Buy this book on-line THOMSON, John : (The Atlas of Scotland)
Folio (570 x 450 mm.), half calf with contemporary marbled boards, rebacked with contemporary marbled endpapers. With 29 maps in 58 sheets, generally in early outline colour. Some light offsetting and foxing throughout, minor marginal tears repaired, generally in acceptable condition. As in the Chubb example the imprint of Lanarkshire is trimmed off.
John Thomson was born in 1777 to a merchant father in Edinburgh. He started business as a bookseller in Hunter Square, Edinburgh, in 1807. His first major publication was the ‘Traveller’s Guide’ of 1798 which ran to nine editions. ‘A New General Atlas’ was a superb folio production issued in 1817 and again successful with several later editions. Buoyed by this success he set about the production of a Scottish county atlas. It was to be on the largest scale attempted yet with the exception of one or two in Joan Blaeu’s atlas of 1654. A prospectus was issued in 1818 and quickly the number of subscribers passed 1,200.Thomson produced his maps by utilising existing work in many cases and increasing the scale. He then used land surveyors and local people to amend and add to the maps. The map of Edinburgh uses the same plates as the James Knox of 1812 with some alterations. For that of Ayrshire a new survey was undertaken by William Johnson who spent three summers studying local material. The land surveyor Alexander Martin spent the years 1822-26 working on Fife, Sutherland was freshly surveyed at the expense of the Countess of Sutherland and Bute was surveyed by John MacKinlay.As in his previous publications partners employed around the country. The plates were engraved in both Edinburgh and London from 1820 to 1830. As they were finished the maps were made available for sale. In the Preface of the finished work Thomson wrote that since 1818 “the work has been continually in progress, but the great difficulty of finding assistants, materials, and making the necessary surveys have retarded the completion much longer than anticipated ... A Work which he never would have undertaken, had he known the difficulties to be encountered, the great number of people to be employed, the advance of capital, and the time necessary to carry through such an arduous undertaking, which required at least one surveyor to each county to correct the drawings, and find respectable names to guarantee their accuracy”.This inevitably led to Thomson suffering financial difficulties and on 20 April 1830 he went into bankruptcy. After the Trustee for the creditors decided to finish the atlas it is recorded that various people needed payment for goods especially to the engraver Robert Menzies who would not complete the map of Inverness-shire until paid. This is relevant as the example we offer here lacks all the preliminary matter; title page and index etc. but it does include the Inverness-shire. The Trustee attempted to sell the entire complete stock without success and the whole went to auction in April 1831. Thomson in the guise of John Thomson & Co. bought the stock for £1800. His payments were guaranteed by his friends. A title page had been printed by the Trustee dated 1831, one example of which survives in the example at the Cambridge University Library. It is prior to this date that this example was clearly sold. This is therefore the EARLIEST AVAILABLE FORM OF THE COMPLETE SET OF MAPS. Thomson went on to produce his own title page, and Index both dated 1832, and a further contents leaf which is the standard format found. These examples are so fresh that in many cases signs of the engravers guide lines can be seen indicating an early imprint from the plate.The complete work has 58 maps of the 29 counties of Scotland. The scales vary between one and two inches to the mile. It was therefore the largest and most detailed survey of Scotland to date and not superseded until that of the Ordnance Survey. His financial woes continued and he filed for bankruptcy a second time in 1835. This book was first bought by Randle Jackson (1757-1837) the noted parliamentary council to the East India Company and the Corporation of London. Provenance: bookplate of Randle Jackson pasted inside front cover with ownership inscription on front free flyleaf. Chubb (1927) no. 32; Moir (1973) no. I pp. 129-31 & II p. 154 no. 11; Withers, Charles Introductory Essay to Facsimile of the atlas.
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