Central London Railway 1902 Passenger Map
The Central London Railway pioneered giving maps like this one to passengers free of charge, something which we now take for granted but which only...
View full detailsThe Central London Railway pioneered giving maps like this one to passengers free of charge, something which we now take for granted but which only...
View full detailsThis map of the London underground was published shortly before changes were made to the colour coding of the Central and Bakerloo Lines. Beck’s 19...
View full detailsThis issue of Beck’s 1934 map saw a slight increase in size of the card folder given away to passengers. Beck’s diagram is one of the most innovat...
View full detailsOur map of the London underground is the second edition in a series designed by Fred Stingemore, issued free to passengers from May 1925 onwards an...
View full detailsThis Edwardian map of the London underground represents a significant advance both in the issuing of passenger maps in a convenient format, and in ...
View full detailsThe “District Railway” Miniature Map of London and Environs (6th edition) District Railway routes are overprinted in red on this road and rail map ...
View full detailsThe British Empire Exhibition was, at the time, the largest exhibition staged anywhere in the world; a high profile, postwar statement of confidenc...
View full detailsA first edition of the famous diagram from January 1933 Beck’s diagram is one of the most innovative and influential designs of the twentieth centu...
View full detailsThe District Railway Guide to the Greater Britain Exhibition, the Gigantic Wheel, &c, at Earls Court The Greater Britain Exhibition was one of ...
View full detailsA July 1910 map of the Uptown and Downtown Hudson Tubes, pairs of tunnels connecting Jersey City with Greenwich Village in New York and with the Hu...
View full detailsMap with lines showing the boundary for free collection and delivery of parcels and passengers’ luggage The main map shows central London, includin...
View full detailsBeck’s diagram is possibly one of the most innovative and influential designs of the 20th century. First published in 1933, Beck remained directly ...
View full detailsUnderground Map of Central London/A Guide to Underground Travel, Through Service Sth. Harrow and the West End Leboff and Demuth draw attention to t...
View full detailsUnderground Railways of London/What to see and how to travel: Map of the Electric Railways of London The continuation of lines in the margins is no...
View full detailsMap of London and the Suburbs, shewing the existing and proposed railways. [20 miles round] arranged by W.R. Botham, of the London and North Wester...
View full detailsThis District Railway map of Greater London shows the approximate extent from Epsom to Enfield and from Windsor to Grays, with inset of the Henley ...
View full detailsThis pictorial map of London employs an unusual form of Turkish fold which makes use of inclined folding lines. The map is a simplified pocket vers...
View full detailsMacDonald Gill, brother of Eric, was a successful commercial artist in his own right, and a noted calligrapher who designed the font used on all he...
View full detailsThis iteration of the UERL common design marks George Philip & Son’s first official map for the Underground Group; the firm had designed the fi...
View full detailsThe earliest versions of this map advertised the Franco-British Exhibition which closed at the end of October 1908, marked here as ‘Exhibition’. In...
View full detailsThe London General Omnibus Company was by this point owned by the Underground Group and this is an early attempt at transport integration, with the...
View full detailsThis issue of the London Underground map, the last of Beck’s pre-war card folders, features on its reverse an enlargement of the central area with ...
View full detailsThis was the first official London Underground passenger map to be printed since spring 1943, at least partly due to paper shortages. When printed ...
View full detailsUnderground Railways of London What to see and how to travel: Map of the Electric Railways of London Condition & Materials Summer 1925 issue of...
View full detailsThe guide seems to have been aimed at an American audience, with several pages devoted to converting prices in pounds, shillings and pence into dol...
View full detailsThis Central London Railway map is similar in style to the UERL common design which had been in circulation since 1908, although with a chocolate r...
View full detailsThe Evening News was responsible for coining the name ‘Bakerloo Line’ for the Baker Street and Waterloo Railway, and here the newspaper makes a rel...
View full detailsNachtverkehr der BVG… Winter 1934/35 Published by the Berlin Transport Corporation, the BVG, this unusual passenger map and timetable details the n...
View full detailsBeck’s diagram is possibly one of the most innovative and influential designs of the twentieth century. First published in 1933, Beck remained dire...
View full detailsIn 1933 the Met became part of the LPTB. Here though, the Tube and other railways fade into the background. The emphasis is on work/life balance, c...
View full details