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Old Maps Showing Pembury by Tony Nicholls
This is not a history of Pembury. I have not the authority nor knowledge to
start down that track, but I have read many local history books. Most have been
written by life long residents bursting with tales from the past, and nearly all
suffer from the same irritating defect: the lack of maps and plans that would
otherwise greatly assist the reader. I have two general criticisms with all
local historians:
- The author usually assumes the reader to be a local and
comes with an inherited background knowledge of the area.
- The author
generally writes for today, giving little consideration for that fact that their
book may be picked up in 10 or 20 years time as a reference work. Referring to
key locations as " … the old brown building currently occupied by
Jones the Butcher" is of no use to anyone. Jones the Butcher has long
since been replaced by a Blockbusters Video shop, the building is now bright
yellow, and the reader is climbing the walls with rage. This has happened to me
many times - sheer frustration at completely losing the plot, when a few
supplementary maps would work wonders. Histories, of any kind, can never have
too many maps!
I have a passion for maps, and I have assembled here a collection of edited
sections that may be of interest to local residents. The maps were produced
between 1580 and 1860. I have compiled a few notes regarding bygone surveying
and mapping that may help you understand the data on the maps, and may prevent
you from making some wrong assumptions. It's very easy to believe what is seen
on old maps.
Maps fall into two categories ; printed and manuscript.
- Manuscript maps are hand drawn and are one-offs. They generally reside
in libraries, museums and record offices, and were usually commissioned
by land owners or farmers as an account of their estate.
- Printed maps were produced in commercial quantities and can still be
acquired by map collectors for intimate scrutiny and hours of quiet
drooling.
The early years
The reign of Elizabeth I was the age of discovery, and a time when the
countryside was first surveyed and mapped. The first atlas of county maps was
produced by Christopher Saxton in about 1579 from a series of surveys carried
out from 1573 to 1579. John Norden conducted another survey a few years later,
but the epic atlas of the age came in 1611 from John Speed. His work was based
mainly on the surveys of Saxton and Norden. Speed's maps were modified and
reprinted for the next 160 years. The early editions did not show the roads. The
first road atlas was produced in 1675 by John Ogilby, and was copied and
repackaged for the next 100 years or so. The smaller road maps were set into
pocket sized atlases for the busy executives travelling the King's highways by
coach or mail wagon.
Publishing piracy was rife - copyright was unheard of - all map makers copied
from their predecessors and re-branded the products as their own. Most maps
claimed 'from new and accurate surveys' , but there were very few new surveys,
and the accuracy is dubious. Many publishers relied on submitted corrections for
their updates. Spelling was not standardised in those days - the first common
dictionary, by Samual Johnson, did not appear until 1755.
Surveyors did not personally trek around to every village, every hamlet, up
every muddy track, and along every river bank in the land to acquire their data.
They probably visited key towns on main roads and drew data from local sources.
It's anyone's guess as to the true extent of these surveys.
What's in a name!
Communications in those days was poor. There was no TV, no radio, and no
general means of sharing information. Most people very rarely left their
village, and if they did, it was probably to go no further than the next
village. Knowledge was gained locally, and shared locally. Family and neighbours
were the main source of what you were, where you were, and what you called it.
If the people in the next village called it something different, that was their
problem. There were no national standards.
Travelling surveyors would ask locals the names of towns and villages and
would write down their phonetic interpretation of the name. The village may be
pronounced slightly differently between residents and neighbours, or between
neighbours to the north and neighbours to the south. Two surveyors asking six
locals could end up with a dozen different names! Imagine that Pembury had
always been Pembury, and a surveyor happened on a local with a stammer - "
it's P…P …Peb .. Pepenbery". A trifle implausible? A village could be
misnamed by accident or stupidity? Well, during the compilation of Speed's atlas
a place name in Wiltshire had been missed, and they put 'quare' on the map - a
note to go back and query the missing name. They forgot, and the map got
produced with the village named 'Quare'. Subsequent piracy and lack of fresh
surveying meant that this error was passed from atlas to atlas for nearly 150
years before correction. (Emanual Bowen's map of 1755 correctly showed it as
North Burcombe). This error is well documented, many are not.
Village names were obviously spoken, and referred to verbally long before
they were written. The majority of the population were illiterate, and there was
probably no distinction between Pembury, Bembury or Bembry in everyday speech.
The phonetic translation onto paper was a truly haphazard process. It is also
possible that the pronunciation later evolved to suit the modern spelling,
resulting in a further twist in the evolution. Apart from the obvious names like
Edenbridge or Gravesend, always treat the so-called 'origins' of place names
with a degree of scepticism.
Robert Morden's maps of 1695 and 1722 onwards did much to standardise the
spelling of place names, but you will see many variations of Pembury through the
ages, and not in a very progressive order. It was not until John Cary's maps and
the first ordnance surveys in approx 1790 - 1801 that the spellings of many
place names were set in concrete.
Do not agonise over the spellings on old maps. Do not be tempted to configure
some sort of evolution to the name of this village through its umpteen ancient
spellings. The fanciful variations you see are mostly due to ignorance and
misinterpretation.
From obscurity to prominence
Just why many of today's names have found their way on to maps will be never
known, but take one modern example that illustrates how a name can rise from
obscurity to prominence in just a few years: For decades, maybe even centuries,
an obscure, winding lane in Surrey meant nothing - not even to the farmer and
his animals that used it. In the late 20th century a motorway service area was
built on the southern side of the M25, and it took its name from the nearest
thing that had a name - Clacket Lane. Now, it's virtually a household name, and
it is prominent on all maps of the area.
Mapping conventions
We're all fairly well conditioned to the symbols used on modern maps, but it
wasn't always like that. Hills and hollows were depicted as hills and hollows -
contour lines had yet to be invented!
Road maps, starting with Ogilby in 1675, were depicted as scrolls, with the
road stretching linearly along the scroll. Change of direction was indicated by
a new compass point. Sometimes the same scroll will have several compass points
indicating a change in the road's direction relative to the orientation of the
scroll.
In the mid 18th century the fashion of scrolls was dropped, in
favour of plain strips.
Later road maps, such as Laurie & Whittle, abandoned the strip format for
more conventional layouts.
Dates
It is important not to get too fixated with dates on these maps. Academics
do, and spend years gleefully shuffling and re-shuffling these old pieces of
paper into their correct chronological order. Dates generally indicate the year
of publication. Most maps were published in books or atlases and had several
printing runs and revised editions over many years. The information contained in
the map was the result of earlier surveys or the pilfering from earlier
publications. For the purposes of historical analysis it is convenient to
attribute 'Circa' to a date, and express it as, say, C1740. This conveys its
approximate age. As the integrity of the data contained in the map is in
question, there seems little point in fretting over the pin-point accuracy of
the map's age.
Local names found on maps.
"Wood Cote" or "Woodscote" or any similar variation is
taken to be the area around the road junction of the A264, High Street and the
Tonbridge Road.
"Copping Crouch Green" or any similar variation is taken to be the
triangular green - the village green - opposite the Camden Arms.
"Pembury" or any of it's variations is taken to be the old village
church or that end of Lower Green Road - the original settlement.
Maps from 1800 might indicate "Pembury" at the new location - the
coaching road passing along the dry elevated ridge (they were not called 'high
streets' for nothing!).
"Rumford" is Romford - the estate in Romford Road.
"Hundred" is not a town or village. Kent, along with many other
counties, was divided into administrative areas called 'hundred's. They were
abolished in the Victorian era with the introduction of boroughs and councils.
"Half Way House" is not a local name. There were hundreds of them.
It is a generic term for basic road side stops for the traveller to be fed and
watered. They were not as fancy as coaching inns that were generally located in
towns and providing full service facilities. The maps in this collection feature
several half way houses in the Pembury area. As a child I can remember the Blue
Boys at Kippings Cross being used as a half way stop for the London-Hastings day
trip coaches.
Errors and Omissions.
Do not assume that the absence of a road, or building, or village, from a map
means that the item did not exist at the time. Common sense would dictate that
two adjacent villages would have an interconnecting road or track. Mapmakers
inserted only the data that they wanted to insert. For reasons of clarity, cost,
effort, and of course data to hand, maps could be either sparse or congested.
As seen before, with Quare in Wiltshire, place names can be wrong, and can
stay wrong for many years. This does not signal stability or acceptance of the
name.
Distances were as variable as the weather. The mile was different in just
about every county. Morden's maps show three scales of short, medium and long
miles. Despite maps having scales they should not be used. Never scale an old
map!
Villages might appear on the wrong side of a road or a river. Rivers may
follow unfamiliar courses. Roads have branches that don't go anywhere and some
often appear with breaks as if the middle portion of highway is missing (similar
to our phantom bit of the A21 at Castle Hill!)
Note to remove that last comment in 2068 when the A21 dual carriageway is
complete.
That concludes our brief sermon on the joys of bygone mapping. May you go in
peace with the understanding that the potential for misinterpreting old maps is
enormous.
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