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Surrey: Moule, c.1844

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  • Title: Surrey
  • Author: Henry Moule
  • Date: c.1844
  • Condition: Age-related toning; 7/8" expertly repaired tear extending into the title; paper loss at top right corner
  • Inches: 10 3/8 x 7 3/4 [Image]
  • Centimeters: 26.35 x 19.68 [Image]
  • Product ID: 308428

A highly decorative and intricately detailed 19th-century map of Surrey by Thomas Moule, featuring charming vignette views of Dulwich College and Richmond Bridge. Originally published in Barclay’s Complete & Universal English Dictionary (London: G. Virtue, 1840s).

Maps by Thomas Moule are probably, with those by Speed, the best known of all series of English county maps. The maps combine a clarity of cartographic style with immense detail, by way of vignette views, scenes and portraits relating to the county shown, often set within a gothic architectural or floral surround, into which armorial devices and so on are worked. As the editions of the maps were published, first in "The English Counties Delineated" and later in "Barclay's English Dictionary", the development of the network of railways throughout England can be observed. Moule, like many other map-makers and map-sellers before him, was a man of many talents. As an author his output included books and papers on topography, history, genealogy, heraldry and architecture; the maps which he designed show elements of these studies. The 57 maps and plans produced for Moule's "English Counties Delineated", originally issued as a part-work, include maps of each English county, the towns of London, Bath, Boston, Portsmouth and Plymouth, and the Isles of Wight, Man and Thanet. Frequently entitled the last series of decorative county maps" they are good informative maps, as popular now as they were in the early years of Queen Victoria's reign.

Background on Creator

Henry Joseph Moule (1825–1904) was an English watercolour artist, best known for his landscapes and his close friendship with the writer Thomas Hardy. Born on 25 September 1825 at Gillingham Vicarage, Dorset, he was the eldest of eight sons of Reverend Henry Moule. He grew up at Fordington Vicarage near Dorchester, where his father was vicar, and was educated at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, graduating with a B.A. in 1848 and an M.A. in 1853.

After university, Moule worked as a tutor, secretary, and librarian for aristocratic families, including Lord Wriothesley Russell and the Earl Fitzwilliam. In the early 1860s, he moved to Gatehouse of Fleet, Kirkcudbrightshire, Scotland, to serve as the estate factor for Horatio Murray Stewart at Cally. He married Elizabeth Young in Edinburgh in 1862, and they had four children during their 15 years in Scotland.