Wildlife, Environmental and other News
A window onto the wider world

New Forest Images
Digital images and
mounted prints are
available for purchase.

Advertise Here
Feature your business within the pages of the New Forest Explorers' Guide - it's surprisingly cost-effective.
Web Development Services Fresh, new web sites created; search engine rankings improved; and much more.
What's On in the New Forest?
An indispensible guide to events and activities.

Brockenhurst: the site of the future station, and the Parish Church of St. Nicholas on old maps

Richardson, King and Driver's 1789 map

Richardson, King and Driver map, 1789

Richardson, King and Driver's map

Maps are used extensively throughout the New Forest Explorers' Guide to illustrate the changing face of the New Forest. The earliest of these was published in 1814 at a scale of 4 inches to the mile (6.3 centimetres to the kilometre), by Richardson, King, Driver and Driver. This was, though, a revised edition of the first reasonably accurate, large scale map of the New Forest, published in 1789 by the first three of those named.

The 1814 edition relied substantially upon the survey undertaken for the 1789 map, and was updated primarily to reflect relatively limited revisions to forestry inclosures. It therefore largely depicts the New Forest as it was immediately prior to 1789, rather than in 1814.

Consequently, the map reproduced here is always referred to simply as ‘the late-18th century Richardson, King and Driver map’.
 
Note: On this map, the letter ‘L’ refers to lands held on leasehold from the Crown, whilst the letter ‘i’ is used to show incroachments, or parcels of land taken illegally from the Forest.

 

New Forest Places to Stay
bluesky