Samuel Buck, Nathaniel Buck

Prospect Map of London

Circa 1749

Complimentary Shipping

Price:

International shipping available

Customs duties and taxes may apply.

Ships from: London, United Kingdom

Taxes not included

VAT and other taxes are not reflected in the listed pricing. Read more

Authenticity guaranteed

We guarantee the authenticity of this item.

Details

Up arrow

Description

A prospect map of London, by Samuel and Nathaniel Buck.

  • Sold as a set of 5 plates.
  • Samuel & Nathaniel Buck (English).
  • London: circa 1749.
  • Colored.
  • Each is presented unframed.


An incredibly-detailed prospect of London and Westminster from the Thames, showing from Millbank in the west to the Tower of London, with an 140-point key underneath.


The first sheet, Millbank to the Treasury sketched from 'Mr Sheve's Sugar House, opposite to York House', shows the finishing touches being made to Westminster Bridge, with stonemasons at work in the bottom left corner.


On the Thames in front of Millback is a ferry carrying a coach and horses, the 'Horseferry' that became obsolete when the bridge opened the following year.


Westminster Abbey has the two towers added in 1734.


The second sheet, the Treasury to Somerset House from 'Mr Watson's Summer House, opposite to Somerset House', shows one of the rare surviving pieces of riverside history, York Stairs. The Italianate watergate, built c.1626, remains in place but is now separated from the river by 150 yards of the Thames Embankment.


The third plate, Somerset House to Bridewell from 'Mr Everard's Summer-House, opposite to St Bride's Church', depicts the City Barge and ceremonial barge of the East India Company.


East of Whitefriars Stairs, unsurprisingly unnamed, is 'Whitefriars Laystall', a huge heap of human dung collected from the ward of Farringdon.


Plate four, the Fleet to St Michael's Bassingshaw from the 'West part of the Leads of St Mary Overy's Church in Southwark', is dominated by the dome of Wren's St Paul's Cathedral.


The 'Fleet Ditch' is still open, twenty years before it disappeared under Blackfriars Bridge.


The final plate, Old Street Church to Limehouse, also from St Mary Overy, details London Bridge, less than a decade before an Act of Parliament ordered the removal of the buildings that strangled it.


In the far right is the Tower of London.

Condition Report

Revive
Fair
Good
Star iconVery Good
Like New

Some minor restoration.

 

Product is used.

Dimensions

Height: 12.6 inches / 32 cm
Width: 32.28 inches / 82 cm

Language

English

Subject

Maps, Botanicals and More, Maps and Atlases, History, English literature and history, British history, Travel and Exploration

Conditions of Business

Please note that the cancellation right for EU/UK purchasers applies to this item. Please read Condition 19 of the Buy Now Marketplace Conditions of Business for buyers for more information. Read more here.