Difference between revisions of "Maps and Photography"

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[[image:mapsandphot2.jpg|250px|right]]
 
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*[http://www.oldtowns.co.uk/MapShop_mainpage.htm Old Towns of England Map Shop]
 
*[http://www.oldtowns.co.uk/MapShop_mainpage.htm Old Towns of England Map Shop]
  
*[http://www.alangodfreymaps.co.uk/ Old Ordnance Survey Maps - The Godfrey Edition]
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*[http://www.alangodfreymaps.co.uk/ Old Ordinance Survey Maps - The Godfrey Edition]
 
 
*[http://www.maproom.org/index.html MapRoom]
 
 
 
*[http://mapseeker.co.uk/genealogy/ Genealogy Map Resources]
 
 
 
  
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==Old London Maps==
 
==Old London Maps==
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*[http://photoexchange.ourgenealogy.co.uk/pe/index.php Genealogy Photos] Search for Volunteer Photographers.
 
*[http://photoexchange.ourgenealogy.co.uk/pe/index.php Genealogy Photos] Search for Volunteer Photographers.
  
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See also [[Maps: Tithe and Ordnance Survey]]
  
 
Back to [[Creating Your Family Tree]]
 
Back to [[Creating Your Family Tree]]

Latest revision as of 08:29, 25 September 2022


Mapsandphot2.jpg


Lloyd George's Domesday: a useful source c 1910

Valuation Office Records, popularly known as Lloyd George's Domesday are held at the National Archives.

This was a precursor of Capital Gains Tax. Tax would be paid on the increase in value of properties sold, so their values had to be calculated. Most were apparently done in the summer of 1914.

Every property in England & Wales was marked on a map, given a hereditament number and then the property described in a field book. The field books (in IR 58) each contain (up to) 100 properties and there are four standard preprinted pages for each property. You get owner, occupier, rental, a description of the property and value.

Not everything survives, of course, but where it does, you can find out if your ancestor was in a detached house or a terrace, what it was made of, who his or her neighbours were etc etc.

I've been to several talks, which all made research sound very complicated. The parish of Bury in Sussex stretches over 6 maps, so working from map to field book would be a long winded process, but there are only three field books (less than 300 properties) so you could go the other way round if looking for rural properties. The fieldbooks have references back to the maps, which are very large scale, often with coloured boundaries, so works of art.

It would be more difficult in a town, where you would have to be able to pinpoint a property on a map before you started, but town maps are very large scale.

We may not have census available for the period yet, but for those who can get to the National Archives at Kew, this would certainly help our understanding of pre WW1 ancestors.


Maps: Tithe and Ordnance Survey




Map Links


Old London Maps


General Photograph Links


Place Specific


Churches


Photographers

Directories of Victorian and Edwardian Photographers


See also Maps: Tithe and Ordnance Survey

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