86/2
Constructing the M1 93/36-37
Contour accuracy 100/40-41
Dealing with awkward extrusions 98/56
Defence
Intelligence and the Cold War [review] 106/54
Depiction of RAF stations on the
Provisional (NG) six-inch 97/46-47
A different Medway crossing 87/49
Difficulties
with Land-Line data 69/29-30
The
finest index map in the world? 95/46
The first waterproof OS map?
106/34-35
For an up-to-date map - go to
Stanfords 107/56-57
Foulshiels – birthplace of Mungo Park
80/67
The
French ‘Type 1922’ series 75/13-18
Further observations on the map of
East Anglia 106/25-26
How Bartholomew gained and lost a
customer 90/36-37
How
to treat a cult 115/32
Internal divisions in buildings 103/54-55
Irish 3D town models 92/49-50
Is Folkestone on the road to
Killarney? 79/16-17
A
Kesteven road atlas, 104/35-36
Luftwaffe air photos and the OS
Special Emergency Edition 117/3-8
A map too far? Arnhem 1944 90/59
Marbled paper 113/34-36
Masked balls 98/38-41
Modern history on OS maps 101/39-41
The National Grid Provisional
six-inch in Cambridgeshire 103/47-51
The New Forest Tourist map of 1966 107/46-50
New Series to Popular: European
parallels 109/23-36
Not the M1 95/19
Observations on Maps from the past 5 100/53-58
On ‘Interpreting the 1:2500 County
Series’ 80/69
Ordnance Survey forgets about roads
102/21
Ordnance
Survey public consultation 72/3
The
Pictish Symbol Stones of Scotland [review] 84/51
Picturing
Britain: Paul Sandby [exhibition review] 86/23
Plagiarism
with large-scale maps 81/30-33
Popular revision: lessons from Leicester 71/52-56
Postscript to Aberystwyth 69/11-14
Proposed
and mystery tunnels 104/40-43
Pumps and wells at 1:2500 94/50-51
Representation of railway track
layouts on County Series 112/31
Reprints of the first edition
1:2500 119/44-48
Roy’s map of Minden 1759 111/38-45
Setting Colby in context – and the software that does
it 115/37-39
The shadow of the land-surveyor 81/43-47
Shap meeting, 23-24 October 2004 72/4-5
Sir Henry James’ Domesday Book 113/42-47
A Six-inch Lancashire and Yorkshire
cartobibliography 116/44-48
The six-inch survey of Lancashire
and Yorkshire and railway revision 113/25-33
The Special Emergency Edition (SEE) 110/3-13
The Special Emergency Edition in
Lincolnshire 108/24-31
A special plan of Ryde 107/39-43
Stanford’s Hunting Populars
106/41-42
Tactical societies 82/60
The
Times Mapping the railways [book review] 96/46-47
The transformation of the Ordnance
Survey under Colby 76/46-51
The
treatment of works projected or in progress
72/47-48
The
use of one-inch maps by a railway promoter
70/26-27
Towards
a virtual museum of the geographic production process 97/3-4
Urban road fill on the Third Edition
114/33-35
Victorian
Maps of England: The County and City Maps of Thomas Moule [review] 114/55
What is a place? 74/28-32
William Mudge and the General map of
England 97/13-19
Wheeler,
RC and Archer, David
Timothy
Robin Nicholson [obituary] 85/5-8
Welham,
PS
- see Andrews,
K S, and Welham, P S
Wilkes,
Margaret
25th anniversary of the Charles Close Society
75/7-9
Alan Godfrey MBE 87/2
Williams,
Julian
Tales
from an overseas member 76/66-67
Willis,
Peter
Terry Keegan [obituary]
95/60
Wilson,
Graham
Sheet 33 for me! 97/36-37
Winterbottom,
John
The
GeoInformation Group 81/10-11
Wolstenholme, Mark
Rebranding
OS – a view from Cartography Production 105/2-6
Woolven,
Robin
The London County Council’s bomb damage
maps 1939-1945 75/38-43
Wynn,
Peter
River basins 116/52-53
Zierler,
Gerry
Charles
Close Society Scotland Tour 79/6-7
From
the chairman 95/1
Great
map for a Great Park 89/20-22
A
new Guernsey official map 93/4-42
How
CCS communicates 115/2
London
area AD: a mystery map 102/36-40
Not
such a Scilly map? 88/44-46
Stanfords
print-on-demand maps of London railways 90/45
Visit
to Map Department Cambridge University Library
86/7-8
Visit
to the Latvian Geospatial Information Agency (LGIA) 76/41
World
War One and the Luck family maps 100/5-8
Unattributed
2005 Annual General
Meeting 73/35
2014 Annual General
Meeting 100/9
An Ulster
pilgrimage 104/2-3
Answer corner:
World Heritage sites 80/70
Argleton – the town
that never was 86/52
Authentic Map Directories
69/43
Blue period 92/33
Brian Irwin 76/4
Bridges patent
mounting 98/56
British Cartographic Society 70/4
Butley ferry 115/28
Buying maps in 1945
88/10
Cagoules, beer and
free maps 104/50
CCS Archives 78/2,
85/9, 85/54
CCS expedition to
Belfast, 2005 73/26
CCS expedition to
Dublin, 2004 70/37
CCS2,
City of York – 1920 84/3
CCS visits to
Chelmsford, St Albans, Keyworth,
York 103/3-6
CCS
website 101/64
Channel
Islands maps 86/12
C-ing things in Kielder Forest 118/19
Colby’s
grave 98/42
Colonel
Michael Cobb, PhD 83/50
Common Ground 110/51
Congratulations
71/2
Copying of OS paper
maps by librarians 78/3
Danger, unexploded
maps 103/64
Dating maps 102/44
Easy peasy 101/59
Edinburgh event,
Sept 2009 86/6
Engineering the
Olympic park 89/4
Everyman’s right
110/51
Explanatory memorandum 112/39
Explorer Map – Active
75/5
Explorers:
least, most and right all along 113/48
Exploring missing territory
72/3
Fashion page 96/45
Ferry good effort
113/62-67
Great Lines project
112/60
Half-inch cartobibliography
873
The Henry Johns award
78/4
How low can you get? 118/56-57
I do like to be
beside the seaside 108/54
Important new
listings on CCS website 88/7
In memory of Brian Adams
85/8
Irish postcodes
98/53
Isle of Blue? 89/12
Jenaestuarium 95/32
John Bartholomew
1923-2008 81/3
J S Broadhurst and
G Foster 78/4
The Keyworth files
74/44, 81/41
A large scale
contributor [John Cole] 93/45-6
Lt. Col. A J Ayers
79/42
London Cycle Guides
80/3
London’s transport
maps 106/59
Lost in translation
90/51
Manchester mystery
ship 107/51
Maps of the Witham Fens
80/4
Medieval views
of the cosmos 70/4
More maps to view
and download 78/4
Mumford. Ian [obituary] 103/60
Neville Hausaman 75/2
NLS
and RCAHMW websites 71/3
Notes for authors
69/55
Open data and
mashups 88/24
Ordnance Survey Act of 1841 70/46
Ordnance Survey
moves ahead 79/2
The Ordnance Survey
Office in 1860 84/17
Ordnance Survey
plans new head office 75/5
OS cover misprint
86/8
Peter Walthall 82/2
Prize quiz 104/4
Professor R J P Kain
73/1
Projections and origins
75/4
Return to Larkhill
72/23
Rowley award 2018
112/60
Sheetlines archive now on website 96/3
Society website
101/64
Stop Press/Stop Presses
86/60
Surveying in
Swindon 1953 97/44-45
Surveying like it
used to be 77/52
Taking
the Nickey 105/68
Tiffin
goes to Chessington 100/52
Thank
you Chris Board ...and welcome Gerry Zierler 94/2
Tidal bounce 71/3
Top 5/Bottom 5 86/38
Toponymy on the
move 86/12
Tony Baggs 76/2
Tunnel vision ?
103/53
Ulster pilgrimage
104/2-3
Updated website for
the Society 84/3
Virtual meetings 118/3
A vision of the future
81/4
Water, water, every .. where? 103/64
We’ve got it covered 110/56
1:500, 1:528, 1:1056 plans 82/15-16
1:1056 plans of London 98/59
1:1056 plans of Manchester 71/61‑62
1:1250 plans 69/54, 73/53, 77/57, 77/66, 85/24-26 102/34, 103/44, 108/46-49
1:2500 plans 71/9, 72/46, 73/53, 74/34-35, 77/58, 78/45-48, 79/18, 80/58-60, 80/69, 81/36-39, 82/50-56, 84/44-45, 85/24-26, 94/50, 98/32-33 102/34, 103/44,
103/54-55, 105/27-33,
106/43-49, 107/39-43, 110/19, 112/31 119/44-48
- bomb damage maps 75/38-43
- re-drawing 106/43-49
- of Scotland 85/11-12
102/34
- shading of buildings 83/37-38, 105/27-33
1:10,000 plans 92/29-31
1;10,560 (six-inch) plans 92/29-31, 94/46-47, 95/6-15, 97/46-47, 98/4, 98/19-31, 98/32-33, 99/43, 100/27-32, 103/47-51, 103/54-55, 112/31, 115/20 cartobibliography of
Lancashire & Yorkshire six inch maps 116/44-48
1:25,000 / Explorers 71/15‑16, 72/3, 75/5, 78/44-45, 103/2, 105/2-6
- First Series, Regular Edition
69/31‑34
- Outdoor Leisure 103/2
- Provisional Edition 85/21-23,
100/40-41, 102/43-44
- Provisional Edition, early states 86/13
- War Office GSGS 3906, 1940-43 115/20
1:25,344 (two-and-a-half-inch) 95/34
1:50,000 / Landrangers
- covers 72/62, 103/61, 108/9-17
- European 72/4
- First Series, ‘bar’ reprints
74/24‑27
- French 75/11-18
- index 95/46
- Ireland 95/38, 103/45-46
- Latvian 76/42
- Northern Ireland 95/38
- redesign 105/2-6
- Timeline historical
74/45-47
1:63,360 (one-inch)
- Aldershot Command
85/55-56
- First
edition, Scotland 95/32
- Fifth Edition 85/15-20,
85/34, 99/26-27
- Fifth (Relief) Edition
72/50‑51, 73/21
- Fourth Edition 85/29, 99/19-39
- GSGS 3907 71/40, 85/35-36
- Ireland 69/6‑10
- London Passenger Transport Map 80/3
- New Popular Edition 76/14, 78/38, 79/10, 82/17-21, 85/15-20, 85/37, 87/44, 99/19-39
- New Series 69/5, 69/45, 79/16,
81/25-28,
85/29-30, 98/59
- Old Series 74/33,
74/44-47, 75/48, 77/27, 78/51, 80/26-39, 81/16, 84/52-55, 85/28
- cartobibliography see
website index
- Popular Edition 71/40, 71/52 , 85/33, 99/19-39, 102/30-33
- Scotland
81/56-57, 84/33-41, 99/19-39 115/21
- Seventh
Series 85/38, 105/43
- cloth 75/24
- covers
70/11-21, 74/51, 80/47
- Scottish
revision 75/28-30
- use
of Welsh 74/17
- Third Edition 70/53‑54,
71/22, 77/73, 79/16, 85/29, 85/31-32, 99/19-39
- Scotland 80/64, 82/2
- Tourist map of New Forest 107/46-50
1:100,000 cycle mapping 74/45,
80/9
- theoretical 74/36
1:126,720 (half‑inch) Bartholomew
73/22, 74/51
1:126,720 (half‑inch) Ordnance Survey 92/23-28 95/18-19
- cartobibliography see website index
1:250,000 / 1:253,440 (quarter-inch) 95/35, 102/54, 103/61, 107/39-43
1:600,000 Scotland Tourist Map
82/24, 83/24-26
1:625,000 / 1:633,600 planning maps 93/4-9
1:1,000,000 International Map of the World 72/15, 72/27
10 miles to 1-inch Rivers and
their catchment areas 112/42
16 Survey company 95/32
1943 South Downs map 110/24-25
A, B, C and M: road numbers revealed [review]
81/53
AA Close‑up Britain road atlas [review] 78/61‑62
AA mapping 94/10-16, 95/4, 97/28-30, 109/40-41
Aberystwyth University library 106/12-20
Access land 70/68, 73/37, 81/47
ACI - see Army Council
Instructions
Act of Parliament,
- Copyright Designs and Patents
78/3
- CRoW 70/68, 73/37
- Ordnance Survey 70/46‑51
Accuracy 101/48-50, 102/17-20
Adams, Brian W 75/2, 76/33-34, 77/27, 77/31-33, 85/8, 94/6
Aerial survey 73/28, 73/33,
76/6-13, 81/10‑11, 82/50-56
Aerodromes, depiction on maps 99/19-39, 100/42-46
Aesthetic appreciation 90/29-35
AD map 102/36-40, 112/21-30, 114/2-7
Agas, Ralph 112/51-53
AGM 2014 100/9
AIDU 84/5-7, 101/57
Air defences map 102/36-40, 112/21-30, 114/2-7 115/54 (Searchlight stations,
London and Essex)
Air ministry works dept see AMWD
Air photo mosaics 71/24, 72/58‑59
Air traffic control 71/38‑40,
81/13-14, 84/5-7
Airfields, depiction on maps 99/19-39, 100/42-46, 101/4-28, 101/29, 101/30, 118/58
Airfields, Norfolk 78/34‑37
Airports, depiction on maps 99/19-39, 100/42-46, 101/4-28
Airy, Prof George 99/16
- The Ordnance Survey and Airy’s figure of the Earth 119/6-17
Alan Godfrey Maps - see
Godfrey Edition
Alan Godfrey MBE 87/2
Aldershot Command map
85/55-56
Amesbury map 95/30-31
AMWD 97/46-47
Andrews, David 77/52‑55
Andrews, J
H 91/60, 94/8,
[obit] 117/54-55
Annotation
on maps 74/48-50, 107/23-25
Annual General Meetings 70/2‑3,
73/35-38, 76/33-34, 79/1-2, 82/22, 85/57, 100/9
Antonine Wall [review] 83/46-47
Anquet digital maps 87/40
The
Antique maps of Cornwall [review] 114/56
Apps 91/59, 102/54-55, 102/56-62
Archaeological investigation 69/53, 72/5, 81/58, 83/47-49
Archaeological maps 95/25-31, 104/51-55, 107/23-25
Archaeological survey 118/3-18
Archer, David, sales catalogues 94/8
Archives, British Library 102/41-42
Archives, CCS
77/4, 78/2, 79/2, 85/9, 85/54, 85/57, 94/4-9, 98/3-4, see also website index
Archive, MOD (also DMO) 102/42
Archive, Sheetlines, on CCS
website 96/3, see also website index
Archive, War Office 102/41
Archives of the Valuation of
Ireland 1830-1865 [review]
113/56-57
Arden-Close, Col Sir Charles see website index
Area books 109/13-22, 112/55
Argleton 86/52
Armistice 114/24-29
Arms, Royal 70/13‑15,
76/18
Army Council Instructions 96/20-29, 98/52-53
Arnhem 1944 87/11, 89/38-39, 90/52-59
Arrowe Park 95/49-50
ARP revision 1938 100/33-36
Art society, OS 85/45-50
Artillery, Royal School of, Badley Library 70/4‑5, 70/33, 71/5, 71/37, 74/5
Assiotti, Francis 118/24
Astigan 102/3-4
Asylums
77/21‑26
Atlas, mystery 72/61
Atlas of Scotland (1832) 115/16
Attingham, ha-ha 95/13-14
Authentic Map Directories 69/43‑45,
70/62, 72/62
Authors, notes for 69/55
‘Auto-mapic’ map of GB 104/30-34, 105/65-66
Aviation history 99/19-39, 101/4-28, 101/29 101/30
Aviation maps 71/38‑40,
81/13-14, 84/5-7, 95/36
Ayers, Lt. Col. AJ 79/42
AZ mapping 94/10, 95/4, 96/17-19, 102/44, 104/63
Badley Library
70/4‑5, 70/33, 71/5, 71/37, 74/5
Bagshot Heath 81/44-47
Baggs, Tony 76/2-3
Baker committee 99/44-53, 100/11-22
Baker, Paul 71/40
Ball, Begg’s 77/55, 78/5
Ballantyne,
Campbell (obit) 90/2
Balloons 76/6-13, 102/36-40, 114/2-7
Balta Sound 99/5-17
Barber,
Peter 94/60
‘Bar’
reprints, 1:50,000 74/24-27
Bartholomew,
John Christopher 81/3
Bartholomew,
John & Son 79/7, 79/76
- 1:1,000,000
road map 74/30-32
- half‑inch
maps 73/22, 74/51, 89/54-57, 89/25-29, 90/36, 98/56, 100/42, 102/44, 103/53
- UK maps 73/24, 74/52,
75/46, 79/76, 82/14, 94/37,
95/35, 103/53, 105/7-25
Barton,
Capt. Dick 82/6
Battle sites
88/36
Bavarian
maps 110/39-42, 111/49
Beattock
Bank 118/27-36
Beaufort,
Captain 102/5-16
Beaver,
William 96/42-44
Bed linen,
maps on 73/24, 74/52, 75/46
Beer, John
(1930-2010) 89/3
Begg’s ball 77/55, 78/5
Belfast, CCS
expedition to 73/26‑34, 104/2-3
- Geological
Survey 73/29
- OSNI 73/27‑28, 73/33, 104,2
- PRONI 73/31‑32, 73/34, 104/2-3
- Queen’s
University 73/30‑31, 73/33
Belhelvie base line 104/5-18
Ben Cleugh 100/23-26
Ben Hutig 98/12-13
Bench marks 69/35‑36,
70/60‑61, 74/39, 85/39-44, 103/4, 107/29, 116/54-56
Bender fold 94/49, 96/54
Besant, Pamela 93/10
Bibliography see website index
Bicester 107/13-19
Biddulph 105/42
Bignell, Bill 96/4
Bilby tower 70/58‑59
Bing Maps and Ordnance Survey 110/28-29
Biot,
Jean-Baptiste 99/5-17
Birmingham,
maps of 84/44-45
Birthplaces,
shown on maps 79/69, 80/67
Black
Country 83/11
Blackpool,
invasion of 73/6
Blank maps 80/38-39
Blind stamp 110/43
Blocks, building 84/5
Bloggoscope 82/56, 93/15
Blogg tiltfinder 93/15
Bloody Old Britain [review]
83/47-49
Blue ensign 94/48
Blue period 92/33
Blueback charts 80/5
Board, Dr Christopher 71/2, 72/1
94/2, 100/9
Bodleian
Library 83/4-6, 90/23-28, 93/2
Bodleian Library book storage facility 93/2-3, 100/51
Bogus
Bognor 86/13
Bomb damage
maps, LCC 75/38-43
Books of
Reference 109/13-22, 112/55
Borders
102/29, 112/18
Boud, Roy 94/60
Boulter’s Lock 94/48
Boundaries, administrative 73/21, 80/11-13 92/6-22, 93/38, 102/29, 103/62, 104/37-38, 106/36
- charter 85/21-23
- garden 81/44-47
- property 103/31-39, 105/34-41
- international 112/18-20
- riverine 112/18-20
Boundary mereing 103/31-39, 105/34-41,
110/14-17,
112/63
Boundary mereings, uncommon 70/8‑9
Boundary,
New Forest 73/23
Boundary
stones, Baldernock (Scotland) 116/30-40
- Burton on Trent 118/44-49
Bramah
press 88/54
Brewer’s
Britain & Ireland
[review] 75/45
Bricmics 95/5
Bridges patent mounting 98/58
Brief record of … the Egyptian Expeditionary Force
83/12-23, 84/7-12, 84/55-56
Briefing models 74/6-8
Bringing the past into
the digital age 90/23-28
Britannia’s Roads: An
introduction to the strip maps of John Ogilby’s Britannia, 1675 [review] 116/64-65
British Association topographical
map … 72/24
British
Cartographic Society 73/2, 77/2, 78/4
British Geological Survey, Keyworth
71/4‑5, 71/36, 74/44, 81/41, 103/5
British grid systems 98/34-37, 107/52-55
British Library 75/7-8, 98/50-51, 102/41, 114/15
British map engravers [review] 92/52
British Rail system map 79/19
British system 107/52-55
British
Town Maps [review] 105/66
Broadhurst, J S 78/4
Brocklesby, ha-ha, 95/13-14
Bronte land 107/29
Broomway 118/50-55
Brown,
Archibald Frederick 94/6
Browne, John
Paddy 74/48-50, 75/46
Brownsea
Island 84/58
Bryant (1828
map) 94/37ff
Bryn Howell
116/48-51
BT Tower 106/27
Budgen,
Charles 76/47-51, 118/20-26
Buildings,
shading of 83/37-38
Bull, Cathy
and Chris 76/2, 76/33, 85/2-3
Bull
Sand fort 94/42ff
Buness
99/5-17
Burnham-on-Sea 100/27-32
Burton
on Trent 118/44-49
Bus stations, depiction on maps,
103/63, 105/43
Bus
stop, mystery 83/55, 84/49
Butler, Tanner & Dennis 90/44, 92/3-5, 92/32, 107/38
C roads, 106/50-51, 118/19
Caledonian
Railway 107/30
Calendar
girls 82/3
Cally
House 95/6ff
Camborne
and Redruth tramway 117/30-44
Cambridge,
military map of 100/53-58
Cambridge,
Soviet map of 74/16
Cambridge University Library 75/10, 76/34, 82/27, 85/3-4, 85/9
Cambridge University Library, visit to 86/7 97/5-7
Cambridgeshire
103/47-51, 118/56-57
Campbell
Ballantyne [obit] 90/2
Canary Islands
75/48
Cancelled maps 112/40-41, 112/63
Cannock Chase map 92/51
Cape Colony 72/4
Carshalton 93/33-35
Cartobibliographies
see website index
Cartographic
design principles (OS) 98/44-45
Cartographic
materials, electronic 73/4‑5
Cartographic
meander 109/2, 110/46, 111/2-12
Cartographic
style 87/19, 88/11
Cartographics, sales catalogues 94/8
Cartoholism 93/43
Caslon 95/36ff
Cassini maps 78/51, 80/4, 82/22-24, 89/50-53
Cassini projection 72/42, 80/42
Catalogues, map sellers’ 85/51-54
- Ordnance Survey 80/53-58, 82/59-60
Catchment basins 112/42, 113/37-38
Caves, mapping of 112/46-50, 113/19-21, 114/16
Ceiriog valley 100/27-32
Celtic earthworks 95/25-31
Centre of UK 110/38, 111/66
Chain survey 83/35-37, 84/29-32
Channel Islands maps 86/12
Changing the map 97/20-22
Charlbury (misprint on map) 100/58
Charles Close Society, see also website index
- 25th
anniversary 74/2, 75/7-9
- 40th
anniversary 119/2-5
- archives 77/4, 78/2, 79/2, 85/9, 85/54, 85/57, 94/4-9, 98/3-4
- as
collectors 76/29-32
- constitution
see website index
- chairman 94/2
- objects
73/62
- publications
policy 75/31-32, see website index
- reproduction maps 95/18-19
- visits 110/46-7, 111/32
- website 83/2, 84/3, 96/3, 101/64, 106/51
Charter bounds 85/21-23
Charting the aeronautical landscape 99/19-39
Charts, blueback 80/5
Charts, air 81/13-14
Chasseaud, Dr Peter 71/3
Cheam ha-ha 95/13
Cheshire, maps of 76/5, 113/2-3
Chilterns tourist map 81/49
China (Selden map of) [review] 115/56
China, surveying in 76/52-58
Churches, depiction of 80/15-16
Civil Aviation Authority 81/13-14
Civil Engineers, Institution of (ICE) 89/4, 98/44-45
Clare, County 112/46-50
Clark, Peter 77/2, 94/8
Clarke, Alexander 85/39-41, 104/5-18
Cleaning maps 70/55‑56
Close, Albert 102/63
Close, Col. Sir Charles 76/6, 76/12, 77/56, 81/40, 85/23, 85/41
Cloth
mounting, discontinuation 75/24
Clothing, maps reproduced on 69/42, 73/4
Coastal defences 103/7-30
Coastlines
90/4-17, 101/56, 102/5-16
Coat, high visibility 78/49
Cobb, Col. Michael 70/52‑53, 71/66‑67, 72/55, 83/50
Colby, Maj.-Gen. Thomas 76/46, 77/46‑49, 78/11‑30, 79/68, 81/30, 90/4-17,
98/5-15, 98/42, 98/46-49, 99/5-17, 100/23-26, 102/5-16, 104/2-3, 104/5-18, 106/12-20
Colby’s camps 90/4-17, 113/6-12
Cole, John 93/45-46
Coleby Grange (RAF) 97/46-47
Collecting maps 76/29-32, 77/66‑67, 80/65‑67, 81/54-55, 101/60-62
Colour, introduction of 69/21‑29
Colours, choice of 80/10-11
Combined OS maps 108/22-23
Commercial publishers (use of OS data by) 95/3-5, 96/8-13, 96/17-19, 102/3-4
Commonwealth War Graves commission 101/2-3
Common ground 110/51
Concise guide, the (CCS publication) 97/10-12
Constitution, CCS see website index
Constructing the M1 93/36-37
Consultation of future of OS 87/4-6, 88/3-7
Consumer
information 83/51-53
Contour
accuracy 100/40-41
Contour
photographs 103/7-30
Contours 74/26-27,
100/40-41
Contour
lines (blue) 115/46
Conventional signs 84/63
Conwy 83/10-11
Co-ordinate transformation 80/40-46
Copenhagen, CCS expedition to 83/7-9
- KMS 83/7-8
- Royal National Library 83/8-9
Copinsay, Horse of 82/62
Copying of maps 78/3
Copyright in
Soviet maps 74/14
Corby, Popular revision 71/54‑56
Cornwall,
Cycle … Map [review] 74/45
Cornwall Explorers 71/15‑16, 78/44-45
Cornwall
- Scilly Archaeological Survey
118/3-18
- St Agnes Beacon 119/18-25
Corpse roads 119/26-29
Counter Drain 90/48
Countryside and RoW Act 70/68, 73/37, 113/13-18, 113/23-24
County Series, interpreting 78/45‑48, 79/18, 80/69
- sheet co-ordinates 80/40-46, 98/32-33
Covers, Alan Godfrey ‘look-alikes’ 82/11-14
- and titles 111/13-21, 114/30-32, 118/59
- collection see Website index
Irish 91/2-5
- Landranger 72/62,
82/24, 90/44, 92/33, 103/62, 108/9-17
- New Popular Edition 76/14, 78/38, 79/10, 82/17-21
- pre-war 81/48-50, 82/59
- Popular and Fifth Edition 70/57
- Scotland Tourist Map 82/24
- Scottish Popular Edition 81/56-57, 84/33-41
- Seventh Series 70/11‑21, 74/51, 80/47
- Third Edition 77/73
Crawford, OGS 83/47-49, 85/21-23, 95/25-31, 107/23-25
Creag Doire nan Nathrach
78/65-66, 79/57
Credenhill, Herefordshire 95/45
Crewe Borough Council 81/40
Cromford and High Peak Railway
76/63-64
Croyde Cycle maps [review]
74/45, 78/61, 104/19-26
Croydon Airport 71/38‑40, 101/29
Crutchley,
John 94/60
Crystal
Palace 94/20-21
Cursiter,
Stanley 93/10-15
Curtis,
Layla 75/34
Curtis,
Roland E 95/25
Custom made
110/18
Cycle and Leisure Maps, Cornwall and Devon [review]
74/45
Cycle guides, London 80/4
Cycle maps 104/19-26
Cyprus 104/51-55
Dale Dyke
Dam 94/46
Daily Mail Group 79/3
Danger, unexploded maps 103/64
Dartmoor 89/13, 104/49
Dartmouth, Third Edition cover
77/73
Das Geheimnis
des Karten-Wunders, Schwerte [review] 111/59
Data digitisation 73/30‑32,
79/48-51, 81/4-5
Dating maps 83/27-34, 102/44
Datum, Liverpool 98/46-49
Dawson, Robert 118/20-26
De la Beche, Henry 96/14-16
De la Mare, Walter 72/49
Dealing, map 69/38‑41,
70/28‑32, 71/18‑22, 73/25, 79/51-54
Dealing with
awkward extrusions 98/56
Deane
District light railway 117/30-44
Defence
College of Intelligence 82/4-7
Defence
Geographic Centre, Feltham 73/3‑4
Defence Intelligence and the
Cold War [review] 106/54
Defence, Ministry of 94/5
Defence Surveyors’ Association 81/2, 84/2, 84/50, 93/39
Definitive map 97/20-22, 103/52, 108/18-21, 109/53
Delamere origin 77/27, 77/40‑50
Dench, Dame Judi 102/63
Denmark 83/7-9
Dennett, John (OS employee)79/8-9, 84/20-28, 94/8
Dennis Maps 107/38
Derry / Londonderry 98/54-55
Desert Island Discs 102/63
Dessiou, Joseph Foss 102/7ff
Desmaretz, John Peter 118/24
Destroying maps 71/63‑64
Devon,
Cycle … Map [review] 74/45
Different
Medway crossing 87/49
Digimap
Services (Guernsey) 93/41-42
Digital mapping 87/39-43,
102/56-62, 104/51-55
Digitisation 73/30‑32,
79/48-51, 81/4-5, 83/6, 90/23-28, 104/51-55
Directorate of Overseas Surveys 94/5, 98/57-58
Disagreeable
countries 83/54
Discovery Walking guides 109/55-57
Disposal of
OS Record Map Collection 86/5
Divis
104/2-3
DMMO 97/20-22
DMO secret
archive 102/42
Dogs,
hunting with 97/38-42
Domesday Book
84/13-16, 113/42-47
Dorington Committee
74/44
Dougalston estate, 95/6ff
DOS - see Directorate of Overseas Surveys
Dublin, CCS expedition to 70/34‑43 92/37-39
- Irish Railway Record Society
73/32-34
- National Archives 70/34, 70/37‑39, 92/38
- Phoenix Park 70/34‑35, 70/40‑41, 92/38
- Royal Irish Academy 70/36, 70/41‑42, 92/38
- Soviet
map of 73/19‑20
- Trinity College 70/42‑43, 92/39
Dunbar tidal
observatory 115/41
Dunlop,
Kenneth (OS employee) 88/41
Dunnose
99/42
Du Noyer, George Victor 35/14, 92/37, 92/41, 109/12
Durham Records
office 112/17
Duvet
covers, maps as 73/24, 74/52, 75/46
Duxford,
RAF 74/6-8
The Eagle has Landed 114/35
Early days
[of Sheetlines] 100/2-4
Earth,
figure of 99/5-17
East German
mapping 79/23, 80/69
‘Ebinburgh’
81/58
Eclipse map
93/44
Eddystone
lighthouse 98/56
Edinburgh
event, September 2009 86/6
Edinburgh visit 110/47
Edinodunensis 110/50
Edition codes 83/27-34, 84/42-43
Effluence and influence 105/42
Egyptian Expeditionary Force
83/12-23, 84/7‑12, 84/55-56
Ekwall, Eilert 86/18
Electronic
cartographic materials 73/4‑5
Elliot, Geoffrey 76/33
Elsdale, Henry 76/6-13
Enderby 93/36
Engineering the Olympic park 89/5, 98/44-45
Engraved maps [review]
86/50, 87/7
Engraved maps 87/7
Engraving and lithography 69/21‑29,
95/33-42
Epping Forest 90/46-47, 114/54
Erisgeir 71/67, 72/3
Error and efficiency 101/48, 102/5-16
Error, root mean square 102/17
Errors and experiences 102/17-20
Errors concealed in rivers 102/29, 106/36
Essex
- Broomway 118/50-55
-
Foulness 118/50-55
- record office 103/3
ETSR89 107/2-3
EuroSDR 97/3-4
European Surveys (Austria &c) 115/37
Everard, Cyril 76/3
Everyman’s right (Finland) 110/51
Exam map extracts 94/23
Exercise Viking 72/39-41
Exeter & Sidmouth (Landranger map) 94/10-15
Exeter Central 98/63, 99/64
Exeter, Sidmouth & Torbay (AA Leisure map) 94/10-15
Exmoor (AA
Walker’s map) 94/10-15
Explorer
House 96/6-7
Extrusions 98/56
Facebook,
CCS group 115/2
Faden,
William 102/5-16, 105/59
Fairclough, Roger 85/3-4
Falmouth, Russian town plan 77/51
Fantasy maps (E. German) 79/26-28, 79/31
Far‑Distant Oxus, The 69/49‑50
Farnborough aerodrome 97/33-35
Feeling blue 87/35
Felixstowe tidal observatory 115/42
Feltham,
Defence Geographic Centre 73/3‑4
Ferry
services 113/62-67
- Butley,
Suffolk 115/28
Fiction,
maps in 119/59
Field
history sheet 75/21-22
Field
section, photograph 75/26, 78/43
Field Survey Company, Seventh 83/13-14, 84/7, 84/55-56
Fifty Maps and the Stories
They Tell [review] 115/56
Figure of the earth 99/5-17
Fingerprints 71/50, 104/63
Fire insurance plans 79/4, 80/62-64
Flappers and sleepers 83/55
Flat maps 72/3
Florjančič, Janez Dizma
79/44-45, 79/48
Flying, history 99/19-39, 100/42-46, 101/4-28
Focus Maps 71/50
Folding of maps
74/53, 85/56
Folk
songs of old Hampshire 74/48
Folkestone 79/16
Football grounds 70/61‑62
Footpaths, public 74/52, 78/8, 103/52, 113/13-18
Fosse Way 115/11-13
Foster G 78/4
Foula 70/12‑13
Foulshiels
79/69
Fox hunting 97/38-42, 98/63
Foyle Reading Room
77/4
France, maps of 75/11, 75/13, 77/18, 77/70‑71, 100/5-8
‘Free our
data’ campaign 80/17-19
Freil,
Brian 92/42-48
Frodsham 82/3
From Squaw Tit to Whorehouse Meadow [review] 77/69
FWT 84/46-47
Gaols
77/21‑26
Gardner,
James 100/23-26, 101/31-38
Gars‑bheinn 73/60‑62
Gasholders 70/62
Gauss-Kruger grid zones 102/22-28
The GB 1900 project 110/48-9, 111/46-48, 112/54, 113/13-18
General map
of England 97/13-19
German
mapping of UK 115/23-25 117/3-8
Geodetic
survey 73/28, 97/20-23
Geodetski Inštitut Slovenije
79/50-51
Geodetski Zavod Slovenije 79/49
Geographia Authentic Map Directories 69/43‑45, 70/62, 72/62
Geographic
Information Systems (GIS) 73/30‑31, 104/51-55
Geographic
Journal 97/50 see
also website index
Geographic
production process, museum of 97/3-4
GeoInformation
Group 81/10-11
Geo-location
105/26
Geological
maps 96/14-16
Geological
Survey and mapping, NI 73/29
Geological
Survey of Ireland 92/37
Geological
Survey of Scotland 115/21
GEOREF 80/20-25
George Petrie 1790‑1866, the rediscovery of
Ireland’s past [review] 71/60‑61
German mapping 72/9, 73/39, 79/23, 94/49
- of UK and Ireland 69-15, 70/32, 72/21, 77/5, 79/34-41, 80/69, 94/26-27
- German Army mapping of Scotland 1941 115/22
Getmapping 102/3-4
Gill, David 97/23-27
Gill, MacDonald 106/2
Gill Sans 108/2-8
Gift‑wrap, maps as 69/41‑42
GIS 73/30‑31, 104/51-55
Glasgow visit 110/46-7
Glimpses
of Ireland’s past [book review] 105/66
Global positioning systems - see
GPS
Gloucestershire 119/56
Glucksman Map Library 70/42‑43
Glue reversal (Vandyke process) 93/20-25
Goad Fire Insurance maps 79/4,
80/62-64, 94/7
Godfrey, Alan MBE 87/2
Godfrey Edition 72/48‑49, 76/45, 79/55-56, 82/11-16,
83/42-45, 93/26-35, 94/8
Gold digging
101/39-41
Gold
mine 73/52, 74/52, 75/47, 76/61
Google
earth 87/43
Google
maps 84/59, 87/43, 102/54-55
Gordon’s
Edinodunensis 110/50
Gosset,
William Driscoll 81/20-23, 82/63
Gotha 92/34-36
Gough
map 75/35, 119/49-55
GPS 78/63‑64,
79/65-66, 102/54-55, 107/2-3
GPS network 95/5, 107/2-3
Graffiti,
coastal 76/63
Graffiti on
maps 96/48
Grampian
mountains 100/23-26
Gran
Canaria 75/48
Grassholm and The Smalls 72/42
Great game 96/42-44
Great great grandfather 88/37
Great instrument station 98/13, 99/42
Great Lines project 112/60
Great Map, The [review]
81/51-52
Great map for a Great Park 89/20
Great Ormes
Head 83/11
Great
Western Railway 105/44-53,
106/4-11
Greenspace
110/35-37
Greenwich
Meridian 74/41
Greenwood (1830 map) 94/37ff
Grid, conversion 80/40-46
- British system 107/52-55
- Fifth and New Popular
85/15-20
- Gauss-Kruger 102/22-28
- German military 69/17‑19,
73/47-49
- National 69/46‑47
- Target-area
designator 81/34-35
- UTM
102/22-28
Grimes WF 95/27
GSGS 3036 [also others] 95/34
GSGS 3907 71/40, 85/35-36
- map lists 84/50
Guardian, The 80/17-19, 96/9
Guernsey, official map 93/41-42
Guide to the OS one‑inch Seventh Series [review]
71/57‑58
Guide to the OS one‑inch Third Edition maps, in
colour [review] 70/53‑54
Gurney, Ivor 119/56-58
GZS 79/49
Ha-has 95/6-15, 96/31-35, 97/48-49
Hadrian’s Wall 89/18
Hagstrom maps 69/41‑42, 102/44
Haile Sand fort 94/40-41
Half‑inch - see 1:126,720
Half-inch cartobibliography 87/3
Hamlyn Publishing 91/9-18
Hampshire
- Budgen’s Rough Plans of 118/20-26
Hardwick Hall, ha-ha 95/13-14
Harley, JB 80/6
Harmston, Lincolnshire 75/1-2,
75/11-13, 77/52‑55, 78/33, 81/43
Hartamul 71/67
Harvey Maps 79/6-7
Hausaman,
Neville 75/2, 76/33
Haven of rest 91/54
Heights of hills and mountains
69/48‑49, 74/26-27, 78/65-66, 79/57-60
Helio-zincography 90/41-43, 93/20, 95/34ff
Henderson,
Capt Alexr 102/5-16, 104/5-18
Hendon,
RAF 85/13-14
Hermitage,
RSMS 82/4-7
HGIS
104/51-55
High
Peak Junction 76/63-64, 77/72-73
Higley,
Chris 91/62
Hills are stuffed with Swedish
girls 89/36-37
Hill sketches 103/7-30
Hinks, Arthur R 94/23
Historic
town plans of Lincoln
[review] 73/55
Historic Towns atlas 112/51-53
Historical Geographic Information Systems (HGIS) 104/51-55
Historical map series online 109/37-39
Historical Military Mapping Special Interest Group, BCS 73/2
A history of 20th century in
100 maps [review] 102/49
HM Land Registry 101/52-56
Hobbs, Capt. John 78/9, 104/5-18
Hodson, Yolande 78/4
Holland, Julian 96/46
‘Holm(e)’ 72/45
Hooton 100/42-46
Hopetoun House 96/33
How and where 100/47-51
How
big a map does it take to build socialism? 89/5
HTT (Historic Towns Trust) 112/51-53
Hunt maps 97/38-42, 106/41-42, 108/34-41
Hutton, Charles 112/60
Hydraulic ram 95/51
Hydrographic chart 94/37ff
Hydrographic Office, Taunton
70/7‑8, 101/57, 102/5-16
Hydrographic survey 117/9-22
ICE see Civil Engineers, Institution of
If
maps could speak 103/45-46
Image processing 93/16-19
Imperial Geographical Service 91/54
Imray, Laurie, Norie and Wilson Ltd 80/5, 106/11
In Passing 86/24
India, Survey of 93/20-25
Index diagrams 85/27-38, 86/25-36 95/46
Ingleborough cave 114/16
Insanity, male 78/42, 79/64
Institute of Civil Engineers (ICE)
see Civil Engineers, Institute of
Instructions
to Field Examiners 94/50
Instructions
to surveyors 97/48-49
Intelligence revealed: maps, plans and views at Horse Guards and the
War Office [review]
93/51
International
Collection, OS 74/3-4
Internal divisions in buildings 103/54-55, 105/27-33, 108/42-44
Internet 73/25, 85/58
Inversion
of maps 78/42, 79/64
Ireland, large‑scale plans
70/37‑39
- National Archives of 70/34, 70/37‑39, 92/38
- postcodes 89/16, 90/38-40, 98/53
- valuation of, 1830-1865, 113/56-57
Irish 3D town
models 92/49
Irish Historic Towns Atlas
- [review] 77/68
- latest developments 98/54-55, 112/53
Irish Ordnance Survey 70/34‑35, 70/40‑41 91/2-5, 92/37, 92/40, 92/42-48, 92/49
- placename books 70/39
Irish Ordnance Survey (history, culture and memory) [review] 71/58
Irish
postcodes 89/16-17, 90/38-40, 98/53
Irish
Railway atlas 1838 101/31-38
Irish
Railway Record Society 73/32, 73/34
Irwin, Maj.-Gen. Brian 76/4,
79/9
Islands, missing 71/67, 72/3, 82/62
Isle of Blue? 89/12
Isle of Man 76/20, 80/37-38, 82/8-9, 83/53-54, 96/36-37
Isle of Skye map 90/29-35
Isle of Wight 76/63, 80/34-37, 82/59
Ivybridge 111/22-28
Jack, EM 93/11
James, Nigel
[obit] 98/43
James, Sir Henry 84/13-16,
85/41, 98/5-15, 113/42-47 116/41-43
Jāņa
Sēta 76/1, 76/37, 76/40-41
Janus 94/4-9
Jenaesturarium 95/32
Jigsaws 61/28, 81/14-15
John Rylands Library 111/32
Johnston, Keith 78/57‑60
Joyce, Fred 94/7
Jura 102/21
KML files see website
index
K-top
(British Library) 98/50
Kain,
Professor RJP 73/1‑2
Kaiser Bill
77/5
Keegan, Terry [obituary] 95/60
Kennedy, Campbell 115/51
Kennels 97/38-42
Kesteven, C roads 106/50-51
Kesteven, atlas of 104/35-36
Keyworth, British Geological Survey
71/4‑5, 71/36, 74/44, 81/41
Kielder
Forest 118/19
Kildonan 101/39-41
Killarney 79/16, 90/29-35, 102/50-53
Kinder Scout 113/23-24
Kineton, MoD 79/19-22
King Orry’s Grave 83/53-54
Kingscote 99/40-41
Kingston upon Thames 82/22
Kington, Miles 81/50
Kirwan,
Richard 103/45-46
Kort
& Matrikelstyrelsen, Copenhagen 83/7-8
Khrushchev
preferred Bartholomew’s 87/31
Labelling on maps 98/38-42
LAM-fold
maps 74/53
Lanarkshire
- Evan Water aqueduct 118/27-36
Lancashire
92/6-22
- Cartobibliography of Six inch maps 116/44-48
Land
Drainage Act 1930, map showing catchment board areas 116/52-53
Landscape of London
(review) 88/50
Land Registry 101/52-56
Land Utilisation Survey 74/48-50, 75/46, 76/65,
104/27
Land‑line data 69/29, 79/2
Landmark Information Group
79/3-4
Landscape legacies 113/6-12
Langley, Hawker factory 71/34‑35
Langton by Spilsby 95/51
Large scales revision 91/28-30
Lapenotiere, Lieut. JR 72/51
Larkhill, Badley Library 70/4‑5, 70/33, 71/5, 71/37, 74/5
- Military Railway 71/6‑9, 72/23‑24
Latterwood 99/40-41
Latvia 76/1,
76/36-44, 96/30
- National Library of 76/36, 76/39-40
Latvian Geospatial Information Agency 76/1, 76/38, 76/41-43
Latymer Upper School 103/60
Lawrence, Vanessa 73/37, 75/5, 81/3, 82/27, 85/10-11, 100/9
Leeds 92/6-22
Legible London 110/57
Leicester half-inch map sheet 37 94/59, 95/18
Leicester, Popular revision 71/52
Leith Hill 70/57‑58
Letter book, OS 76/46
Lettering on maps 95/33-42, 96/38-41, 98/38-42
Levelling 70/60‑61,
85/39-44
Ley lines 95/43-45, 103/40-43
Lightning map company 105/7-25
Limekilns 98/19-31, 101/42-47, 106/32-33, 107/20-22
Lincoln 69/3‑4, 71/36,
74/29, 78/45‑48, 79/18, 80/69, 81/30
Lincoln, Historic town plans of [review] 73/55
Lincoln, Wainfleet Haven and Boston Railway 70/26
Lincolnshire, Ordnance map of 69/36
Linen marques, Old Series
80/29-30
LINZ 112/3-16
Lithography and engraving 69/21‑29,
93/20-26, 95/33-42
Liverpool, CCS visit 98/46-49
- Ocean Gateway 118/37-43
Ljubljana
79/44-51
LKS (abbreviation) 106/28-29
Loc8 codes 90/38-40
Local authority
revision of large-scale plans 103/44
Loch Hourn 97/36-37
Lockspit 106/28-29
London 2012 95/16-17, 96/44, 97/31-32
London - a life in maps
[exhibition] 77/4
London, AD map 102/36-40, 112/21-30, 114/2-7
- bomb
damage maps 75/38-43
- landscape of (review) 88/50
- maps of 72/5, 75/38-43,
76/44, 80/4, 81/11-12, 107/26-28,
108/32-33, 110/57, 111/2-12, 111/60
- model
of 74/4
- National Park city map
[review] 111/60
- Times atlas [review] 92/54
- transport museum 70/6‑7, 70/33
- underground
railway 72/37, 73/59‑60
London Passenger Transport Map 80/3, 83/55
Long Hanborough, Oxfordshire 83/3
Looe, Cornwall 72/48‑49
Lough Erne 89/30
Lough Foyle base line 104/2-3, 104/5-18
Loughton, Focus Map 71/50
Lovell Johns 83/3-4
Lowest point in Britain 117/49-50, 118/56-57
Ludlow 70/2‑3, 78/8
Luftwaffe 117/3-8
Lunch menu 1956 106/52
Lundy Island 77/46
M1 (motorway) 93/36, 94/59, 95/18-19
Macaulay
Isles of Scilly map 88/44
Macclesfield
76/5
MacGillycuddy’s Reeks and
Killarney [review]
102/50-53
MacLeod, MN 93/11ff
Malaya 74/15, 76/3
Malden, HE 93/32
Man, Isle of - see Isle of Man
Manchester & Salford, 1:1056 plans
71/61‑62
- Goad maps 79/4, 80/62-64
Manchester: Mapping the city [review] 114/53
Manchester Rambler 113/23-24
Manchester Ship canal 91/28-30, 107/51, 118/37-43
Manuscript plans 69/11
Map
addict [review] 86/49
Map art on Irish covers 91/2
Map Book,
The 74/61, 75/57, 80/4
Map collecting 87/37-39
Map covers 110/56, 114/30-32 See Website index
Map:
exploring the world [review] 104/45
Map design 105/2-6
Map extracts 94/23
MapFinder app 102/56-62
Maplin Sands 118/50-55
Map modification orders 97/20-22
Map of a
nation [review] 89/40-50
Map of
England, The 81/40
Map redaction 103/7-30
Map selling
94/56-59
Mapland Scotland 81/14-15
Mappa Mundi 78/8
Mapping international sporting events 96/36-37
Mapping
of Saddleworth [review] 81/51-52
Mapping the past on the web 104/51-55
Mapping the Olympic Park 98/44-45
Mapping the railways [review] 96/46-47
Mapping the roads [review] 98/64
Map-reading manuals 94/23-32
Map sizes 109/42-52
Maps.Me (app) 102/54-55
Maps and map‑making in local history [review] 71/59
Maps and Survey 94/23
Maps in those days [review] 91/60
Maps from the past 94/17-22, 94/59, 95/18-19
Maps of the Witham Fens 80/3, 85/51
Maps of War [review] 81/51-52
Maps from the past 100/53-58, 106/21-23
Maps on the move 91/59
Marbled paper 113/34-36
Marginalia 70/22‑26,
- records of 98/32-33
Marloes Beacon 94/22, 95/5
Mars, OS map of 105/61
Martello towers 103/7-30
Martin, Ellis 74/48-50, 75/46,
76/65, 82/17-18 94/48, 95/25, 95/35, 96/38
Masked balls 98/38-41
Mass trespass 113/23-24
Master drawings 69/11
MasterMap 72/3, 73/37, 79/2, 79/4-5,
81/4-5
Masters, Henry
85/47-50
Maxwell, Robert 78/32
McColl, Ewan 113/23-24
Measure
of Manhattan [book review]
97/56
Medway crossing 87/49
Meeting and chatting 95/52-54
Melbourne Military Railway 72/24
MemoryMap digital map 87/42
Mental hospitals 70/44‑45,
72/60
Mereing 103/31-39, 106/28-29,
110/14-17,
111/29-31
Mereings, uncommon 70/8‑9
Merely a question of boundaries 103/31-39, 111/29-31, 112/18-19
Meridian,
Greenwich 74/41
Messenger, Kenneth Guy 94/7
Metric measurements in Victorian era 116/25
Michelin maps 76/3, 85/7-8
Milestones 76/59-60
Military maps 96/20-29, 98/34-37, 99/44-53, 99/56-58, 100/5-8, 100/11-22, 100/53-58, 102/22-28, 107/52-55 116/18-22
Military Maps [review] 72/52‑55
Military maps, German 72/9, 73/39, 77/5‑20, 78/32, 78/62, 79/23, 80/69, 87/31
- Polish 78/4, 84/49, 94/26-27
Military maps, Soviet - see Russian
mapping
Military Survey, School of 106/21-23
Military Map survyors (early) 118/20-26
Millennium Mapping Company 102/3-4
Mind the gap
108/33
Minden 111/38-45
Mine,
gold 73/52, 74/52, 75/47, 76/61
Minorca,
‘general plan of the island’, 1780 118/20-26
Mistakes on
maps 103/45-46
Mitcham 93/31-33
mobile
downloads 103/2
MOD archive
102/42
Model of London
74/4
Models, 3D 92/49
Models, briefing
74/6-8
Modified British system 107/52-55
Monsal Dale 70/57
Moore, Maurice Hubert 94/8
More battles 88/36
Morecambe Bay 118/50-55
Motor sport 101/50-52
Motorway achievement, The [review] 73/55‑56
Motoring atlas
91/6-18, 104/30-34
Motorway,
M1 93/36-7, 94/59, 95/18-19
Motorway, M40 79/66
Moule, Thomas 114/55
Mound or tumulus 81/58
Mountains - see Heights of hills and
mountains
MS plans 69/11
Mudge, Maj.-Gen. William
76/47-51, 78/11‑15, 79/67, 97/13-19, 98/5-15, 99/5-17, 102/5-16
Mumford,
Ian 94/8, 103/60
Murder
74/40
Names and name books 75/19-23,
75/45, 76/1, 76/43
Naming of crags 105/59
Nantwich 84/57
National Archives (TNA) 95/32
National Archives, visit to
86/17
National Archives of Ireland
70/34, 70/37‑39
National Gallery of Scotland 93/10-14
National Grid 69/46‑47, 80/40-46
National Library of Denmark 83/8-9
- of Latvia 76/36, 76/39-40
- of Scotland
71/3, 79/7, 83/50, 85/11-12, 93/4-9, 95/20-24, 96/48, 98/32-33, 98/59, 99/43, 100/1, 102/34,
104/27, 112/54-55
- of Slovenia 79/48-49
- of Wales 110/30-34
National
Monuments Record (NMR) 95/27
National parks
73/23, 102/50
National
Plans, The 75/26, 78/43, 80/7
National
Rail 100/10
National
Rail Museum archives 103/6
Network Rail
archives 103/6
New
Forest 73/23, 94/49, 107/46-50
New Popular index damaged 87/44
- printings and other discoveries 88/25
Newlyn Tidal Observatory [review] 114/57
Newman, Col. HEM
76/52, 76/57‑58, 78/65
New Series to Popular: European parallels 109/23-36
New Zealand 112/3-16
Nicholson, TR 85/5
Nickey line 105/68
The nine lives of John
Ogilby [review] 108/50
Nitrate vulnerable zones 81/47
No more OS maps as we know them? 89/33
Nolan, AE 91/2-5
Nor any drop to drink
100/37-39
Norfolk airfields 78/34‑37, 99/19-39
Northallerton moveable railway bridge 119/64
Northamptonshire
- Weedon, bridge 118/27-36
North Norfolk coast (AA Walker’s map)
94/16
North York
moors 104/28-29
Northern
Ireland, Geological Survey 73/29
- Ordnance Survey of 73/27‑28,
73/33, 89/30, 99/19-39, 101/24-28
- Public
Record Office 73/31‑32, 73/34
Northolt,
RAF 84/5-7, 101/57
Northumberland
118/19
Northumberlandia 99/18, 100/64
Northwest
Norfolk (AA Leisure map) 94/16
Norwich
triangulation scaffold 116/57
Not
such a Scilly map, 88/45
Numbering
of Explorer maps 103/2
NZtopo
112/3-16
O’Brien award 106/3
O’Brien,
Ian [obituary] 103/60, 104/57-58
Object
name books 75/19-23, 76/1, 113/13-18
Objects,
CCS 73/62
Observations on Maps from the past 5 100/53-58
Ocean
Gateway 118/37-43
Offshore
footpaths 118/50-55
Ogilby,
John 108/50
Old Sarum map 95/25-31
Old
Series, new information? 95/2
Old series to Explorer [review] 91/62
Olympic park (London) 89/4, 95/16-17, 97/31-32, 98/44-45
On the map 98/3-4
On
the road with Ekwall 86/18
On
the web 86/4
One‑inch - see 1:63,360
One-inch engraved maps [review] 86/50, 87/7
Onecote, Staffordshire 84/45
Online maps 71/3, 78/4, 78/50, 79/48-49, 80/61-62, 83/50, 85/11-12,
99/43 see also website index
OpenStreetMap 91/20-27, 102/54-55
Opera 79/55-56
Optimum size of maps 109/42-52, 110/52-55
Ordnance Geological Survey 96/15-16
Ordnance Survey 60" … plans of Manchester &
Salford [CD review] 71/61‑62
Ordnance Survey Act, 1841 70/46‑51,
91/36-51, 92/6-22
- anniversary 107/4-7
- annual reports see website index
- Apprentice Tradesmen Boys RE 116/48-51
- art
society 85/45-50
- artefacts 80/65-67
- becomes
a Govco 102/4
- brand
identity 102/2
- catalogues 80/53-58,
82/59-60, 100/47-51, see also website
index
- cartographic
style 87/19, 88/11
- Chessington
office 100/52
- collaboration with Hydrographic office 102/5-16
- competition 102/3-4
- consultation of future 87/4, 88/3, 91/20-27
- cover
changes,, leisure maps 88/33
- cover
misprint 86/8, 92/33
- copyright
109/40-41
- Custom
made 110/18
- data
collection, tidal features 90/4-17
- data (use by commercial publishers) 95/3-5, 96/8-13, 96/17-19
- datum
(Liverpool) 94/33-45
- descriptions 100/47-51, see also website
index
- depiction of airfields 99/19-39, 101/4-28
- directors
general see website index
- documents
(in CCS archive) 94/5
- efficiency
review 87/50, 102/3-4
- Explorer House 96/6-7, 100/9
- finance and funding
80/8-9, 80/17-19, 81/6-7, 82/25-36, 84/4
- Greenspace 110/35-37
- half-inch maps 92/23-28 95/18-19
- head
office 96/6-7
- history 80/6, 80/68, 99/2-4, 100/11-22, 111/22-28, see also website
index
- how
and where 100/47-51
- index
diagrams see website index
- International
94/5
- International
Collection 74/3-4
- Ireland 70/34‑35,
70/40‑41, 92/38, 92/40, 92/42-48, 94/5, 95/38, 102/50-53, 103/45-46
- landscape legacies of 113/6-12
- lawyers 89/36-37
- letter book 76/46
- logo 102/2
- map
covers 111/13-21
- map
indexes see website index
- MapFinder
app 102/56-62
- map
numbering 103/2
- maps
as evidence 103/31-39
- maps
in schools 89/19 89/50-53
- maps
– future possibilities 89/33
- maps
online see website index
- maps
– printing 92/3-5, 92/32
- maps
– proof copies, 94/9
- Mars
map, 105/61
- motoring
atlas 91/6-18
- national
GPS network 95/5
- new logo and branding 102/2, 103/2, 105/2-6
- Northern
Ireland 94/5
- OpenData 91/20-27, 96/17-19, 96/45
- paper
maps 102/2
- public
consultation 72/3
- repayment
work 76/57-58
- representation
of ha-has 95/6-15, 96/31
- sale and supply of maps 82/25-36
- sales of paper maps 102/2
- Southampton 72/5‑7,
73/35‑38, 75/5‑6, 78/5-7, 79/1-2, 81/4, 82/3, 84/17-28, 85/10-11, 96/6-7
- staff
association, OS 85/58
- tee
shirt 96/45
- unfair
competition 102/3-4
- use of the title 102/45-48, 103/56-59
- videos 82/3
- of
Wales 89/22
- working at 106/37-40, 107/35-37, 117/51-53
The Ordnance Survey and Modern Irish
literature [review] 107/61
Ordnance Survey in the nineteenth century 99/2-4
Ordnance Survey maps: a concise guide for historians
73/54, 80/4
Organisation tree, OS
80/68
Orkney 93/10-15
Origin, Delamere
77/27, 77/40‑50
ORPA (other route with public access) 112/67
OS 225 107/4-7
OS explore 80/61-62
OSGB36 107/2-3
OS map covers 111/13-21
OS Net 107/2-3
Overchurch hill 95/47
Overseas member 76/66-67
Overseas Surveys, Directorate of 79/42, 84/42-43
Ox Rock 110/26-27
Oxbridge ramblings 88/17
Oxford University, Bodleian Library 83/4-6
Padley, JS 69/3, 73/55, 81/30
Palestine, mapping of 83/12-23, 84/7-12, 84/55-56
Palestine of the Crusades 71/10‑15
Park, Mungo
79/69, 80/67
Parker, Mike
86/49, 94/1, 98/64
Parliamentary
debates 74/44, 81/41
Parsons, Professor David 76/5
Past and Present Series [review] 78/51
Peabody museum 95/27ff
Pearson, C Arthur 105/7-25
Pelagios 104/51-55
Pembrokeshire (Historical Atlas of) [review] 115/58
Penarth pier
82/14
Penkilan Head
78/33
Period maps 95/25-31
Persistent error 87/29
Perspective maps 105/54-58
Perth – CCS visit 116/2
Perthes, Justus 92/34
Petermann’s planet (vols I
and II) [review] 112/61,
113/55
Petrie, George 71/60‑61, 93/13
Pevsner, Nikolaus
93/28-30
Philip’s Navigator atlas [review] 78/61‑62
Philip’s motoring atlas 91/6-18
Phillips, CW 95/27
Phoenix Park, Dublin 70/34‑35,
70/40‑41
Photo-rectification 93/10-14
Photo-zincography 84/13-16, 90/41-44, 93/20, 95/34ff 116/41-43
Pictish symbol stones … [review] 84/51
Picture of the land, A 90/29-35
Picturing Britain [exhibition review] 86/23
Pig farm, surveying 72/25, 101/52-56
Piran maritime museum 79/45
Pipelines 107/30
Placename books, Irish 70/39
Place name labels on maps 98/38-42, 104/51-55
Place-names 94/33-45, 104/51-55
Places 74/29-32,
75/45
Place’s
waterproof paper 112/40
Plagiarism 81/30
Planning
maps 93/4-9
Pleiades 104/51-55
Poetry 74/53
Pole
Hill 74/41
Polish mapping 78/4, 84/48-49
Political incorrectness
81/48-50
Poor houses 77/21‑26
Popular maps, principal stations 102/30-33
Post Office Tower 106/27
Postcodes in Ireland 89/16, 90/38-40, 98/53
Postbridge, Devon 77/80
Postcards 74/39, 75-6, 79/61, 84/18-19
Prayer Book
– OS facsimile of the Black Letter Prayer Book of 1636 116/41-43
Preston‑Hull line 77/31
Pricing,
Bartholomew maps 73/22
- Seventh Series 70/19‑21
Primary trigs in Wales 96/52-53
Print
codes 73/22, 79/61-62, 83/27-34
Principal
Triangulation 115/3
Printing 73/41‑44, 78/7, 78/41, 90/44, 92/3-5
- colour 69/21‑29,
71/45‑49, 80/10-15, 83/42-45
Projections
and Origins 75/4
Proof copies
(of OS maps) 94/9
Property
boundary mereing 103/31-39
Proposed and
mystery tunnels 104/40-43
Proposed
railways on maps 103/53, 104/40-43
Provisional
perplexity 102/43-44
Publications
policy, CCS 75/31-32, see also website index
Public Sector Mapping Agreement (PSMA) 95/3-5, 96/10-13
Puddleducks
tearoom 110/38
Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park 98/44-45
Queensferry crossing 111/67
Quickmap, Luton 81/11-12
Quo digital maps 87/41
Quorn and Woodhouse Station
83/58
RAF stations, depiction of 97/46-47
RAIB (Rail Accident Investigation Board) 100/10
Railton, CL 112/46-50
Railway, alignment of 74/33,
75/48, 80/32-34, 100/10, 105/44-53,
106/4-11, 112/31-37
- Cromford and High Peak
76/63-64, 77/72‑73
- Kineton, military 79/19-22
- Larkhill Military 71/6‑9, 72/23-24
- Land plans 105/44-53
- Lincoln, Wainfleet Haven and Boston 70/26
- Liskeard and Caradon 74/52, 75/47
- London Underground 72/37,
73/59‑60, 90/45, 100/10
- Melbourne Military 72/24
- Stafford and Uttoxeter 74/33, 75/48
Railway
bridges 118/27-36
Railway and
Canal Historical Society 75/33
Railway pier
100/27-32
Railway
Record Society, Irish 73/32, 73/34
Railway stations, principal 69/50‑52, 102/30-33, 103/62-63
Railway track, depiction of 112/31-37, 113/25-33
Railway tunnels (depiction on maps)
100/10, 103/53
Railways of Great Britain: a historical atlas [review]
70/52‑53, 71/66‑67, 72/55, 83/50
Railways of Kingston-upon-Thames [review] 111/60
Railways, Mapping the 96/46-47
Ramblers 113/13-18
Rann, Karen 112/60
Randle, John Jr 97/56
Ransome, Arthur 69/49‑50
ReCycled Wire 108/53
Red Atlas: How the Soviet
Union Secretly Mapped the World [review] 110/58. 111/62
Redaction of
OS maps 103/7-30
Redfearn,
JCB 75/3
Reichsamt für Landesaufnahme 72/9, 73/39, 78/62, 79/26
Regular
revision 91/52
Repairs to
maps 76/63
Repayment
work, OS 76/57-58
Reproduction maps (CCS) 93/16-19, 94/17-22,
100/53-58
Reservoirs 74/25-26, 75/28-30,
78/65, 100/27-32, 104/28-29
Retrospectroscope 72/3
Revision, 1:50,000 74/24-27
- large‑scale 69/11, 69/31‑34, 69/52, 80/58-60, 81/36-39, 85/24-26
- Points 67/26-31, 97/44-45, 98/16-18, 98/63,
109/58-61, 110/22-23, 111/66
- Popular 71/52
- Seventh Series 75/28-30
- tide
line 73/24
Revolution: mapping the road
to American independence
[review] 104/44
Riga, CCS
expedition to 74/2, 76/1, 76/36-44
- Jāņa
Sēta 76/1, 76/37, 76/40-41
- LGIA 76/1, 76/38, 76/41-43
- National
Library 76/36, 76/39-40
Rights of way
74/52, 78/8, 80/10-11
108/18-21, 109/53, 113/13-18
Rivers, as boundaries 104/37-38, 112/18
River basins 112/42-45, 113/37-42, 114/18-19, 114/20-22
Road atlas 104/30-34, 104/35-36
Road map 107/39-43
Roads, depiction of 71/22, 71/44‑49, 79/66, 80/10, 93/36, 102/21, 114/33-35
- numbering
of 81/53
- turnpike 76/59-61
Robinson Lt
GG RN 102/5-16
Roby, Henry,
MP 74/44, 81/41
Rocks on
maps and charts 114/8-15
Roman
England 81/40, 115/8
Roman
Britain 104/51-55, 114/36-47, 114/48
Roman Scotland 107/8-11
Romer 111/50-54
Root mean
square error (RMSE) 102/17
Roseberry Topping
81/8-9
Roussilhe
apparatus 93/15
Routledge handbook of mapping and
cartography 111/61
Rowe, Langdon 94/7
Rowley award
100/62, 106/3, 110/55, 112/60
Roy, General William 81/51, 97/56, 98/50, 104/51-55, 109/10-11, 111/38-45
Royal Air
Force, Duxford 74/6-8
- Hendon
85/13-14
- Northolt
84/5-7
Royal Aircraft
establishment 97/33-35
Royal Atlas, Johnston’s
78/57‑60
Royal Corps of Military Surveyors and Draughtsmen 118/20-26
Royal Geographical Society 72/8,
73/60, 77/4, 96/38-41
Royal insignia 70/13‑15,
76/18
Royal Irish Academy 70/36, 70/41‑42
Royal National Library, Copenhagen
83/8-9
Royal School of Military Survey
82/4-7, 106/21-23
Royal Scottish Geographical Society – CCS visit 116/2
Rubber stamps 84/59
Ruhr, The 83/43-45
Russian mapping 71/65, 72/26, 73/6, 73/59-60, 74/9 74/13, 75/43, 76/1, 76/39-44, 77/51, 78/32, 78/50, 79/22, 79/23, 79/64, 82/37-49, 87/31, 89/5-11 89/23,
94/28-29, 100/42, 110/58, 111/62, 114/23, 114/24-29, 117/27-29, 119/30-43
Ryde 107/39-43
Sabine, Capt Edward 99/15
Saddleworth 81/51-52
Salisbury, Marquess of 83/54
Salisbury Plain 95/25-31
Saltholm and Peberholm 83/9
Sandby, Paul 98/50
Sandby, Paul [exhibition review]
86/23
Sandford Fort 98/50
Sans-serif lettering 95/39
Sanwald patent 105/7-25
Satellite navigation systems 78/63‑64, 79/65-66
Save the map! 95/5
Scaling the depths 104/28-29
Scaling the heights [review] 114/59
Scanning historic maps 90/23-28
Schiehallion 112/60
School of Military Survey 106/21-23
Scilly, Isles of, 88/44, 118/3-18
Scotland
from Keith Johnston’s Royal Atlas 78/57‑60
Scotland, AA Touring map 97/28-30
Scotland, CCS visit to
79/6-7
- mapping of 77/47‑50,
78/9, 79/67, 80/64, 81/16, 82/10, 82/24, 83/50, 84/33-41, 85/11-12, 97/28-30, 98/5-15, 98/19-31, 101/42-47, 102/34, 117/23-26
- National Library of 71/3,
79/7, 83/50, 85/11-12, 95/20-24, 96/48, 98/32-33, 99/43, 102/34, 103/63, 104/27
- in Roman times 107/8-11
- Soil survey 104/27
- Tour(ist) map of
83/24-26
- Triangulation of 98/5-15, 99/5-17, 104/5-18
- Trigonometrical survey of 98/5-15
Scotland:
Defending the Nation [review] 114/53
Scotland: mapping the
islands [review] 108/52
Scotland:
mapping the nation [review] 95/58-59
Scottish Mountaineering Club 75/28-30, 79/58
Seaplane station 100/42-46, 101/30
Security deletions 71/28‑35,
72/58‑59, 78/34‑37, 79/19-22, 83/5, 106/27, 110/3-13
SEE – see Special Emergency Edition
Selden map of China [review] 115/56
Series numbers, DOS/OSD 84/42-43
Serif lettering 95/39, 96/38-41
Sewage maps 107/32-34
Shading of buildings 83/37-38
Shannon, John (OS employee) 88/37
Shap Wells 72/4‑5, 112/2
Shapefiles see website index
Sheet lines, Cassini
77/59
- County series 98/32-33
- Old Series 77/27, 81/16, 84/52-55, 85/28
- One-inch 85/27-38
- theoretical 74/36
Sheetfinder see website index
Sheetlines, archive on website 96/3, see also website index
- back numbers 82/61
- the early days 100/2-4
- number 1 100/2-4
- on CD
77/4, 82/61
Sheetlines editors (John Davies, Andrew Darling)
115/45
Sheffield waterworks 94/46
Shelf wobbler 82/58
Shetland 99/5-17
Shooting towers 97/33-35
Shuckburgh’s papers at National Library of Wales
110/30-34
Sillitoe, Alan (obit)
88/9
Six-inch plans – see 1:10,560
Size of maps 109/42-52
Skegness 104/39
Sketch maps 78/38, 79/10, 80/47
Skye 71/16-18, 73/60‑62
Slovenia, CCS
visit to 79/44-51
- Geodetic Institute
79/50-51
- GZS 79/49
- National Library 79/48-49
- Surveying and Mapping Authority
79/46-47
Smith, Walter Purvis [obituary] 114/61
Smith, William 1815 geological map 103/5, 103/59
Snowflake Software, Southampton 79/4-5
Soil survey of Scotland 104/27
Solway Survey 102/5-16
Somerset mapped [review] 107/62-63
Southampton, Gas Monument 76/65
- OS HQ
72/5‑7, 73/35‑38, 75/5-6,78/5-7, 79/1-2, 82/3, 84/17-28,
85/10-11
Soviet mapping - see Russian mapping
Spaven, David 96/46
Special Emergency Edition of 1938 100/27-32, 108/24-31,
110/3-13 117/3-8 see
also website index
Speed track 97/33-35
Spence, Graeme 102/7ff
Spiders 77/56
Sports grounds 70/61‑62
Spurn
Head 91/48-51
Staff
association, OS 85/58
Staffordshire
- Burton on Trent boundaries 118/44-49
Stanfords 90/45, 106/41-42, 107/56-57 109/5
Stereo-plotting 93/10-14
Stevens,
Henry 76/46
Stirling
Surveys 79/6, 79/63
Stone
circles 95/47-50
Stotherd,
Col. Richard 76/9-11
Strassenzunstands-Karte von
Deuschland 94/49
Struve
geodetic arc 96/30 97/23-27
Subterranean
passage, depiction of 113/19-21
Surrey 93/28ff, 113/19-21
Surrey Ordnance Survey historical maps [review]
91/62
Survey Company, 16th 95/32
Survey of India 93/20-25
Survey methods 69/54, 73/53, 75/1, 77/52‑55, 78/6, 80/58-60, 81/36-39, 82/50-56, 83/35-37, 84/29-32, 101/48-50, 107/13-19, 117/9-22 see also website
index
Surveying the administrative boundaries of
Lancashire and Yorkshire after 1841 Ordnance Survey Act 92/6-22, 93/38
Surveying Ireland’s past [review] 71/59‑60
Surveying
the surveyors 113/6-12
Surveyor’s
name on OS map 88/41
Surveys,
coastal 102/5-16
Sussex
-
Survey of (1778-80) 118/20-26
Sustrans
cycle maps 104/19-26
Sutherland,
Ann [obituary] 113/53-54
Sweden,
Soviet mapping of 73/7‑8
Swindon
97/44-45, 98/16-18
Symonds,
Posy 95/28
Sywell 100/46
Tactical societies 82/60
Talking Maps [review] 115/56
Target-area
designator grid 81/34-35
Target
maps 105/54-58
Tate
Britain 75/34
Taunton, UK Hydrographic Office
70/7‑8
Teaching OS map-reading as a foreign language 94/23
Telecom tower 106/27
Templer, Col. JLB 76/6, 76/12
Tenerife Hikers map [map review] 109/55
Ten-mile maps 93/4-9
Tetney Haven 94/42ff
Tentative Technical manual (US Army)
94/24-25
Thairteamul 72/3
Thalweg 112/18
Thames basin 114/20-22
Thaxted triangulation scaffold 116/57
Theodolite diaphragm 77/56, 80/70
Thickness of walls 108/42-44
Thomas, Edward 119/56-58
Thomas, George 104/5-18
Thorn, Henry George 85/45-47
The Three peaks challenge [map review] 110/44-5
Thumbnail sketches 78/38, 79/10, 80/47, 86/44,
91/31
Ticking the boxes? Sustrans cycle maps 104/19-26
Tidal bounce 71/3‑4
Tidal observatories 115/41
Tide
line 73/24,
90/4-17,
91/36-51
Tiffin school
100/52
Timeline
Historical Map [review] 74/45-47
Timepix 109/58-61
Times atlas of London [review] 92/54
Toll gates 76/59-60
Top 5 / Bottom 5 86/38
Top 10 Landrangers / Explorers 102/2, 113/48
Topographical survey 117/9-22
Toponymy on the move 86/12
Touring midst the tors 89/13
Tourist map of New Forest 107/46-50
Tower, Bilby 70/58‑59
Tower of London drawing room 118/20-26
‘Town
Series’ plans 82/15-16
Townlands 73/27, 74/52
Tracklogs digital maps 87/41
Trademarks 72/56‑57
Trafalgar Way [review] 72/51‑52
Trainee (at OS) 117/51-53
Translations 92/42-48
Tramways, depiction of 112/37 116/5-17, 117/30-44
Trans Pennine Trail 108/53
Transport maps 80/3, 81/11-12,
84/46-47, 90/45, 96/44, 97/31-32, 107/26-28 116/5-17
Transport Museum, London’s 70/6‑7,
70/33
‘Traveller’ overprint 98/4, 99/54
Trench maps 100/1, 100/5-8, 101/2-3
Trench map reprints 81/64
Triangulation of England and Wales 102/5-16
Triangulation, Principal 115/4, 117/9-22
Triangulation of Scotland 98/5-15, 104/5-18
Triangulation point, double 69/20, 70/58‑60, 72/59
- padlocked 100/64
- legacy 113/6-12
- scaffolds 116/57
- setting up
71/16‑18, 73/60-62
- St Agnes Beacon 119/18-25
- sub‑sea level 69/53‑54,
72/62
Trigonometrical survey of Cyprus 104/51-55
Trigonometrical survey of Scotland 98/5-15, 104/5-18
Trinity College Dublin 70/42‑43
Troubled progress of the Scottish triangulation 1823-1858
104/5-18
Tucker, James
85/55
Tumulus or mound
81/58, 118/3-18
Tunnel
vision 103/53, 104/40-43
Tunnels,
depiction of 113/19-21
Turner,
Whiteley 107/29
Turnpike
roads 76/59-61
Twenty-fifth
anniversary, CCS 74/2, 75/7-9
Twenty-five inch - see 1:2500
Two‑inch mapping, lost 78/9, 79/67
Twigg,
Jenny 75/19
Typeface on OS maps 104/39, 105/2-6,
108/2-8
Underground features 113/19-21
Unfair competition or an overstocked market? 102/3-4
Unique numbers 83/30-34
Univers typeface 104/39
Unpopular Edition 93/2-3, 94/59
Up the airy mountain 86/39
Upnor castle 87/49
Uppingham
77/63‑65
Under
ever leaf [book review] 96/42-44
UNESCO 96/30
Universal Grid systems 102/22-28
Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM) 96/20-29, 98/52-53, 102/22-28
US Army manual 94/24-25
US Army Map Service (AMS) 96/20-29
Use
of foreign maps (US
Army) 94/24-25
UTM – see Universal Transverse Mercator
Vandyke process 93/20-25
Verneer, William Willoughby 100/11-22
Victorian Biddulph 105/42
Victorian maps of England [review]
114/55
ViewRanger app 102/56-62
Viking, Exercise 72/39-41
Virtual museum 97/3-4, see
also website index
Vision of
Britain 73/30‑31
Wales, online maps 71/3
-
Primary trigs of [review] 96/52-53
Walker’s handbook [review] 104/46
Walker’s map (AA) 94/10-16
Walks around Grantown-on-Spey [review]
79/63
Walk London [review] 116/62
Walthall, Peter 82/2
Wantage tramway 117/30-44
Warrington (water supply to) 100/27-32
War, Maps of [review]
81/51-52
War Office archive 102/41, 103/61
War office maps 108/22-23
War preparation map, Cardiff 115/23 117/3-8
Warsaw Pact mapping 79/23, 110/58
Washed out 103/52
Washington,
cartographic discoveries 69/5‑10
Water-lining 79/16
Waterproof
map 106/34-35, 112/40-41
Water
supply 100/27-32
Water,
water every ... where? 103/64
Watkins,
Alfred 95/43-45
Weatherproof
maps 74/53, 75/5, 106/34-35
Website, CCS
83/2, 84/3, 96/3, 97/50, 101/64, 106/51, 110/57
- DSA 84/50
Wei-Hai-Wei 75/36, 76/52-58
Wellington, Duke of
78/10‑25, 79/67
Wells on
1:2500 maps 94/50
Welsh, use
of on maps 74/17
Welsh water
for English use 100/27-32
West Coast
Main Line 118/27-36
Western
Front 101/2-3
Westmorland
man 96/48
WGS84 107/2-3
What makes a
good society? 101/57
What the
papers say 93/35
What three words 105/26
Wheeler, RC 80/3
Whitby 81/8-9
White, Maj. TJ 76/9-11
Whittiers, William J 95/25
Why North is Up [review] 116/63
Why not walk it? 95/16-17, 96/44
Wight, Isle of - see Isle of Wight
Wigtown Bay 95/32
Willenhall Historic Map Gallery
70/10
Windfarms, mappng of 116/24-29
Windmill, mapping the [CCS publication] 96/4-5
Windsor, Fundamental bench mark and others 116/54-56
Windsor Great park 89/20
Winterbotham, Brig. H S L 80/7-8
‘Wired for
maps’ 73/4‑5
Wirral 95/47-50, 111/66
Witham Fens
80/3, 85/51
Withycombe JG 95/35ff, 96/38-41
Women reading maps 82/59,
83/56-57, 84/58, 85/26, 85/55
Woolaton, ha-ha 95/13-14, 96/34
WOOGs, WOOSies & WOMAT 102/41, 103/61
Workhouses
77/21‑26
Works in
progress 72/47, 79/66
World heritage sites 80/70
World map, Soviet
77/51, 78/32, 79/64
World War One, air defences 102/36-40
World War One and the Luck family maps 100/5-8
World War One, graves 101/2-3
World War Two, target maps 105/54-58
Writing on maps 112/46-50, 112/64
WRP (water resistant paper) 112/40-41
Wynnstay Hall 106/21-23
Wyndham Chapel 117/45-47
Yolland, William 98/5-15, 104/5-18
York, City of, map
84/3
- Minster 85/39-44
Yorkshire boundaries 92/6-22, 93/38
Yorkshire, cartobibliography of six inch mapping 116/44-48
Yorkshire Dales trigpointing
walks [review] 99/64
Yudin, AD 117/27-29
Zierler, Gerry 94/3
Arden-Close, Col Sir
Charles http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/close
Bibliography http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/bibliography
Cartobibliographies
(provisional)
–Half-inch
series http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/halfinchcarto
–Old
series http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/oldseriesintro
–Special
Emergency Edition of 1938 http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/SEE
Charles Close
Society
–
archives http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/archives
–
constitution http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/constitution
–
digital images collection http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/digital
–
publications http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/publications
–
publications policy http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/pubpol
–
Sheetlines archive http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/SheetlinesArchive
Geographical Journal 1896 – 1934, Articles from (in chronological order) http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/GJ
Ordnance Survey maps
The sale of Ordnance
maps
Twelve years work of
the Ordnance Survey 1887 to 1899 by Col Sir John Farquharson
A German critic of
Ordnance Survey maps
Cheap Ordnance
Survey maps for teaching purposes
The ideal
topographic map by Major CF Close
The forthcoming new
edition of the one-inch Ordnance Survey map
The scientific work
of the Ordnance Survey
The Ordnance Survey
and the war
The new one-inch and
quarter-inch maps of the Ordnance Survey
The second geodetic
levelling of England & Wales by Col. Sir Charles Close
The choice of a grid
for British maps by Col HSL Winterbotham
The quarter sheets
of the six inch Ordnance Survey maps
OS Scotland Popular
edition
Conventional signs
for revised one-inch (Popular edition)
Index to
Popular edition sheets of Scotland
Photo-mechanical
processes of map production by Lieut-Col JEE Crater, Ordnance Survey,
Recent productions
of the Ordnance Survey by Capt JG Withycombe
The two-hundredth
anniversary of the birth of General Roy by Col. Sir Charles Close
Map of Roman Britain
Lettering on maps by
Capt JG Withycombe
The one-inch
Ordnance Survey map of England
The new one-inch
Ordnance map
The small scale maps
of the Ordnance Survey by Col HSL Winterbotham
The new one-inch
Ordnance map
Sheet-lines by Brig
H StJ L Winterbotham
Progress of the
Ordnance Survey 1931-1932
The new road map of
Great Britain
The use of the new
grid on Ordnance Survey maps by Brig H StJ L Winterbotham
The National Grid on
the map of London
The new Ordnance
Survey magnetic maps of Great Britain
Celtic earthworks on
Salisbury Plain
Population of Great
Britain 1931, two-sheet map
Geodesy
/ Ground stations http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/virtualmuseum
KML files see Shapefiles
Map cover collection
https://www.charlesclosesociety.org/coversintro
Ordnance Survey
–annual
reports http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/annrep
–catalogues
http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/OSCatalogues
–catalogue
supplements http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/supplements
–descriptions
http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/descriptions
–
directors general http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/dgs
–
history
–
OS Great Britain http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/osgbhistory
–
OS in Ireland http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/ireland
–
map index diagrams http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/indexes
–
map index shapefile http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/kmlfile
–
maps online
–Ireland
http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/threeway
–Isle
of Man http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/threeway
–Guernsey
http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/threeway
–Landranger
and 1:10,000 http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/OSMap
–notable
maps http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/notable
Shapefiles (OS map
indexes) http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/kmlfile
Sheetfinder http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/CCS-sheetfinder
Sheetlines archive http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/SheetlinesArchive
Surveying equipment http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/virtualmuseum
Virtual museum http://www.charlesclosesociety.org/virtualmuseum
The search box on
the home page https://www.charlesclosesociety.org/ can be used to find
occurrences of words or phrases on the website