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Victorian London in detail with OpenLayers (mappinglondon.co.uk)
89 points by msmithstubbs on Jan 27, 2016 | hide | past | favorite | 20 comments



I thought my house was built some time between 1890 and 1900, but as I can see it on this map, I guess that puts it nearer to 1890.

I'd like to think of some Victorian gentleman sitting in this very same room, smoking a pipe, reading in the paper by gaslight about the newly built power station at Deptford, and about Idaho becoming the 43rd American state.


You can look at census information if you are curious.

I was curious about my victorian house. These days it is a typical 3 bedroom detached semi, constructed circa 1890.

A check of the census revealed that back in 1901, there was a married couple, the husband working for the Pearl Insurance company, 8 children and a grandmother living in it. The toilet was outside (but at least they had their own!) and there was only one dedicated bedroom as upstairs had not been converted.

So your idea of a "victorian gentlement" sitting alone in the room is probably wrong. Likely the house would have been teeming with children, who would be employed after the age of 12 or so. Multiple people would sleep in each room. The kitchen would have a bed recess. Constant work would be done all day every day for everyday tasks now like keeping dishes clean, heating water, cooking etc.

The husband probably spends his occasional free time at the pub to avoid the endless activity of home.

It is surprising how much more poverty-stricken and arduous even middle class life was then, compared to now.


Do you have a link to where you can search census data by address? Most of the standard sites let you search by name.


http://search.findmypast.co.uk/search-world-records/1901-eng...

hit the address tab on the top of the search page


You have to subscribe to that site right?

Edit: Seems a bit scammy.

https://uk.trustpilot.com/review/www.findmypast.co.uk


I live in Scotland so I used http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk

Additionally turns out I didn't use the census information on it - it was Valuation Rolls which in Scotland listed the occupiers, information about the house, occupations and so on.

I imagine if you get the occupiers via valuation rolls or similar (which are address searchable) you can then go on to census records.


It even shows Horse Troughs, which are still there

http://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/#zoom=19&lat=51.5230&lon=-0.1...


Some building seem to have their internal walls mapped. For example:

http://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/#zoom=20&lat=51.5226&lon=-0.1...

Or am I reading this wrongly?


No, you're right. If they're a public space they're likely to be mapped.


Google Maps Inside back in 1895!

It looks like the building I noticed was a courthouse from 1780 to 1931 [1], so yes a public space. Its now a private members club targeting tech workers [2].

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middlesex_Sessions_House

[2] http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/home-house-t...



Not any more, apparently society doesn't need to pee


The other urinal, at the park gate to the east, is now marked as a toilet on OpenStreetMap.


It does, but then society doesn't exist, according to Margaret Thatcher.


This looks a lot like the maps that came with the old Sherlock Holmes Infocom game: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sherlock:_The_Riddle_of_the_Cr... ... which makes sense I guess.


Forget London, try browsing round other areas of the UK and looking at some of the historic OS 25 inch maps.


Is there a page that explains all these abbreviations and symbols? P.H.? H? F.P.? That little arrow against the walls? http://maps.nls.uk/townplans/symbols.html only has a couple.


They are likely the same as used in modern OS maps - https://www.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/resources/maps-and-geograph...


I know "P.H." is "Public House". Not sure about the others.





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