Saturday 21 November 2020

Westcountry Studies. Issue 18. November 2020

 
Westcountry Studies

bibliographical newsletter

on Devon and its region

Issue 18

November 2020

In the midst of other preoccupations I have returned to work on the Devon bibliography to catch up on almost three months of backlog in looking for Devon related entries in the British national bibliography. I have also updated the list of bulletins for Devon County Council's Coronavirus response updates, which provide an excellent week by week summary of the County Council's response to the pandemic. I have still not discovered a way of getting similar URLs for the District and Town Councils, but hopefully much of the information will be available on their news archives. Newspaper websites become ever more infuriating to check with their intrusive adverts and pop-ups.

Sabine Baring-Gould
Halloween saw us in a thatched cottage deep in the west Devon countryside on the fringes of Dartmoor. Knowing that the author of A book of werewolves was buried just yards away, and that Lewtrenchard Manor was haunted by the White Lady, we made sure that our doors and windows were bolted and barred and listened to the wind howling through the trees, the rain beating on the windows and little creatures scrabbling in the thatch with just a hint of trepidation. We had been welcomed with a massive cream tea which was to last us for several days, and very welcome it was after the first of five days of intensive work on the Baring-Gould family's library. The American descendants of SBG, who own the estate, were due to visit – partly to avoid the US election and the prospect of a victory of "the Orange One" as they call him – but Covid had put paid to any flights over, so we had the use of their vacant cottage.


Cottage on the Lewtrenchard estate

Lewtrenchard Manor

The whole library operation is a complex and never-ending one. More than 2,000 books built up by six generations of the Baring-Gould family between the late 18th century and 1931, when they left for America, are housed there, just part of a collection that is split haphazardly between Lewtrenchard, the University of Exeter and the Devon Record Office. A recent development is the donation in 2018 of the Shacklock collection of more than 1,000 books and bound volumes of periodicals by or relating to SBG. 

To assist in locating and reshelving the books we had decided to place spine labels on most items and to sort them into categories subdivided alphabetically by author or title. The categories in the Shacklock collection reflect the divisions allocated by David Shacklock and, with an eye to eventual rationalisation of the three present locations of the Baring-Gould family library -  at Lew, the University and the Devon Heritage Centre - the categories in that collection are based on the ownership and authorship of the books. However the location of the books on the shelves is complicated by the fixed heights of the shelves, many of which are too small to take any but the smallest formats – books today are larger than in SBG's time and the Shacklock colletion contained many more recent items. This means that there are two or three parallel sequences for most categories. Work is still in progress labelling and relocating the books but we haven't quite reached our aim of having the Shacklock collection on the open shelves in the library, the books definitely owned by SBG's children and grandchildren in the gallery and the remainder of the Baring-Gould family library behind glass in the library.


The main bookshelves that were worked on

The fact that the weather was poor meant that we were not enticed into the beautiful grounds and there was much of interest in the collections. Baring-Gould was a man with a magpie mind. Apart from the folk songs, which he considered his most important achievement, he collected works on archaeology, history, the topography of the Westcountry, France, Germany, Iceland and other parts of the world, folklore, superstitions, country life and customs, as well as church history, many in German or French. He was also a prolific writer, with more than 1,000 books and articles to his credit on all the subjects mentioned above, mostly written standing at his writing desk. He was the author of a large number of novels but he wrote them with great reluctance. In his diary he writes on 24 August 1886 "I write novels with anger and heat because they take me off my proper course of study, history, especially ecclesiastical, and mythology, which is my favourite study. I write only because I cannot build and restore this house. I can not live on the estate, without supplementing my income from my pen."  He might have added that his family of fifteen children cannot have made his financial situation exactly easy.

Good or bad, his novels provide an interesting record of the development of the design of publishers' casings. Here are three examples from editions of Grettir the outlaw, a story of Iceland, a novel that had its genesis before his visit to Iceland in 1862 and passages from the sagas appear in Iceland: its scenes and sagas, published in 1863. It was not until 1890 that the novel appeared to fill a hole in SBG's finances.


Grettir the outlaw #1

Grettir the outlaw #2
Grettir the outlaw #3 

 But perhaps the most unusual item is one collected by an ancestor of SBG, It is an ambitious serial publication for women, published in Paris. The Bibliothèque universelle des dames appeared in 156 volumes between 1785 and 1797. The privilege for this mammoth undertaking was granted 6 July 1784 to Jacques Perrin. The frequency announced was fortnightly on the 1st and 15th of each month but, while this was maintained from 1786 to 1790, it became very irregular after the Revolution. The size of each volume varies from about 120 pages to more than 400, in a tiny octodecimo format, only 13 by 8 cm in size. Volumes could be delivered in wrappers or bound in a variety of ways. The annual subscription for 24 volumes bound was 72 livres, or 54 livres in wrappers, plus postage. 

The series of volumes was in eleven classes:


Nine of the 143 volumes

Close-up of the spines

Book label of William Baring-Gould

Subscription details
                    Section title

   Volume title (Poètes latins)
1) Voyages

2) Histoire ancienne et moderne

3) Mélanges: grammaire française, orthographe, versification, prononciation, logique, rhétorique française, mythologie, littérature grec et latine

4) Théâtre

5) Romans: Ethiopiques, grecs, chevalerie, historiques, Amadis de Gaule, Petit Jehan de Saintré, Abdeker

6) Morale: moralistes latins et grecs, moralistes modernes

7) Mathématiques: arithmétique, algèbre, géométrie, trigonométrie

8) Physique, astronomie

9) Histoire naturelle: botanique, chimie, physique de l'homme, physique de la femme, économie rurale et domestique

10) Médecine domestique

11) Musique

The series was conceived as a collection works to provide a general education, easily accessible, for women of "a certain class". From 1787 interest seems to have been focused on the practical, technical and scientific aspects of the collection. Few complete collections are known, only the British Library seems to have a full set in Britain, so it is good to have discovered an almost complete set in original bindings in the Baring-Gould family library in Devon. A full list of the titles of the 143 volumes they hold can be found in the catalogue of the collection. The subscription to this set seems to have ceased early in 1793, which accounts for most of the gaps.

So, we were able to spend a few days in agreeable bibliographical surroundings, just before Lewtrenchard Manor Hotel and the cottage were due to close once more for Lockdown #2, but at least the worst fears of the owners about the "Orange One" were not realised.   

A tale of two escritoires

After the death of Sabine Baring-Gould in 1924, the writing desk at which he stood to write most of his several hundred works was donated to Exeter City Library by one of his ten daughters, Joan Priestly. I stumbled on it, hidden away in a dusty corner of the library stack, in the 1980s and decided that it would be appropriate to place it on permanent loan in Lewtrenchard Manor, SBG's magnificent Jacobean home, where it can be admired by visitors to the hotel.

                                      

Shortly after the unveiling of Baring-Gould's plaque by Exeter Civic Society Society in March 2020, RAMM was approached by an American descendant of another Exonian, James Chadwick (1771-1855), offering her ancestor's writing desk as a gift to the Museum, even bearing the not inconsiderable costs of shipping it over. Although he spent some fifteen years in Exeter, Chadwick remains a shadowy figure. His two sons by different marriages are better known. Sir Edwin Chadwick (1800-1890, the prominent social reformer) was born 24 January 1800 at Longsight, near Manchester. His half-brother Henry Chadwick (1824-1908, a noted sports journalist in America, known as the "father of baseball") was born at Jessamine Cottage, St Thomas on 5 October 1824.  The arrival of the desk in Exeter gives us something tangible to remember him by.  

James Chadwick taught botany and music to the Manchester physicist and discoverer of the atomic theory, John Dalton, and he took an active part in the liberal politics of his time. He was a friend of William Cowdrey the Manchester journalist; and at the time of the French revolution he visited Paris, and later on, in company with the republican American poet and diplomat Joel Barlow, and the great Tom Paine, stood in the Champ de Mars to witness Napoleon Bonaparte, as First Consul, holding a military review.  After entering into business in Manchester he moved to London about 1810 and undertook the editorship of the leading liberal paper of the day, The Statesman, during the imprisonment of Lovell, the editor, for a political libel. After Lovell's release from gaol in 1817 James Chadwick moved to Devon, certainly by 1823 as he married Teresa Coates St Thomas on 29 October that year His son Henry Chadwick was born at Jessamine Cottage, St Thomas on 5 October 1824. He appears to have written leaders for Syle's Barnstaple herald  in 1825 and 1826, and some time after October 1827 became editor of Exeter weekly news, renamed the Western times from 1829, for its proprietor James Terrell.

The newspaper's early issues kept a close eye on the Corporation, particularly its activities in respect to mayoral elections and the development of the canal. It also spoke in favour of tolerance to the Catholics and against the anti-Popish activities around 5 November, and on 13 October 1827 inveighed against the "oppressive and absurd restrictions of the poor laws". The high profile given to the activities of his son Edwin Chadwick as secretary of the Poor Law Commissioners also betrays his presence as editor. Thomas Latimer was appointed as sub-editor early in 1831 and took over as owner and editor in 1835. On 23 September 1837 James Chadwick emigrated to Brooklyn with his second wife and their children where he worked as a journalist in New York until his death in 1855.

Chadwick's successor Thomas Latimer is the recipient of another of Exeter Civic Society's blue plaques, on the old Western Times office at 143, Fore Street where he is linked with his friend Charles Dickens, whom he first met when he came to Exeter to report on the parliamentary election in 1835.

So this year two of Exeter Civic Society's blue plaques are rather tenuously linked by two writing desks, we discover another name in Exeter's stirring history of radical journalism, and Charles Dickens provides us with a suitable title for this anecdote. As for the newly arrived writing desk, it requires a considerable amount of tender loving care before it can be displayed to the Exeter public. 

UNESCO City of Literature
Hopefully an awareness of the importance of Devon's local studies collections will be heightened in Devon by Exeter's recent designation. Work is well under way in putting together a programme for the four year Exeter initiative. I have been in contact with the organisers and have offered the contents of the Exeter Working papers in book history, the Devon bibliography, and Etched on Devon's memory websites. Rescuing and updating the From script to print to hypertext exhibition of 1999 from the Wayback Machine as a structure, I am also transcribing some of my extensive manuscript lecture notes as the World book heritage website to serve as a resource base for projects. Something to keep me busy, and hopefully inspired, during the present winter lockdown. I have produced a project listing for the UNESCO initiative but other projects could be added, for example on election literature, broadside ballads or watermarks. 

Farewell to Jonathan Barry

Jonathan Barry, Professor of Early Modern History at the University of Exeter will be leaving in December after 35 years at the University. A valedictory event on 18 November was the delivery of The Joyce Youings Memorial Lecture 2020 followed by a Zoom meeting with 100 participants, boasting a plethora of ac.uk email addresses, plus overseas visitors from Italy and the Netherlands and a few representatives of the non-academic community in Exeter. His topic was "Bristol and Exeter compared: researching early modern cities", but he also gave an outline of role of the University in regional and local history since its start in the 1950s with the formidable Professor Joyce Youings, Exeter's first woman professor, and W.G. Hoskins, who showed how local history, far from being parochial, could address the Big Historical Questions. In 1985 Jonathan became a Lecturer in History at Exeter. He was a founder of the Centre for South Western Historical Studies in 1987, which brought together the departments of History, Archaeology and Economic History. Changes in the University's direction brought a decline in regional and local history during the first decade of the present century, but there has been a revival since with a renewed involvement with the local community and the Devon and Exeter Institution. 

He stressed the importance of comparative studies in shedding light on the unity and diversity of communities and suggested that this comparison should be global in scope. Urban history was an important element in this and a detailed knowledge of sources was vital, as Joyce Youings had shown in her work on Tucker's Hall. He showed that the archival sources for Exeter and Bristol vary considerably; Exeter had lost probate records in WW2 and apprentice records were poor. On the other hand Bristol had no legacy to compare with John Hooker for the archives of Exeter. Record publishing also varies; the Bristol Record Society had been publishing that city's records for many years while Exeter formed only part of the output of the Devon and Cornwall Record Society. However hearth tax returns had now been published for both cities and provided interesting comparisons. There were also differences in government. Bristol was a newer diocesan foundation and was less well endowed than Exeter. Bristol also fell outside the county structure of the rest of England, affecting the nature of its hinterland, while Exeter had long been a county town. Both suffered in the Civil War but their paths diverged after the restoration, Bristol's population increasing more than Exeter's. This was partly because the markets for Exeter's textile trade were in Europe while Bristol turned its attention to the Atlantic trade. As Jonathan put it, Exeter "backed a loser" as the textile trade declined. The parishes had a lesser role in civic government in Bristol, the city being divided into wards. Exeter followed Bristol in transferring poor relief from parish into corporation hands. 

The final part of the lecture was devoted to a case study of the contrasting burial practices in Bristol and Exeter. In Exeter the Cathedral controlled the burial of Exeter's citizens, almost all of whom were laid to rest in the Cathedral Close, although from 1637 rising ground levels in the Close meant that a compromise was reached with the civic authorities with the opening of Bartholomew Burial ground. Burial grounds for Quakers, Unitarians and other dissenters only came later. As Bristol churches had their own churchyards, parishes remained responsible for the disposal of the dead in that  city. It was an earlier epidemic, cholera, which changed the situation during the 19th century in both cities. 

I was able to thank Jonathan for his support of so many individuals and groups outside the University. When I was compiling my list of books with Devon imprints in the late 1980s he was undertaking research in the Bodleian Library and showered me with details of books printed or published in Exeter which he had come across. He will be moving to Munich where he will be a guest professor at Ludwig Maximilian University from 2021 to 2023, but he will remain an Emeritus Professor at Exeter and continue some doctoral supervision for the next few years, so hopefully he is not lost to us entirely.

Children's literature
Exeter Library's cage holds an important collection of early children's literature, so it is most appropriate that in Emma Laws the Devon and Exeter Institution has recruited an expert from the extensive collections in the Victoria and Albert Museum. Her online talk on Beatrix Potter and the Westcountry is a fascinating exploration of the way sketches made in Devon appeared in her children's books, often many years later. It certainly provoked lively reminiscences of beloved children's books among the lockdown email group of Sheffield Library School alumni from the late 1960s in which I participate. Have a look for yourselves. 

Monarch of all they survey? Devon libraries and Ordnance Survey mapping.
William Cowper and Alexander Selkirk would be dismayed (just Google it). The Westcountry Studies Library has added no OS maps to its catalogue since 2008 and I have been hard put to it to trace any records in other on-line catalogues. Not that there is a great number to add to the 17,500 Ordnance Survey printed maps and plans dating back to 1809 that are listed in the Devon bibliography - I append a list of 44 titles below which probably make up the majority of items that have appeared so far at the start of the third century of Ordnance Survey's existence. But they have been difficult to track down. BNB does not list them. Ordnance Survey's bookshop is very coy about ISBNs and revision dates. In about 2015 OS dropped the system of assigning letters to identify successive states of revision, so we cannot be sure we have acquired them all. Eventually I visited W. H. Smith and Waterstones to take the briefest of notes which I filled out by reference to JISC records. I append a list below which might assist WSL in filling the gaps. From recent experience, a visit to Waterstones with a big shopping bag might be the easiest way, and it would be a good priority for the Kent Kingdon grant that SWHT recently received. Since the demise of hard copy updates of larger scale plans and of the OS monthly lists of new publications, which we used to await with bated breath in the fear that OS had decided on a drive to update Devon with the potential of a several hundred pound hole in WSL's bookfund, coverage of current mapping has changed dramatically. Large-scale OS mapping of the whole county of Devon is now accessible through the Public Rights of Way map and elsewhere, but access to earlier versions since the 1990s is tricky. It is to be hoped that DCC are archiving at intervals the mapping that they receive under licence from OS. With so much development across the face of Devon,the picture is changing month by month.

List of current printed Ordnance Survey mapping with a selection of earlier revisions     

Explorer 108 : Lower Tamar Valley & Plymouth. - 2015. - 1 map : colour ; 120 x 89 cm, folded in cover to 24 x 14 cm. - ISBN 9780319243107. - 
Explorer map. - Revised August 2012, reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2012. -
Explorer 108 : Lower Tamar Valley & Plymouth. - Active edition. - 2015. - ISBN 978031946 [to check]. - 
Explorer map. - Revised August 2012, reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Tamar Valley. Maps. 2012. -
Explorer 112 : Launceston & Holsworthy Roadford Lake. - 2015. - 1 map : colour ; 120 x 88 cm, folded in cover to 24 x 14 cm. ISBN 9780319243138. - 
Explorer map. - Revised December 2011, reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2011. -
Explorer 112 : Launceston & Holsworthy Roadford Lake. - Active edition. - 2015. - ISBN 978031946 [to check]. - 
Explorer map. - Revised December 2011, reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Torridge. Maps. 2011. -
Explorer 113 : Okehampton. Hatherleigh, North Tawton & Lapford. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319243145. - Explorer map. - Revised April 2013, reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2013. -
Explorer 113 : Okehampton. Hatherleigh, North Tawton & Lapford. - Active edition. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319469934. - 
Explorer map. - Revised April 2013, reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. North Devon. Maps. 2013. -
Explorer 114 : Exeter & the Exe Valley. Crediton, Tiverton & Dulverton. - 2015. - 1 map : both sides, colour ; 172 x 80 cm, on sheet 100 x 89 cm. - ISBN 9780319243152. - 
Explorer map. - Revised 2013, reprinted with new legend and cover 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2013. -
Explorer 114 : Exeter & the Exe Valley. Crediton, Tiverton & Dulverton. - Active edition. - 2015. - ISBN 978031946941 [check]. - 
Explorer map. - Revised 2013, reprinted with new legend and cover 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Exe Valley. Maps. 2013. -
Explorer 115 : Exmouth & Sidmouth. Honiton. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319243169. - 
Explorer map. - Revised October 2014, reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2014. -
Explorer 115 : Exmouth & Sidmouth. Honiton. - Active edition. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319469958. - 
Explorer map. - Revised October 2014, reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. East Devon. Maps. 2014. -
Explorer 116 : Lyme Regis & Bridport Chard. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319243176. - 
Explorer map. - Revised February 2011, reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2011. -
Explorer 116 : Lyme Regis & Bridport Chard. - 2018. - ISBN 9780319243176. - 
Explorer map. - Revised 2018. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2018. -
Explorer 116 : Lyme Regis & Bridport Chard. - Active. - 2018. - ISBN 978031946 [to check]. - 
Explorer map. - Revised 2018. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. East Devon. Maps. 2018. -
Explorer 126 : Clovelly & Hartland. Bideford & Bradworthy. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319243220. - 
Explorer map. - Revised October 2013; reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2013. -
Explorer 126 : Clovelly & Hartland. Bideford & Bradworthy. - Active edition. - 2015. - ISBN 978031946 [to check]. - 
Explorer map. - Revised October 2013; reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. North Devon. Maps. 2013. -
Explorer 127 : South Molton & Chulmleigh. Kings Nympton, Chittlehampton & Dolton. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319243237. - Explorer map. - Revised November 2014; reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2014. -
Explorer 127 : South Molton & Chulmleigh. Kings Nympton, Chittlehampton & Dolton. - Active edition. - 2015. - ISBN 978031946 [to check]. - Explorer map. - Revised November 2014; reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. North Devon. Maps. 2014. -
Explorer 128 : Taunton & Blackdown Hills. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319243244. - 
Explorer map. - Revised 2013, reprinted with new legend and cover 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2013. -
Explorer 128 : Taunton & Blackdown Hills. - Active edition. - 2015. - ISBN 978031946 [to check]. - 
Explorer map. - Revised 2013, reprinted with new legend and cover 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Blackdown Hills. Maps. 2013. -
Explorer 139 : Bideford, Ilfracombe & Barnstaple. Woolacombe & Lundy. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319243329. - 
Explorer map. - Revised May 2008, reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2008. -
Explorer 139 : Bideford, Ilfracombe & Barnstaple. Woolacombe & Lundy. - Active edition. - 2015. - ISBN 978031946 [to check]. - 
Explorer map. - Revised May 2008, reprinted with new cover September 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. North Devon. Maps. 2008. -
Explorer OL 9 : Exmoor - Barnstaple, Lynton, Minehead & Dulverton, including the National Park. - 2017. - 1 map : both sides, colour ; 97 x 240 cm, on sheet 95 x 127 cm, folded in cover to 24 x 14 cm. - ISBN 9780319242483. - Explorer map. - Revised January 2017. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2017. -
Explorer OL 9 : Exmoor - Barnstaple, Lynton, Minehead & Dulverton, including the National Park. - Active edition. - 2017. - ISBN 978031946 [to check]. - Explorer map. - Revised January 2017. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Exmoor. Maps. 2017. -
Explorer OL 20 : South Devon : Brixham to Newtown Ferrers. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319242599. - Explorer map. - Revised March 2014, reprinted with new cover May 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2014. -
Explorer OL 20 : South Devon : Brixham to Newtown Ferrers. - Active edition. - 2015. - ISBN 978031946 [to check]. - 
Explorer map. - Revised March 2014, reprinted with new cover May 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. South Hams. Maps. 2014. -
Explorer OL 28 : Dartmoor. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319242674. - 
Explorer map. - Revised November 2013; reprinted with new cover May 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2013. -
Explorer OL 28 : Dartmoor. - Active edition. - 2015. - ISBN 978031946460 [check]. - Explorer map. - Revised November 2013; reprinted with new cover May 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Dartmoor. Maps. 2013. -
Explorer OL 44 : Torquay & Dawlish : Newton Abbot. - 2015. - ISBN 9780319242834. - Explorer map. - Revised July 2013, reprinted with new cover May 2015. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2013. -
Explorer OL 44 : Torquay & Dawlish : Newton Abbot. - 2017. - ISBN 9780319242834. - Explorer map. - Revised April 2017. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Maps. 2017. -
Explorer OL 44 : Torquay & Dawlish : Newton Abbot. - Active edition. - 2017. - ISBN 978031946 [to check]. - Explorer map. - Revised April 2017. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Teignbridge. Maps. 2017. -
Landranger 180 : Barnstaple & Ilfracombe : Lynton & Bideford. - 2016. - 1 map : colour ; 80 x 80 cm, folded in cover to 23 x 14 cm. - ISBN 9780319262788. - 
Landranger map. - Revised August 2013, reprinted with new legend and cover February 2016. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. North Devon. Maps. 2013. -
Landranger 181 : Minehead & Brendon Hills : Dulverton & Tiverton. - 2016. - 1 map : colour ; 80 x 80 cm, folded in cover to 23 x 14 cm. - ISBN 9780319262795. - 
Landranger map. - Revised October 2009, reprinted with new legend and cover February 2016. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Exmoor. Maps. 2009. -
Landranger 190 : Bude & Clovelly : Boscastle & Holsworthy. - 2016. - 1 map : colour ; 80 x 80 cm, folded in cover to 23 x 14 cm. - ISBN 9780319262887. - 
Landranger map. - Revised September 2013, reprinted with new legend and cover February 2016. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Torridge. Maps. 2013. -
Landranger 191 : Okehampton & North Dartmoor : Crediton & Bovey Tracey. - 2016. - 1 map : colour ; 80 x 80 cm, folded in cover to 23 x 14 cm. ISBN 9780319262894. - 
 map. - Revised May 2015, reprinted with new legend and cover February 2016. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. Dartmoor. Maps. 2015. -
Landranger 192 : Exeter & Sidmouth, Exmouth & Teignmouth. - 2016. - 1 map : colour ; 80 x 80 cm, folded in cover to 23 x 14 cm. - ISBN 9780319262900. - 
Landranger map. - Revised June 2013, reprinted with new legend and cover February 2016. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. East Devon. Maps. 2013. -
Landranger 192 : Exeter & Sidmouth, Exmouth & Teignmouth. - 2019. - 1 map : colour ; 80 x 80 cm, folded in cover to 23 x 14 cm. - ISBN 9780319262900. - 
Landranger map. - Revised 2019. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. East Devon. Maps. 2019. -
Landranger 201 : Plymouth & Launceston : Tavistock & Looe. - 2016. - 1 map : colour ; 80 x 80 cm, folded in cover to 23 x 14 cm. - ISBN 9780319262993. - Landranger map. - Revised July 2012, reprinted with new legend and cover February 2016. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. West Devon. Maps. 2012. -
Landranger 201 : Plymouth and Launceston. - D1. - 2009. - 1 map : col. ; 84 x 84 cm. on sheet 89 x 99 cm., folded to 23 x 14 cm.. - ISBN 9780319231463. - 
Landranger map. - Revised 2002. Revised for selected change 2008. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. West Devon. Maps. 2002. -
Landranger 202 : Torbay & South Dartmoor : Totnes & Salcombe. - 2016. - 1 map : colour ; 80 x 80 cm, folded in cover to 23 x 14 cm. ISBN 9780319263006. - 
Landranger map. - Revised July 2012, reprinted with new legend and cover February 2016. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Devon. South Devon. Maps. 2012. -
Road 7 : South West England. - 2016. - ISBN 9780319263495. - Road map. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Westcountry. Maps. 2016. -
Road 7 : South West England. - 2020. - ISBN 9780319263792. - Road map. - Revised October 2019. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Westcountry. Maps. 2020. -
Tour 5 : Devon & Somerset west. - G. - 2012. - 1 map : col. ; on sheet 91 x 93 cm., folded in cover 24 x 14 cm. ISBN 9780319245347. - Tour map. - Revised 2012. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Westcountry. Maps. 2012. -
Tour 5 : Devon & Somerset West. - 2019. - ISBN 9780319263679. - Tour map. -
Copies: No copy located in Devon libraries. -
Subjects: Westcountry. Maps. 2019. -