Salmon's plan of Nottingham
By SALMON, Edward W. , 1862

Plan of the Town of Nottingham and its Environs (from a special survey)

British Isles English Counties
  • 作者: SALMON, Edward W.
  • 出版商: James Wyld
  • 发布日期: 1862.
  • 物理描述: Engraved map in six sheets, each sheet backed on canvas (635 by 810mm), original slipcase with publisher's label, rubbed, green clamshell case.
  • 库存参考: 11865

笔记

A highly detailed town plan of Nottingham. Nottingham was a flourishing city in the mid-nineteenth century, bolstered by the Industrial Revolution. The first lace machines had been brought to the city in 1809, and it was soon the centre of British lace manufacturing. Unfortunately, the rapid expansion of population required to support this industrial expansion created huge swathes of slums, known as the worst in the British Empire. After the local landowner, the Duke of Newcastle, refused to endorse the Reform Act in 1831, inhabitants of these slums rioted and burned Nottingham Castle, the ruins of which are visible on the map. Nottingham was considerably wealthier and more peaceful by the time this map was made.

There is a dedication to Henry Pelham-Clinton, 5th Duke of Newcastle, under his coat-of-arms. Pelham-Clinton was a prominent Tory and then Peelite politician, holding government posts under Lord Palmerston and Lord Aberdeen, and was Lord Lieutenant of Nottingham. He would die only two years after this map was published, after a life fraught with scandal: his friend, William Gladstone, called him “the unfortunate duke”. His wife, Lady Susan Hamilton, eloped to Italy with Horatio Walpole after a string of affairs, including one with his own brother. His son, Lord Arthur Pelham-Clinton, died in mysterious circumstances after being charged in connection with the Boulton and Park case, a contemporary cross-dressing scandal.

参考书目

  1. University of Nottingham East Midlands Special Collection Not 3.B8.E6.
/