Published by Valentine & Sons Ltd, Dundee & London
Seller: Ryde Bookshop Ltd, Isle of Wight, United Kingdom
Soft cover. Condition: Very Good. 27 Full Colour Plates, Guide Map & Coronation Panorama (illustrator). Spine has some scuffing damage, landscape format seven inches across, published to celebrate the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II.
Published by Victoria Seats Agency, 1902., 1902
Seller: Michael S. Kemp, Bookseller, Sheerness, KENT, United Kingdom
Association Member: PBFA
Map
US$ 232.43
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketColour printed map, 380 x 505 mm. old creases, one with a closed tear. Showing the projected route of the Coronation procession. Following emergency surgery for appendicitis two days before the coronation, it was postponed and eventually took place in August of the same year. This map shows the position of various stands, windows and other accommodation which had been secured by the Victoria Seats Agency, presumably to sell on to spectators. With a manuscript note by the ticket holder referring to the position of his seats.
Publication Date: 1937
Seller: Geographicus Rare Antique Maps, Brooklyn, NY, U.S.A.
Map
Very good. Even overall toning. Light wear along original fold lines. Text on verso. Size 17.5 x 23.25 Inches. This is a 1937 city map or plan of London illustrating how well wishers and other attendees could best attend the Coronation of King George VI of Great Britain. The map depicts London from the now closed Uxbridge Road Underground Station (it was on the Metropolitan Line) to Tower Bridge and from Regents Park to the Borough of Lambeth and the Oval Underground station, which is on the Northern Line. Through the presentation of clear, concise information, directions concerning how to reach the Royal Route are presented. Each colored section represents a part of the Royal Route and correspond to the colors that would be used by buses, trams, and Green Line coaches to easily display for passengers their destination. The part of London each color encompasses is explained in explicit detail on verso, allowing potential attendees to decide where they would like to watch the procession and how best to arrive at their proposed destination. Only pre-arranged private traffic would be allowed into the Coronation Area (the white area on the map) and no superfluous deliveries, etc., would be allowed in. Bus, tram, and Green Line coach routes are labeled in different colors and different symbols are used for Underground stations, so riders can are informed which stations will be open, restricted, or closed for the day. A more detailed Underground map is printed on verso, along with detailed directions of how to get to the Royal Route. This map was published by Geographia and freely distributed in advance of the Coronation of King George VI on May 12, 1937. References: OCLC 53190166.