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Mr. Philip D. Burden
P.O. Box 863,
Chalfont St. Giles, Bucks HP6 9HD,
UNITED KINGDOM
Tel: +44 (0) 1494 76 33 13
Email: enquiries@caburden.com
The finished plan is oriented with north to the right. The title cartouche appears upper left and two large beautifully engraved vignette illustrations of ‘The Cross’ and ‘Abbey Gate’ are in the lower corners. The Market Cross was a three storey building complete with arcades which were demolished shortly after. The map is decorated with a compass rose, coat of arms upper centre and a scale of miles at roughly a quarter of a mile to 5 inches. There are two keys detailed 1 to 55 with street names and from A to W with other places of note. The wealth of detail is remarkable with the borders of individual properties outlined.
The map is dated 1740 in the title although all surviving examples traced are dated 1761 in the lower left imprint of Downing and John Rocque. It had been noticed that the imprint was engraved in two different hands indicating the probable existence of an earlier state. Its presence in Rocque’s Catalogue of 1754 priced at 1s. 6d. was further evidence. This unique first state bears the same first name of Alexander Downing, but does not bear Rocque’s imprint. In his place are the local bookseller’s Samuel Watson and the engraver William Henry Toms. A search of British and worldwide institutions only revealed examples of the later state at Cambridge University Library (Maps.bb.86.76.2) and the British Library (Maps K.Top.39.11). The latter’s example is in King George III’s Topographical Collection, a sign of how rare the first state must have been. Lobel, M. D. ‘The Value of Early Maps as Evidence for the Topography of English Towns’, in ‘Imago Mundi’ no. 22 pp. 50-61; Tooley (1999-2004) p. 384.
A New and Accurate Plan of the Ancient Borough of Bury Saint Edmunds in the Country of Suffolk By Alexander Downing. 1740
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