This must have been one of the first post-Second World War maps of Liverpool to be published. This makes it interesting for historians for several reasons.
Firstly, it probably shows a landscape that matches the memories of people still alive today. This makes it especially useful for those starting on researching their own history, and want to anchor their recollections in some of the streets as they stood mid-century. A lot of this has changed, but this map shows Liverpool before so much remodelling took place. At the same time, there are 1930s social housing like Gerard Gardens, and St Andrew's Gardens, which many readers will have memories of. It's a gateway between worlds.
Secondly, it's a 'modern' map: it looks like any A-Z style map we'd use today, and is coloured with ease of use in mind. Main roads are yellow, parks are picked out in green (and blue, where appropriate) and railway stations are bright red. Landmark buildings, from the Liver Building to the Library, are blocks of black ink. This is a tool for navigating, and probably with one eye for the modern car driver at that.
It's for these features that I chose it as the base map for my Old Streets of Liverpool map, which is a useful resource for anyone trying to locate an old house, or one of an ancestor's.
Finally, this map has one foot in the past. The nest of roads which cover the inner suburbs of Everton, Kirkdale and Toxteth are still present, though their lifespan was at this time limited. The 'streets in the sky' and the M62 are not yet part of the landscape. Scotland Road is still a major thoroughfare with residents and all its pubs and life yet to be ripped out of it. The Liverpool Overhead Railway is still there, though already on the chopping block, and the giant new hospital on Pembroke Place is still on the drawing board.
Geographia became known as a company that produced detailed street maps for navigating your way around cities. Their clear printing and extensive index (in a book stapled to this map as an extra) made it a go-to tool, and we historians today can benefit from it.
Take a look, and I'm sure you'll spot something to start your research journey.
Leave a comment
Jim Robertson
09/23/2023 16:47:08
I lived in Lindley street L7 from 1947-1958 and would like to find some photos of that area at that time do you know of any that exist in any archive anywhere?
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Paula
02/27/2024 00:25:38
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michael joiner
07/27/2024 10:36:13
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Mike Stevens
08/02/2024 14:46:55
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Malcolm Jones
12/14/2024 17:14:20
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Jeff Pelkmans
03/14/2025 14:35:53
Location + pictures please
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Jim Nugent
03/15/2025 00:18:42
This is the real Liverpool, after the Luftwaffe (which the city mostly survived) but before the planners (which it definitely did not).
Many thanks.
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Ernest .G .Tipping.
05/31/2025 16:24:18
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Diane Liddicoat
07/20/2025 19:47:04
can you please let me know where I can buy a copy of your 1951 map as it doesn't appear to be for sale on your website.
It shows the Dingle where my family grew up in its many streets and I would like it as part of my Ancestry search.
with many thanks
Diane x
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Martin Greaney
08/08/2025 16:27:20
Sorry it's taken me a while, but you can now buy various sizes of this map at https://shop.historic-liverpool.co.uk/products/1951-geographia-plan-of-liverpool-bootle-fine-art-print. Bear in mind that, due to its shape, it doesn't fill the paper it's printed on, but is very close and so can be trimmed for framing if that's what you want to do with it. This was a large map in the original, so I'd recommend buying as large a size as possible if you want to read the street names, as I can't accept returns (these are printed to order!) unless they're damaged in transit.
Best wishes,
Martin
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