1897 Admiralty Chart of Western English Channel

EnglishChannelWest-admiralty-1897
$600.00
English Channel. [Admiralty Chart No.] 1598. - Main View
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1897 Admiralty Chart of Western English Channel

EnglishChannelWest-admiralty-1897

Britain's Bulwark.
$600.00

Title


English Channel. [Admiralty Chart No.] 1598.
  1897 (dated)     25.5 x 54.5 in (64.77 x 138.43 cm)     1 : 734000

Description


A large-format 1897 nautical map or chart of the English Channel produced by the British Admiralty. It demonstrates both the notorious hazards of the channel for larger ships, as well as a greater understanding and cataloging of those same hazards in the late 19th century.
A Closer Look
Coverage includes the southern coast of Ireland, the southern coast of Britain from Llansantffraed in Wales to Oxfordness, and the northern coasts of Brittany and Normandy up to Calais. Soundings, contour lines, islands, islets, hazards, shoals, currents, notes on bottoms, lighthouses, and other useful indicators to the navigator are marked throughout. Among the lighthouses present is the Eddystone Lighthouse. The one seen here was the third of four lighthouses at that location, dating back to 1698, with the original likely being the first ever offshore lighthouse. On land, ports, coastal towns, areas of elevation, regions, and waterways are labelled. Seven tables titled 'H.W.F. and Co.' provide information on mean time and tides.
Publication History and Census
This chart was engraved by Edward Weller and published by the Admiralty in 1894. It is based on an 1882 chart that was updated continuously thereafter, which itself appears to be based on an earlier chart published in 1872 by the Admiralty with the same number in the Admiralty series (OCLC 992805108). The British National Archives in Kew lists this chart in their catalog, but without any date. Thus, we are unable to confirm this existence of this edition in any institutional collections.

CartographerS


The British Admiralty Office (1795 - Present) or the United Kingdom Hydrographic Office refers to the Branch of the English government that is responsible for the command of the British Navy. In 1795 King George III created the United Kingdom Hydrographic Office, known in short as the U.K.H.O., to provide top notch nautical charts to the vast Royal Navy. Prior the founding of the Admiralty the surveying and creation of nautical charts was primarily a commercial venture wherein the cartographer himself, more of than not, actually financed the printing of his own material. The great navigator Cook himself is known to have scrambled for funds to publish his own seminal charts - the most important and advanced of the period. The system of privately funded nautical mapping and publishing left vast portions of the world uncharted and many excellent charts unpublished. King George III, responding significant loss in trade revenue related to shipwrecks and delay due to poor charts, recognized the need for an institutionalized government sponsored cartographic agency - the Admiralty. The first head of the Admiralty, a position known as Hydrographer, was the important cartographer Alexander Dalrymple. Dalrymple started by organizing and cataloging obtainable charts before initiating the laborious process of updating them and filling in the blanks. The first official Admiralty Chart appeared in 1800 and detailed Quiberon Bay in Brittany. By 1808 the position of Hydrographer fell to Captain Thomas Hurd. Hurd advocated the sale of Admiralty charts to the general public and, by the time he retired in 1829, had issued and published some 736 charts. Stewardship of the organization then passed to Rear Admiral Sir Francis Beaufort. It was under Beaufort's administration that the Admiralty truly developed as a "chart making" as opposed to a "chart cataloging" institution. Beaufort held his post from 1829 to 1854. In his 25 years at the Admiralty Beaufort created nearly 1500 new charts and sponsored countless surveying and scientific expeditions - including the 1831 to 1836 voyage of the H.M.S. Beagle. By 1855 the Admiralty's chart catalog listed some 1,981 charts. More by this mapmaker...


Edward Weller (July 1, 1819 - 1884) was a cartographer and engraver based in London. Weller was a nephew of another well-known map publisher Sidney Hall (1788 - 1831), who gave him 50 Pounds to pay his apprenticeship fees. He engraved for many prominent mapmakers and was active enough in the community to be recommended for membership to the Royal Geographical Society in 1851 on the recommendation of John Arrowsmith, among others. He eventually inherited the Sidney Hall map business which led him to follow Arrowsmith as the unofficial geographer to the Royal Geographical Society. Weller was among the first map printers in London to embrace lithography. His best known work appears in Cassell's Weekly Dispatch Atlas, published in monthly segments for subscribers of the 'Weekly Dispatch' newspaper. This collection of maps eventually grew to include much of the known world. Published in various editions from 1855 through the early 1880s. Weller died in May of 1884, leaving behind a successful business and an unhappy widow. His son, Francis Sidney Weller (1849 - 1910), followed in his father's footsteps and continued the family map business. The atlas Mackenzie's Comprehensive Gazetteer of England and Wales was published in 1894 and bore F. S. Weller's signature on the maps. Learn More...


Captain Sir Frederick John Owens Evans (March 9, 1815 - December 20, 1885) was a career Royal Navy officer and hydrographer. Evans entered the navy in 1828 as a second-class volunteer. Evans served in on nine different ships before being named a master in 1841, aboard the HMS Fly. Evans and the crew of the Fly spent the next five years surveying the Coral Sea, the Great Barrier Reef, and the Torres Straits. Evans returned to the south seas in 1847, when he arrived in New Zealand with orders to survey the Middle and South Islands. He served in the Baltic Sea during the Crimean War. In 1855, well-known for his scientific knowledge, Evans was named superintendent of the compass department of the navy. He was named chief naval assistant to the Hydrographer of the Admiralty in 1865 and succeeded him in 1874. Evans resigned his post as Hydrographer in 1884 and in 1885 was appointed one of the British delegates to the International Meridian Conferenced in Washington, D.C. He died at his residence in London on December 20, 1885. Evans married Elizabeth Mary Hall on November 12, 1846. Learn More...

Condition


Very good. Light toning. Closed margin tears professionally repaired on verso.